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Live conversation on Friday: Understing LGBTQIA issues

Wear Red Day at Walt Disney World s Magic Kingdom Palm Beach Pride Market Rev. Marie Alford-Harkey – Pastor at the Metropolitan Community Church of the Palm Beaches And is the president and CEO of the Religious Institute, a national multifaith nonprofit dedicated to advocating for sexual health, education, and justice in faith communities and society. She is the lead author of the Religious Institute publication Making the Invisible Visible: Bisexuality in Faith Communities. Julie Seaver – Executive Director at Compass. She creates numerous, efficient, and compelling opportunities for community members and volunteers to support Compass while ensuring the experience of giving is satisfying and rewarding.

New Ultra Naté banger calls for unity between Black trans and cis women

Ultra Naté pictured in Paris on November 13, 1997. (Charriau/ Gamma-Rapho/Getty) Clubhouse singer Ultra Naté has come out swinging for trans rights with a new electro-pop anthem that doubles as a rallying cry for trans people of colour. The American singer, songwriter, record producer and DJ is best known for her dance crossover track “Free”, which shot to the top of the charts in 1997. She’s channelling that same euphoric energy in her latest banger, “Fierce”, a collaboration with pop artist Mila Jam and Pose star Angelica Ross. The result is an empowering party track that’s a declaration of “unity, support and inclusion” between Black cis and trans women.

Black History Month: Angelica Ross

Photo by Lev Radin. Angelica Ross, 40, is a self-made transwoman, veteran and actress who advocates for transgender and nonbinary rights and access to work (Advocate, 2015). She was born in Kenosha, Wisc. and raised in Racine, Wisc. where she finished high school. While growing up, Ross was disparaged by her mother, an Evangelical Christian, because of her LGBTQ+ identity (Ennis, 2015). She was regarded as a “feminine” child and in adolescence was not sure whether she identified as a gay man or someone else. At the age of 17, Ross survived a suicide attempt prompted by her mother’s cruel remarks. It was then that Ross remembered that she wanted to live rather than die (Bried, 2015). She ran away from home after this rejection by her mother (Rudulph, 2016). 

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