Search Results: be an ally (879)

[…] statehouses across the country, fueled by misinformation from extremist lawmakers and unchecked on social media. Statement from Sarah Kate Ellis (she/her), President & CEO of GLAAD: “It’s been one year, one heartbreaking year since Daniel, Kelly, Ashley, Derrick, and Raymond were killed, and more than a dozen were injured, in the unthinkable attack in […]

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[…] M4L’s claims that it’s a grassroots group of concerned parents. They reveal the organization’s ties to some of the loudest and most enduring opponents of LGBTQ equality.  Below are some key examples of M4L’s connections to anti-LGBTQ politicians and funding from anti-LGBTQ groups. For more information about M4L’s anti-LGBTQ record, click here. Moms for […]

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[…] Animal Crossing: New Horizons arrived at the perfect time to offer gamers a much-needed respite from lockdown. The latest installment in a long-running series, New Horizons quickly became a sensation, both within the dedicated life simulation fandom and without, as players lauded its substantial improvements to the series’ charming artstyle and breadth of customization. […]

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[…] Club Q shooting, more than 500 anti-LGBTQ bills were introduced in statehouses across the country, fueled by misinformation from extremist lawmakers and unchecked on social media. “It’s been one year, one heartbreaking year since Daniel, Kelly, Ashley, Derrick, and Raymond were killed, and more than a dozen were injured, in the unthinkable attack in […]

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By Sue Kerr For ten years, I have been documenting violence against the trans community by writing memorial posts on my blog, Pittsburgh Lesbian Correspondents. While my work overlaps with the work of Transgender Day of Remembrance volunteers, I am specifically using a calendar year and focusing on victims of fatal violence. Transgender Day […]

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At first glance, the exterior of Buckhead Art & Company—a brick-and-mortar gallery located in one of Atlanta’s most upscale neighborhoods—appears to be more of the same—a posh offering for wealthy clientele that most residents 30 minutes south of I-85 would deem inaccessible. Yet, once inside, that perceived narrative is immediately disrupted. The space, its […]

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By Dionne N. Walker Images—often heartbreaking ones of pain, illness, and slow death—were among the first ways the American public became aware of the HIV epidemic. Long after those disturbing 1980s pictures first made suffering the face of HIV, a Southern art exhibit on display at Buckhead Art & Company is using joyous portraits […]

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