First Quote Added
April 10, 2026
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"My body, my choice."
"Sex Discrimination. The Biden Administration, LGBT advocates, and some federal courts have attempted to expand the scope and definition of sex discrimination, based in part on the Supreme Courtâs decision in Bostock v. Clayton County. Bostock held that âan employer who fires someone simply for being homosexual or transgenderâ violates Title VIIâs prohibition against sex discrimination. The Court explicitly limited its holding to the hiring/firing context in Title VII and did not purport to address other Title VII issues, such as bathrooms, locker rooms, and dress codes, or other laws prohibiting sex discrimination. Notably, the Court focused on the status of the employees and used the term âtransgender statusâ rather than the broader and amorphous term âgender identity.â * Restrict the application of Bostock. The new Administration should restrict Bostockâs application of sex discrimination protections to sexual orientation and transgender status in the context of hiring and firing. *Withdraw unlawful ânoticesâ and âguidances.â The President should direct agencies to withdraw unlawful ânoticesâ and âguidancesâ purporting to apply Bostockâs reasoning broadly outside hiring and firing. *Rescind regulations prohibiting discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, gender identity, transgender status, and sex characteristics. The President should direct agencies to rescind regulations interpreting sex discrimination provisions as prohibiting discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, gender identity, transgender status, sex characteristics, etc. *Direct agencies to refocus enforcement of sex discrimination laws. The President should direct agencies to focus their enforcement of sex discrimination laws on the biological binary meaning of âsex.â"
"Provide robust protections for religious employers. Americaâs religious diversity means that workplaces include people of many faiths and that many employers are faith-based. Nevertheless, the Biden Administration has been hostile to people of faith, especially those with traditional beliefs about marriage, gender, and sexuality. The new Administration should enact policies with robust respect for religious exercise in the workplace, including under the First Amendment, the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993 (RFRA), Title VII, and federal conscience protection laws."
"Provide Robust Accommodations for Religious Employees. Title VII requires reasonable accommodations for an employeeâs sincerely held religious beliefs, observances, or practices unless it poses an undue hardship on the employerâs business. These accommodation protections also apply to issues related to marriage, gender, and sexuality."
"And the attacks on queer people just keep coming. In May 2023, the Human Rights Campaign listed anti-queer bills introduced and passed in this year alone: ⢠Over 520 anti-LGBTQ+ bills have been introduced in state legislatures, a record; ⢠Over 220 bills specifically target transgender and non-binary people, also a record; and ⢠A record 74 anti-LGBTQ laws have been enacted so far this year, including: ⢠Laws banning gender affirming care for transgender youth: 16 ⢠Laws requiring or allowing misgendering of transgender students: 7 ⢠Laws targeting drag performances: 2 ⢠Laws creating a license to discriminate: 3 ⢠Laws censoring school curricula, including books: 13 Weâre not paranoid. They really do want us to disappear."
"Itâs not all that uncommon today for right-wing Christians in the United States to publicly demand that LGBT people be put to death. As recently as Pride month (June) * Though theyâre starting to say the quiet part out loud, even in this country, theyâve been so much less careful in Africa for decades now. Itâs not all that uncommon today for right-wing Christians in the United States to publicly demand that LGBT people be put to death. As recently as Pride month (June) of last year, in a sermon that went viral on Tik-Tok, Pastor Joe Jones of Shield of Faith Baptist Church in Boise, Idaho, called for all gay people to be executed. Local NBC and CBS TV stations, along with some national affiliates, saw fit to amplify Jonesâs demand to âput them to death. Put all queers to deathâ by interviewing him in prime time. In keeping with right-wing propaganda that treats queer people as child predators, Jones sees killing gays as the key to preventing the sexual abuse of children. âWhen they die,â he said, âthat stops the pedophilia. Itâs a very, very simple process.â (The reality is that most sexual abuse of children involves male perpetrators and girl victims and happens inside families.) Though American âChristiansâ like Jones may be years away, if ever, from instituting the death penalty for queer people here, they have already been far more successful in Africa. On May 29, Ugandan president Yoweri Museveni signed perhaps the worldâs harshest anti-LGBT law, criminalizing all homosexual activity, providing the death penalty for âserial offenders,â and according to the Reuters news agency, for the âtransmission of a terminal illness like HIV/AIDS through gay sex.â It also âdecrees a 20-year sentence for âpromotingâ homosexuality.â While Ugandaâs new anti-gay law may be the most extreme on the continent, more than 30 other African countries already outlaw homosexuality to varying degrees."
"Now, however, thereâs a new extermination campaign stalking this country that would definitely include me among its targets: the right-wing Republican crusade against âsexual predatorsâ and âgroomers,â by which they mean LGBTQI+ people. (Iâm going to keep things simple here by just writing âLGBTâ or âqueerâ to indicate this varied collection of Americans who are presently a prime target of the right wing in this country.) You may think âextermination campaignâ is an extreme way to describe the set of public pronouncements, laws, and regulations addressing the existence of queer people here. Sadly, I disagree. Ambitious would-be Republican presidential candidates across the country, from Florida Governor Ron DeSantis to the less-known governor of North Dakota, Doug Burgum, are using anti-queer legislation to bolster their primary campaigns. For Florida, it started in July 2022 with DeSantisâs Parental Rights in Education act (better known as his âDonât Say Gayâ law), which mandated that, in the stateâs public schools, âclassroom instruction by school personnel or third parties on sexual orientation or gender identity may not occur in kindergarten through grade 3 or in a manner that is not age-appropriate or developmentally appropriate for students in accordance with state standards."
"In April 2023, DeSantis doubled down, signing a new law that extended the ban all the way up through high school. Florida teachers at every level now run the very real risk of losing their jobs and credentials if they violate the new law. And queer kids, who are already at elevated risk of depression and suicide, have been deprived of the kind of affirming space that, research shows, greatly reduces those possibilities. Is Florida an outlier? Not really. Other states have followed its lead in restricting mentions of sexual orientation or gender identity in their public schools. By February of this year, 42 such bills had been introduced in a total of 22 states and are creating a wave of LGBT refugees. But the attacks against queer people go well beyond banning any discussion of gayness in public schools. Weâre also witnessing a national campaign against trans and nonbinary people that, in effect, aims to eliminate such human beings altogether, whether by denying their very existence or denying them the medical care they need. This campaign began with a focus on trans youth but has since widened to include trans and nonbinary people of all ages."
"What I failed to emphasize thenâperhaps because I thought it went without saying (but it certainly needs to be said today)âis that fascism is almost by definition deadly. It needs enemies on whom it can focus the steaming rage of its adherents, and it is quite content for that rage to lead to literal extermination campaigns. The creation of such enemies invariably involves a process of rhetorical dehumanization. In fascist propaganda, target groups cease to be actual people, becoming instead vermin, viruses, human garbage, communists, Marxists, terrorists, or, in the case of the present attacks on LGBT people, pedophiles and groomers. As fascist movements develop, they bring underground streams of hatred into the light of âlegitimateâ political discourse. All those decades ago, I suggested that the Christian fundamentalists represented an incipient fascist force. I think itâs fair to say that todayâs Make America Great Again crew has inherited that mantle, successfully incorporating right-wing Christianity into a larger proto-fascist movement. All the elements of classic fascism now lurk there: adulation of the leader, subordination of the individual to the larger movement, an appeal to mythical past glories, a not-so-subtle embrace of white supremacy, and discomfort with anything or anyone threatening the ânaturalâ order of men and women. You have only to watch a video of a Trump rally to see that his is a mass (even if not a majority) movement."
"Why should it matter whether Donald Trumpâs MAGA movement and the Republican Party heâs largely taken over represent a kind of fascism? The answer: because the logic of fascism leads so inexorably to the politics of extermination. Describing his MAGA movement as fascism makes it easier to recognize the existential threat it truly representsânot only to a democratic society but to specific groups of human beings within it. I know it may sound alarmist, but I think itâs true: proto-fascist forces in this country have shown that they are increasingly willing to exterminate queer people, if thatâs what it takes to gain and hold on to power. If Iâm right, that means all Americans, queer or not, now face an existential threat. For those who donât happen to fall into one of MAGAâs target groups, let me close by paraphrasing Donald Trump: In the end, theyâre coming after you. Weâre just standing in the way."
"Avery told us how gay people used to not be allowed to touch. At bars, clubs, wherever, youâd be arrested for touching. So people danced with two feet of space between them and scattered even farther when the cops came. But he said they took up a lot of space when they were dancing, used their whole bodies."
"I saw a Gay Liberation Front flier from the 70âs that said: âTouch One Another.â I didnât quite understand its meaning until Grace and I were at Jewelâs, and Avery told us about the no-touch laws.Then, we understood that the state had existed in the space between two people. I thought about how law creates forcefields between us, isolating us from the touch we need and want. I thought about the after-life of these laws, the way that forcefields still exist all around us and between us.It was profound, and scary, to think about about the way those anti-touch laws still affect my experience of myself."
"In 2006, following the horrific murder of Gwen Araujo, California became the first state to pass legislation limiting the LGBTQ+ âpanicâ defense. The law, named in Gwenâs honor, aimed to âcurtail the use of so-called âpanic strategiesâ... most widely used in criminal cases involving bias based on sexual orientation and gender identity.â More specifically, The Gwen Araujo Justice For Victims Act (AB 1160) allows parties to request âthe court instruct jurors not to allow bias based on sexual orientation, gender identity or other protected bases to influence their decision.â While this bill was pending in the state legislature, Vice President Kamala Harris, at that time San Francisco District Attorney, called for a national conference on combating the LGBTQ+ âpanicâ defense â an action that was also undertaken in Georgia a year earlier by the Fulton County District Attorney in response to the murder of Ahmed Dabarran. Despite this flurry of action regarding the LGBTQ+ âpanicâ defense, for years The Gwen Araujo Justice For Victims Act remained the only legislation in the country limiting the heinous defense strategy. In 2014, California further restricted use of the LGBTQ+ âpanicâ defense when the state legislature passed Assembly Bill No. 2501. While the 2006 Gwen Araujo Justice for Victims Act focused on juror instruction, Assembly Bill No. 2501 codified the illegality of the LGBTQ+ âpanicâ defense. The new law amended Section 192 of Californiaâs Penal Code to prohibit âthe discovery of, knowledge about, or potential disclosure of the victimâs actual or perceived gender, gender identity, gender expression, or sexual orientationâ from being considered objectively reasonable circumstances for a sudden altercation. This means that murder charges cannot be reduced to voluntary manslaughter through the LGBTQ+ âpanicâ defense in California. Importantly, the law also clarifies that this ban includes âcircumstances in which the victim made an unwanted non-forcible romantic or sexual advance towards the defendant, or if the defendant and victim dated or had a romantic or sexual relationship.â Assembly Bill No. 2501 was groundbreaking as the first successful piece of legislation specifically prohibiting the use and limiting the effectiveness of the LGBTQ+ âpanicâ defense. For three years, it was the only legislation in the nation that acted to curtail the use of this heinous courtroom tactic."
"Reverse policies that allow transgender individuals to serve in the military. Gender dysphoria is incompatible with the demands of military service, and the use of public monies for transgender surgeries or to facilitate abortion for servicemembers should be ended."
"If the Supreme Court were to overturn Obergefell, the new federal law guarantees that a same-sex couple who was married in Illinois, for example, would still be recognized as married if they moved to Virginia, which has a ban on same-sex marriage that could be reactivated. But a same-sex couple wishing to be married in Virginia might have to travel out of state to get their marriage license. The Respect for Marriage Act also provides similar protections for interracial marriages. The dynamic could create a challenge for couples who want to get married but canât afford to travel to another state for the license. That would exclude such couples from accessing the benefits that come with marriage, including inheritance, tax benefits, and the ability to make health care decisions for a spouse who is unable to make them themselves. âYou will start to see a real economic justice problem,â Carpenter says. Bryan Wilson, who co-founded the Pride Center West Texas in Odessa, Texas, says the Respect for Marriage Act is a win for him and his husband, and other LGBTQ couples who are already married, but worries it doesnât do enough for young or unmarried people in states like Texas. âI have youth who go, âWell, if on the off chance I ever want to get married in about six, seven years, 10 years, 15 years, Iâm probably not going to be able to do it here anyway, so I hope Iâve moved to California, New York, or Washington,'â Wilson says. âThere will be enough respect for marriage when every state in the union, every territory, has legalized it as well as enshrined it in their constitution, that same-sex marriage is allowed,â Wilson adds.For LGBTQ people living in states with dormant bans on the books who are vulnerable to financial insecurity, face discrimination, or struggle with their mental health, overruling Obergefell could cause a different kind of fallout, experts warn. âIt would be a deep psychological and emotional blow to a lot of gay, lesbian, and bisexual people to be told that even if their state has to recognize a marriage formed out of the state, that their state nonetheless disapproves of their relationship and effectively considers them second class citizens,â says Michael Boucai, a law professor at the University of Buffalo."
"There is a difference between morality and murder. The fact that more people have been slaughtered in the name of religion than for any other single reason. That, that, my friends, is the true perversion! For the standards that we set, should we look to next weekâs headlines? Well, Iâm tired of the lies of the Anita Bryants and the John Briggs. Iâm tired of their myths. Iâm tired of their distortions. Iâm speaking out about it."
"Gay brothers and sisters, what are you going to do about it? You must come out. Come out to your parents. I know that it is hard and that it will hurt them, but think of how they will hurt you in the voting booth! Come out to your relatives. I know that it is hard and will upset them but think of how they will upset you in the voting booth. Come out to your friends. If indeed, they are your friends. Come out to your neighbors, to your co-workers, to the people who work where you eat and shop. Come out only to the people you know, and who know you. Not to anyone else. But once and for all, break down the myths, destroy the lies and distortions. For your sake. For their sake. For the sake of the youngsters who are being terrified by the votes coming from Dade County to Eugene. If Briggs wins, he will not stop. They never do. Like all mad people, they are forced to go on, to prove they were right."
"What would you do if your government identification suddenly ceased to exist? In the state of Kansas last month, hundreds of residents received a notice that their driverâs licenses had been revoked. They hadnât done anything wrong to warrant this action â except change their gender identity. Under a new state law that was passed on Feb. 26, Kansans are now forced to have their documentation reflect their biological sex at birth. As a result, the trans community in Kansas has been left reeling. Forcing trans individuals to renounce their own gender identity is deeply wrong, and it reflects a wider assault on trans rights in the U.S. that serves to dehumanize and minimize their existence. To understand the lawâs harmful impact, we must dig deeper into the details. Known as S.B. 244, it orders that gender markers on a driverâs license or birth certificate must reflect someoneâs assigned sex at birth. Previously, Kansas allowed people to change their gender on government IDs. S.B. 244, however, instantly changed that rule as soon as it became law, affecting about 1700 people in the state. Itâs also worth mentioning that Kansas bills usually become law on July 1, in the year that they are passed, but this one was specifically ordered to take effect just a few days after it was signed. The application of the law was so sudden that those affected had to have friends or family drive them to the DMV so that they could get new licenses. If they had tried to drive themselves, they would have already risked getting pulled over."
"The law also prohibits trans people from using bathrooms in public places according to their preferred gender identity and allows citizens to sue for up to $1000 in damages if they believe someone has violated these rules. According to the Movement Advancement Project (MAP), 20 states currently have laws that prohibit in some form the ability of trans people to enter the bathroom of their choice. With this law, Kansas has put itself near the top of these states in discriminatory severity, since it applies to all public spaces and violations represent a criminal offense. When you add in the amount people can ask for in so-called âdamages,â S.B. 244 represents a particularly draconian and disgusting law. It weaponizes the government and the stateâs own citizens to discriminate against trans individuals. These restrictions on trans rights have already spurred many members of the trans community to think about leaving Kansas. Those who stay are now essentially considered nonexistent until they comply, since their current gender identity has been invalidated. To Kansas, there is no such thing as transitioning anymore â only your initial biology matters. It is especially notable that the law defines gender as a personâs âbiological sex at birth,â even though gender is a social construct and not biological. At the same time, while genetics cannot be altered, some aspects of oneâs biological sex can change. The lawâs language therefore fundamentally misunderstands the actual science and social aspects in favor of catering to anti-trans sentiment."
"Kansasâ law follows the growing efforts of the American right to restrict the rights of trans people and LGBTQ+ individuals in general. In the past few years, especially after Trump was elected to a second term, Republicans have honed in on attacking trans rights. Several Republican states, including Florida and Texas, have already passed laws prohibiting trans individuals from officially changing their gender identity in the future. Kansas is simply the first state to take a drastic step and revoke documents that were already on file. Trans people have had to deal with an increasing amount of discriminatory legislation. According to Trans Legislation Tracker, 2025 saw the highest number of anti-trans bills both considered and passed. Just through the first couple of months in 2026, 15 bills restricting trans rights have already been passed. In addition, the ACLU has tracked 489 anti-LGBTQ+ bills that are currently waiting on votes. This surge in restrictive legislation is in line with the Trump administration, which prevented transgender, intersex and nonbinary people from updating their gender designation on his first day in office. The onslaught on trans rights, both at the state and federal level, represents a concerted effort from Republicans to eliminate their legal standing. Kansasâ law should serve as a fresh reminder that the right will not stop in its attempt to roll back the protections trans individuals had just started to enjoy. By forcing trans people to go against their own identity, Kansas is throwing the weight of the state against their ability to simply live their lives comfortably. Policing bathroom use while revoking driverâs licenses and birth certificates is a clear sign that trans people are no longer welcome in the state of Kansas. If the law is allowed to stand, anti-trans discrimination and dehumanization will continue to get worse."
"Speculation of whether the U.S. Supreme Court will take a case to overturn same-sex marriage at the federal level is mounting after embattled Kentucky Clerk Kim Davis pushed the effort as far up the legal chain as possible. Davis' attorney, Matthew Staver, previously told Newsweek he is optimistic the court will again rule on Obergefell v. Hodges, the landmark case that guaranteed the right to same-sex marriage nationwide. William Powell, the attorney who represented the couple that sued Davis, previously wrote in a statement provided to Newsweek that he is "confident the Supreme Court will likewise agree that Davis' arguments do not merit further attention." Obergefell v. Hodges, as part of a 5-4 Supreme Court ruling in June 2015, guaranteed that same-sex couples can marry by the Due Process Clause and the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution. Prior the Court's ruling, equal rights and protections for same-sex marriage was already established in 36 states by statutes, court rulings, or voter initiatives. Davis made national headlines just two months after the Obergefell v. Hodges decision when she defied a U.S. federal court order to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples. After being elected clerk of Rowan County, Kentucky, in 2014, she was defeated by Democratic challenger Elwood Caudill Jr. in 2018."
"In an interview at Catholic University last week, Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas said what heâs clearly been thinking for the past 30 years: Supreme Court precedents donât matter, and heâs making things up as he goes along to fulfill his own political agenda. He didnât say it in that way, of course. People would have noticed that. Instead, he couched his self-serving philosophy in legal jargon that will fly under the radar of most people, including journalists. Hereâs what he said: âAt some point we need to think about what weâre doing with stare decisis.⌠[I]tâs not some sort of talismanic deal where you can just say âstare decisisâ and not think, turn off the brain, right?â To translate: âStare decisisâ is a foundational legal principle in this country and all countries that follow a âcommon lawâ system. What it means, in simple terms, is that prior judicial rulings govern future judicial rulings. If a court rules, for instance, that âgay people have the same basic rights as everyone else in this country, including the right to marry other people,â then that ruling is supposed to govern all future cases concerning the rights of gay people. Thomas, apparently, doesnât agree. Instead of respecting stare decisis and precedent, he is saying that older cases shouldnât have the power to control newer ones. For Thomas, just because courts ruled that LGBTQ people should have rights in the past, including the right to marry, doesnât mean he feels compelled to rule that they should keep them."
"Weâve seen this in Thomasâs opinions in recent years. In 2022, he declared, in a separate but supporting opinion in the Dobbs case, that Roe v. Wade was not respectful of our legal traditions, but Loving v. Virginia is. Why? Well because Roe gave women rights, while Loving gave Thomas the right to marry his white wife, and if you have a better legal difference between those cases other than Thomasâs own personal preferences, Iâd love to hear you explain it. Thomas has also decided (in this case, writing for the majority) that simple gun registration laws are not respectful of our traditions in this country, but he signed on to an opinion giving the president the powers of the very king we revolted against. You simply cannot chart a course through what passes for logic in Thomasâs head without understanding his preferred policy outcomes. If Thomas were the only justice who thought like this, it would be a containable problem. But the entire Republican cabal on the Supreme Court rules exactly in the way Thomas is talking about, with no respect for precedent or stare decisis. This coming term, the Republicans on the court are likely to overturn a voting rights precedent they set for themselves only a couple of years ago. The Republicans literally cannot be trusted to respect their own rulings."
"Today the Left is threatening the tax-exempt status of churches and charities that reject woke progressivism. They will soon turn to Christian schools and clubs with the same totalitarian intent. The next conservative President must make the institutions of American civil society hard targets for woke culture warriors. This starts with deleting the terms sexual orientation and gender identity (âSOGIâ), diversity, equity, and inclusion (âDEIâ), gender, gender equality, gender equity, gender awareness, gender-sensitive, abortion, reproductive health, reproductive rights, and any other term used to deprive Americans of their First Amendment rights out of every federal rule, agency regulation, contract, grant, regulation, and piece of legislation that exists."
"Protect faith-based grant recipients from religious liberty violations and maintain a biblically based, social scienceâreinforced definition of marriage and family. Social science reports that assess the objective outcomes for children raised in homes aside from a heterosexual, intact marriage are clear: All other family forms involve higher levels of instability (the average length of same-sex marriages is half that of heterosexual marriages); financial stress or poverty; and poor behavioral, psychological, or educational outcomes. For the sake of child well-being, programs should affirm that children require and deserve both the love and nurturing of a mother and the play and protection of a father. Despite recent congressional bills like the Respect for Marriage Act that redefine marriage to be the union between any two individuals, HMRE [Healthy Marriage and Relationship Education] program grants should be available to faith-based recipients who affirm that marriage is between not just any two adults, but one man and one unrelated woman."
"Be it enacted by the General Assembly of Virginia: 1. That the Code of Virginia is amended by adding in Article 1 of Chapter 4 of Title 18.2 a section numbered 18.2-37.1 and by adding in Article 4 of Chapter 4 of Title 18.2 a section numbered 18.2-57.5 as follows: §18.2-37.1. Certain matters not to constitute defenses. A. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the discovery of, perception of, or belief about another person's actual or perceived sex, gender, gender identity, or sexual orientation, whether or not accurate, is not a defense to any charge of capital murder, murder in the first degree, murder in the second degree, or voluntary manslaughter and is not provocation negating or excluding malice as an element of murder. B. Nothing in this section shall be construed to prevent a defendant from exercising his constitutionally protected rights, including his right to call for evidence in his favor that is relevant and otherwise admissible in a criminal prosecution. §18.2-57.5. Certain matters not to constitute defenses. A. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the discovery of, perception of, or belief about another person's actual or perceived sex, gender, gender identity, or sexual orientation, whether or not accurate, is not a defense to any charge brought under this article. B. Nothing in this section shall be construed to prevent a defendant from exercising his constitutionally protected rights, including his right to call for evidence in his favor that is relevant and otherwise admissible in a criminal prosecution."
"The President should immediately revoke Executive Order 1402041 and every policy, including subregulatory guidance documents, produced on behalf of or related to the establishment or promotion of the Gender Policy Council and its subsidiary issues. Abolishing the Gender Policy Council would eliminate central promotion of abortion (âhealth servicesâ); comprehensive sexuality education (âeducationâ); and the new woke gender ideology, which has as a principal tenet âgender affirming careâ and âsex-changeâ surgeries on minors. In addition to eliminating the council, developing new structures and positions will have the dual effect of demonstrating that promoting life and strengthening the family is a priority while also facilitating more seamless coordination and consistency across the U.S. government."
"Gay people, we are painted as child molestors. I want to talk about that. I want to talk about the myth of child molestations by gays. I want to talk about the fact that in this state some 95 percent of child molestations are heterosexual and usually committed by a parent. I want to talk about the fact that all child abandonments are heterosexual. I want to talk about the fact that all abuse of children is by their heterosexual parents. I want to talk about the fact that some 98 percent of the six million rapes committed annually are heterosexual. I want to talk about the fact that one out of every three women who will be murdered in this state this year will be murdered by their husbands. I want to talk about the fact that some 30 percent of all heterosexual marriages contain domestic violence. And finally, I want to tell the John Briggs and the Anita Bryants that they talk about the myths of gays, but today Iâm talking about the facts of heterosexual violence and what the hell are you going to do about that? Clean up your own house before you start telling lies about gays. Donât distort the Bible to hide your own sins. Donât change facts to lies. Donât look for cheap political advantage in playing upon peopleâs fears! Judging by the latest polls, even the youth can tell youâre lying! Anita Bryant, John Briggs: Your unwillingness to talk about your own house, your deliberate lies and distortions, your unwillingness to face the truth, chills my blood. It reeks of madness!"
"Across the nation, people from all walks of life have poured into the streets to protest the deaths of unarmed Black men and women at the hands of the police."
"The aim should be to reshape our society as a whole. We are not doing nearly enough to address the root causes of poverty, addiction, homelessness, and mental-health crises. Instead, we criminalize poverty through harsh fines and debt regulation; criminalize addiction through drug laws; criminalize homelessness by conducting sweeps of people sleeping in parks; and criminalize mental illness by turning prisons into de facto psychiatric hospitals. Why do we focus on these symptoms instead of the true diseases? ... The Black Lives Matter movement and the pandemic has taught us that weâre all in this together, opening up the opportunity to explore building a new, care-based reality. We need a vision of a future in which vital needs like housing, education, and healthcare are met, allowing people to live big, beautiful, fulfilled livesâwith not a prison in sight."
"In the aftermath of the Ferguson protests, it was fashionable to speak of a "new civil-rights movement." But it is perhaps more illuminating to see Black Lives Matter as a new banner raised on the same field of battle, stained by the blood of generations who came before. The fighters are new, but the conflict is the same one that Frederick Douglass and George Ruby fought, one that goes far beyond policing. (p 302)"
"If black lives matter, then it should matter all the time. You should never let somebody get killed. That's somebody's son, That's somebody's brother; that's somebody's friend. So you should always keep that in mind."
"Civil-rights organizers Alicia Garza, Patrisse Cullors, and Opal Tometi put those three words into our minds and hearts seven years ago, when they began to change the country. The sweeping calls for change we see today are not sudden, but the fruits of the labor of activists like them. Their work has given us room to demand more, because black lives donât truly matter just because people simply say so. This year alone, a white father and son carried out the modern-day lynching of 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery near Brunswick, Georgia. If black lives mattered by now, we wouldnât have to say the name of Breonna Taylor, lost to a hail of police bullets in her own home in Louisville in March. Or chant the name of Floyd, killed for allegedly spending a counterfeit twenty-dollar bill at a corner grocery... Accountability after the fact used to be the most that I once hoped for, as a black man just living and trying to survive. Wishing for the cops not to target me indiscriminately felt almost like too much to ask. But I must be honest: If this era of Black Lives Matter activism has not resulted in the kinds of changes to America that would ensure my safety, then it has made me feel more secure in demanding those concessions from my country."
"In 2016 the Black Lives Matter movement has consolidated this sense of a leaderless movement with foot soldiers in every corner of the land. Some of them are indeed sitting in and marching and campaigning, but it's my sense that many more have taken the message and applied it in disparate ways to their daily practice. I see black hair, in its natural state-free of endpapers-springing out of all the scalps of my friends and students and myself. I see kids expanding the old strictures of the hip-hop aesthetic into Afro-punk and Afro-weird and black-girl-magic and every kind of hyphenated existence. And I see the walk. I see folks making a lot of a little."
"Antiblack racism is not only happening in the United States. It's actually happening all across the globe. And what we need now more than ever is a human rights movement that challenges systemic racism in every single context. ... We need this because the global reality is that black people are subject to all sorts of disparities in most of our most challenging issues of our day."
"I think about issues like climate change, and how six of the 10 worst impacted nations by climate change are actually on the continent of Africa... in Haiti is that they were actually facing a number of challenges that even preceded this hurricane. They were reeling from the earthquake, they were reeling from cholera that was brought in by UN peacekeepers and still hasn't been eradicated. This is unconscionable. And this would not happen if this nation didn't have a population that was black, and we have to be real about that."
"To truly promote confidence in these vaccines, we must start by acknowledging this history of mistreatment and exploitation of minorities by the medical community and the government. But then we need to explain and demonstrate all that has been done to correct and address these wrongs."
"One thing I just want to underscore is that the world is watching us. We see these rallies in solidarity emerging all across the globe. ... I think they have been not O.K. for so many years, and they are finally saying, âHey, we are going to take it to the streets and say we are going to show up in solidarity with you.â"
"There [was] a lot of rage, a lot of pain, a lot of cynicism. But her (Garza's) post resonated with me, for a number of reasons. I think it being explicitly black, it being a message rooted in love, and it just felt very hopeful."
"When we first started Black Lives Matter, I always knew that this needed to be a global movement and that we needed more people to participate. The issues of police brutality, extrajudicial killings and anti-Black racism requires everybody to pay attention."
"We are finally achieving a mass consciousness. We're seeing a widespread awareness and commitment to anti-racism that we have long needed. People are now alert and active because the pandemic demonstrated how interconnected our lives are. We finally had time to sit at home and reflect on how our society functions and whether or not it's functioning well for all of us. The overwhelming consensus was that it is not, it is insufficient â in fact, it's been unsustainable for decades, if not generations."
"People have begun to engage in mutual aid and support for their neighbours. Even if people didn't have much, they were still looking out for each other. Through this, we began to see the ways in which new webs were being constructed. When you're sitting at home or living at a slower pace and you see that Black folks in your community are attacked, killed, murdered by vigilantes and by the police, you wake up, you rise to action, and you rise quickly."
"We are now in a moment where people have no excuses to deny the injustice that's happening in the middle of a global pandemic. Things feel different this time because we were able to tap into a sense of our own agency, our own power and our genuine love for each other."
"Voices on the left, voices on the right... What Iâve not heard is a unanimous commitment to atone for the sins of this country. ... It was an 18-year fight to (make) Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday a national holiday. ... Systemic racism can have an ending. Police brutality can have an ending. Economic repression of Black and brown people can have an ending. ... A movement without action is a movement standing still. To those who say they care: Move more than your mouth. ... Black lives do matter. And this is not another digital, viral trend, moment or hashtag. ... Yes, all lives do matter, but they only matter when black lives matter too."
"High school students have organized protests in California, Maryland and Michigan. In one Texas suburb, three teenagers led hundreds of people in a march, and they say they arenât done organizing. In early June, as outrage over racism and police brutality erupted nationwide, three teenagers from Katy, Texas, grew frustrated by a void of activism in their affluent Houston suburb. They banded together under the name Katy4Justice. Over four days, through text messages and video chats, they organized a protest at a neighborhood park, leading hundreds of people in a march through soccer fields and picnic areas in the summer heat... âKaty loves to think itâs progressive and stuff, but nothing ever happens,â said Erika Alvarez, 17, one of the three organizers, all of whom will start their senior year in the fall. Jeffrey Jin, 17, concurred. âItâs very all talk and no do... Thereâs a lot of white silence.â...The youth-led protest in Katy is representative of the way the nationwide demonstrations after George Floydâs death have energized a diverse cohort of the youngest generation. In recent weeks, high school students have led protests in Greenville, Mich.; Laurel, Md.; and Berkeley, Calif. Several teenagers, including those in Katy, said that it was the first time they had organized any sort of demonstration â and that it would not be the last. In Katy, the studentsâ activism was years in the making, they said, shaped by their own experiences with racism."
"I absolutely think people are concerned with police brutality. Let me make that absolutely clear. We have been fighting and advocating to stop a war on black lives. And that is how we see itâthis is a war on black life."
"Despite warnings from public health officials, new research suggests Black Lives Matter protests across the country have not led to a jump in coronavirus cases. ... A new study, published this month by the National Bureau of Economic Research, used data on protests from more than 300 of the largest US cities, and found no evidence that coronavirus cases grew in the weeks following the beginning of the protests."
"Republicans have racialized poverty, and Democrats have run from poverty. And weâre forcing them to deal with the reality. We are very political, but weâre not partisan... There is not some separation between Jesus and justice; to be Christian is to be concerned with whatâs going on in the world. ... It's better to die having fought for justice than to live and stay on the sidelines and to watch injustice have it's way without a challenge."
"[One] example of narrative takeover is the Black Lives Matter movement. This is a life-affirming accountability movement to call attention to the violence being perpetrated against Black people. But rather than listening, learning, and believing the stories of injustice, systemic racism, and pain, groups of white people centered themselves with âall lives matterâ and âblue lives matter.â There was never a narrative of âwhite lives and police lives donât matterâ in this movement. This was an attempt to, once again, decenter Black lives and take over the narrative."
"In order to have a legal arrest, you need probable cause to believe that the person committed a crime. ... There is nothing in the law that allows âproactive arrest.â.. Itâs the power of the people, and people are in the streetsâhundreds of thousands of people in the streets in US cities, and in cities around the worldâin support of the Movement for Black Lives, and against police brutality.. ... We canât rely on the legal system, but itâs a tool that we have to use. ... There is an ACLU lawsuit ... asking for an injunction against these federal agents targeting legal observers, and targeting journalists as well, because the last thing in the world that the Trump administration and his goons want are witnesses, are media that are witnessing whatâs happening ... there are lawsuits being filed in support of the real power, and that is the power of the people."
Young though he was, his radiant energy produced such an impression of absolute reliability that Hedgewar made him the first sarkaryavah, or general secretary, of the RSS.
- Gopal Mukund Huddar
Largely because of the influence of communists in London, Huddar's conversion into an enthusiastic supporter of the fight against fascism was quick and smooth. The ease with which he crossed from one worldview to another betrays the fact that he had not properly understood the world he had grown in.
Huddar would have been 101 now had he been alive. But then centenaries are not celebrated only to register how old so and so would have been and when. They are usually celebrated to explore how much poorer our lives are without them. Maharashtrian public life is poorer without him. It is poorer for not having made the effort to recall an extraordinary life.
I regret I was not there to listen to Balaji Huddar's speech [...] No matter how many times you listen to him, his speeches are so delightful that you feel like listening to them again and again.
By the time he came out of Franco's prison, Huddar had relinquished many of his old ideas. He displayed a worldview completely different from that of the RSS, even though he continued to remain deferential to Hedgewar and maintained a personal relationship with him.