Pentagon agrees to historic legal settlement with gay and lesbian veterans

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/pentagon-legal-settlement-lgbtq-veterans/

When I was in the service in the 1980s it was illegal for gays to serve.ย  But I was mostly openly gay.ย  I had to be careful as did the many “straight” guys who from training on wanted to have sex with me, and worked / asked / begged for us to take an afternoon drive together somewhere remote on the base to those that begged me to take a four day pass with them to travel a little ways away and get a hotel somewhere.ย  ย The reason if someone asked was we were seeing such … or visiting a theme park … what ever was plausible even though no questions were ever asked. I never thought about that then … no one ever questioned anything.ย 

Not that you need to know this but I was having same sex relations with fellow service members several times a week and at least every month having a four day pass to have sex.ย  Once it took me by surprise when on the way back to the base I got my first blowjob while driving.ย  When I asked gratefully why, the guy told me he wanted me to remember him in case he asked to go on another pass.ย  ย He did afterward … repeatedly.ย  ย 

Hey people we were all young really fit horny guys.ย  ย Were they gay?ย  Were they just straight who understood it would be a way to have enjoyable sex?ย  The only thing I will say is that for every act I performed for them both passive and aggressive, they also performed eagerly for me.ย  ย  You make your own judgments.ย ย 

Again this was the 1980s.ย  I knew so many Marines who went into the Marines to have the gay worked out of them by becoming a real man.ย  Others were like me, gay with nowhere to go, some were gay like my long term boyfriend who were gay so went where hunky young guys were.ย  Remember what I have said about my time in.ย  I was very skilled at my job as a technician.ย  But as far as being in the Army … well not so much.ย  But the day I was due to leave my warrant officer, my upper staff, two of who had walked in on me fucking my boyfriend on my bed with his legs up in the air and everything in view … left the room, made a big show of about to enter with lots of rattling keys to come in to our room for an unannounced room inspection finding us flushed with our pants hastily pulled on, look around and then the senior guy Sgt Emory winked as he told us … everything looks great guys … go back to what you were doing before we came in.ย  My boyfriend about wilted and died, but I gave a hardy OK will do.ย  And we did.ย  I managed to get the satellite site back up online with modulation while in civilian clothing, which the others had been frantically trying to do before I jumped in.ย  As I said, not to brag I had a talent for more than sex. They begged me to reenlist.ย  I asked them if they could protect me from the new Company Commander who was from infantry and hard right wing who had told me if I did not leave when my contract was ended would see me court marshaled and given an unfit for service discharge.ย  Like the people of this article.ย  They admitted they couldn’t … so I left and became a civilian with the military losing my skills.ย  ย 

That is what tRump and the bigot LGBTQ+ haters want to return to.ย  The military already is way behind on recruitment due to increasingly better economic times, so this will make recruitment worse.ย  Making trans care for minor dependents unavailable and removing travel pay / time for abortion services will also cut down on retention.ย  Removing the 15,000 to 20,000 trans people will also cut down on military people. Removing women from combat?ย  ย What is the goal, to gut all the US military?ย  To reinstate the draft?ย  ย Anyway here is the article.ย  Please feel free to ask me anything about this post / my time in the military you feel you need answers to.ย  Hugs

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The Pentagon has reached a historic legal settlement with more than 35,000 gay and lesbian military veterans who were dismissed because of their sexual orientation, and in many cases denied an honorable discharge and the array of services they had earned, CBS News has learned.

Under the terms of the agreement, veterans whose discharge papers reference their sexual orientation as a reason for their separation from the military can now avoid a cumbersome legal process and be re-issued paperwork that eliminates any reference to their sexuality. If they wereย denied an honorable discharge, they will also be eligible for an immediate upgrade review, the agreement says.

“When I was discharged because of my sexual orientation, I felt that my country was telling me that my service was not valuable โ€“ that I was ‘less than’ because of who I loved,” said Sherrill Farrell, a U.S. Navy veteran who was a plaintiff in the case. “Today, I am once again proud to have served my country by standing up for veterans like myself, and ensuring our honor is recognized.”

The settlement, which still must receive approval from a federal judge, would resolve the claims from a group of LGBTQ+ veterans who were kicked out of the military years ago because of their sexual orientation. The veteransย filed a federal civil rights suitย in August 2023 over the Defense Department’s failure to grant them honorable discharges or remove biased language specifying their sexuality from their service records following the repeal of “don’t ask, don’t tell” in 2011.

The class action lawsuit, which was brought in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, claims the Pentagon’s failure to correct this “ongoing discrimination” represents a violation of constitutional rights.

It’s been more than a decade since the military lifted its longstanding ban on openly gay and lesbian troops. But thousands of those discharged under past discriminatory policies like “don’t ask, don’t tell” are still carrying less than honorable discharges today, depriving them of the full spectrum of benefits including VA loan programs, college tuition assistance, health care and some jobs.

A CBS News investigation has documented the Pentagon’sย long-running failureย toย restore honorย to theย service recordsย of thousands of veterans who were deprived of veterans benefits after their military careers were cut short. A series of reports documented the ways these veterans’ often traumatic separation from the military shaped the course of their lives.

The settlement would establish a streamlined process for LGBTQ+ veterans who were discharged honorably but whose dismissal was attributed to their sexual orientation โ€” enabling them to be re-issued papers that make no reference to it. And for those who were denied an honorable discharge, the Pentagon would commit to a streamlined upgrade review process.

“This proposed settlement delivers long-overdue justice to LGBTQ+ veterans who served our country with honor but were stripped of the dignity and recognition they rightfully earned due to discriminatory discharge policies,” said Elizabeth Kristen, a senior staff attorney with Legal Aid at Work, a group that helped file the suit. “It marks a crucial step in addressing this deep-seated injustice and ensuring these veterans receive the acknowledgment and respect they have long been denied.”

The Pentagon has issued a series of pledges in the past year to right the wrongs inflicted on gay and lesbian service members in the past year. Both the Pentagon and the Department of Justice declined comment on the proposed settlement when reached Monday.

At the time the civil rights suit was filed, a Pentagon spokesman said the military had made attempts to streamline the upgrade process to a short, two-page application. The department said legal representation was no longer required to apply for a discharge review and that the discharge review boards “continue to strive to finalize 90% of all cases within 10 months as required by statute.”

But the lawsuit, prepared by the Impact Fund, Legal Aid at Work and the law firms King & Spalding LLP and Haynes & Boone LLP, called that a “constitutionally inadequate” response, saying it placed the burden on individual veterans to spend months or years obtaining old personnel records before they could file the applications. Those reviews would then take months or years to be processed, they alleged.

The lawsuit did not seek monetary damages, though the settlement allows the court to approve a $350,000 payment by the Pentagon to cover the plaintiffs’ legal costs.

“This case is not about damages,” Jocelyn Larkin, one of the lawyers representing the plaintiffs, said at the time it was filed. “This case is about simply changing that piece of paper because the effect of changing that piece of paper is so incredibly consequential for our clients.”

While the full scope of past discrimination against gay and lesbian service members remains unknown, Larkin believes the lawsuit could at least help some 35,000 veterans already identified by a Defense Department Freedom of Information Act request, first reported by CBS News in June 2023. The true figure could be significantly higher. According to the most recent data available from the Pentagon, just 1,375 veterans have been granted relief in the form of a discharge upgrade or correction to their record.

Pentagon agrees to historic legal settlement with LGBTQ+ veterans http://www.cbsnews.com/news/pentago… via @CBSNews

justicetoall.bsky.social (@justicetoall.bsky.social) 2025-01-06T17:10:17.988Z

Trans Kids Are On The Chopping Block

The thing I like about the video is that she points out how the state claims it must do this to protect kids from the dangerous drugs yet allows their use for straight cis children just not for trans children.ย  The law states it is about making kids accept their birth assigned gender and keeping them from transitioning.ย  ย 

They tried these laws with kids who were gay decades ago and some still fight for it.ย  Force gay kids to accept a heterosexual orientation through conversion methods and then outlaw being homosexual along with erasing anything homosexual from society.ย  It did not work.ย  ย The courts vigorously defended and backed up gay people’s rights to exist as themselves and have full equality of societies benefits as straight people do.ย ย 

Sadly we have much different courts now stacked with bigots and racists by bigots and racist who will push and promote the bigotry.ย  But in the law itself they wrote the bigotry out loud, clear, and easy to see.ย  The republican lawmakers are making it plain this is about erasing trans kids and that will make erasing trans adults much easier.ย  ย I wonder if they will succeed, but I am worried.ย  ย The video is well worth the watch.ย  If you do not wish to watch the video but prefer to read the transcript she provides a link to it in the description box.ย  Many of the podcasters now do.ย  Hugs

The queer people who are buying guns to prepare for Trumpโ€™s America

https://www.inquirer.com/identity/guns-trump-lgbt-philadelphia-20250105.html

โ€œWeโ€™re not looking to arm up and storm the Capitol,โ€ one gun owner said. โ€œWe just donโ€™t want to be put in concentration camps.โ€

A., who the Inquirer is identifying by the first letter of her first name for safety reasons, stapled two paper plates to the range for her target practice.
A., who the Inquirer is identifying by the first letter of her first name for safety reasons, stapled two paper plates to the range for her target practice.Bradley C Bower / For The Inquirer
ย 

On a brisk Saturday afternoon, A. crouched in a boxerโ€™s stance, knees bent, one hip forward, raised her new Ruger Security-380 pistol aloft with both hands, and pulled the trigger. Spent gold casings clinked to the ground as a paper plate across the range filled with bullet holes. Next to her, a row of men in sweatshirts and earmuffs affably shot their own marks.

A., who The Inquirer is identifying by the first letter of her first name because of safety concerns, is new to the world of shooting ranges and target practice. As a trans woman who lives in Philadelphia, she began seriously considering armed self-defense this summer, as she saw Texas uphold a ban on gender-affirming care for minors and Florida prohibit nurse practitioners from prescribing hormones to transgender people. She watched with increasing dread as Republicans spent nearly $215 million on network TV ads portraying people like her as a dangerous threat to the country.

โ€œThree months before the election, thatโ€™s when the alarm bells started to ring,โ€ A., who is 24 and speaks carefully and thoughtfully, said recently. When she mentioned wanting to learn how to fire a gun to friends, they stared at her blankly.

But she felt she couldnโ€™t have been more rational. On Nov. 2, she bought her first gun, at Deliaโ€™s Gun Shop in Northeast Philly.

ย 

โ€œMinorities that are armed are more difficult to legally oppress,โ€ she said. She was reassured by the idea that โ€œin the event of hate crimes or terrorist attacks, knowing that, โ€˜OK, Iโ€™m personally armed and I can protect my property and people that are close to me.โ€™โ€ She is applying for a concealed carry permit in Pennsylvania, though she doesnโ€™t plan to carry the gun with her every day.

By the end of her practice at the outdoor range at French Creek State Park, bullet casings littered the ground near her backpack and water bottle, which was decorated with rainbow hearts and a โ€œProtect Trans Kidsโ€ sticker.

A. prepared to shoot at the French Creek State Park outdoor range.
A. prepared to shoot at the French Creek State Park outdoor range.Bradley C Bower / For The Inquirer

โ€˜If I canโ€™t protect myself, who will?โ€™

Since Donald Trumpโ€™s reelection in November, nontraditional gun groups across the city and country have seen a flood of interest. The national Liberal Gun Club said it has received thousands of training requests since the election, more than in all of 2023. A spokesperson for the group estimated that roughly a quarter were from LGBTQ people.

In Philadelphia, in the waning weeks of the year, residents peppered local queer Facebook groups with questions about guns and training. The local chapter of the Socialist Rifle Association, a leftist analogue to the National Rifle Association, said it saw a surge in paid memberships; its regular classes about gun safety filled up immediately, so they added more. The head of the Delaware Valley chapter of the Pink Pistols, a longtime gay gun group with the slogan โ€œArmed Gays Donโ€™t Get Bashed,โ€ said he received a sudden flurry of emails inquiring about gun training.

ย 

โ€œThereโ€™s definitely a feeling among a lot of LGBT individuals: โ€˜If I canโ€™t protect myself, who will?โ€™โ€ said Madeline Shearman, a trans woman based in Glen Mills who runs a casual and growing โ€œ2A social groupโ€ in Pennsylvania. โ€œI feel that way myself.โ€

In Pennsylvania, overall gun sales were down in 2024, according to figures from the State Police: 666,759 firearms were lawfully purchased or privately transferred through the end of October, a drop from the 2020 record high of 1.1 million.

Itโ€™s difficult to track rises and falls in LGBTQ gun ownership because there are few published studies about the relatively small population, said David Yamane, a professor of sociology at Wake Forest University and author of the book Gun Curious.

ยป READ MORE: Gun sales and permits surged during the pandemic in Philly and Pennsylvania

ย 

But in general, Yamane argues that American gun culture has dramatically shifted in recent years, away from a focus on hunting and recreation and toward a focus on self-defense, the core of what he calls โ€œGun Culture 2.0.โ€ As the culture has shifted, people who own guns have become far more diverse. He pointed to 2020 as a pivotal year.

โ€œIt was a period of tremendous social unrest and social uncertainty. And a large number of people in the United States, under those conditions, look to firearms to reestablish some sense of safety and security,โ€ Yamane said. He added that racial and gender minorities โ€œled the wayโ€ in terms of new gun ownership rates in 2020 and afterward.

A. purchased her gun on November 2, 2024.
A. purchased her gun on November 2, 2024.Bradley C Bower / For The Inquirer

ยป READ MORE: Gun ownership boomed during the pandemic. Meet some of the reluctant firearm owners.

Yamane also pointed to other political moments that have fueled gun interest in the LGBTQ community. Pink Pistols, which has more than two dozen chapters across the country, was originally founded in 2000 after the writer Jonathan Rauch proposed in a Salon article that โ€œhomosexuals should embark on organized efforts to become comfortable with guns, learn to use them safely and carry them. They should set up Pink Pistols task forces, sponsor shooting courses and help homosexuals get licensed to carry.โ€

Brandon Wolf, a survivor of the Pulse nightclub shooting and activist, looks at the photos that were part of a Pulse memorial in Orlando, Fla., in 2022.
Brandon Wolf, a survivor of the Pulse nightclub shooting and activist, looks at the photos that were part of a Pulse memorial in Orlando, Fla., in 2022.Cody Jackson / AP

The devastating mass shooting at the Pulse nightclub in Florida in 2016 was another catalyst. Thatโ€™s when Matthew Thompson, who lives in Oakland, N.J., purchased his first gun. A gay man and custom leather worker, Thompson often travels to leather and bear events on the weekends, and feared what might happen. He began practicing drills at home โ€” setting a timer on his phone, wearing his unloaded gun around the house, and drawing it quickly when the timer went off.

Days after the presidential election, he began pursuing his concealed carry permit in New Jersey. He is also organizing other LGBTQ people to practice at a local gun range.

ย 

โ€œThe people Iโ€™ve been seeing on the left and the gay people who are out purchasing guns for the first time, itโ€™s all about self-defense and fear,โ€ said Thompson, who is 36. โ€œWeโ€™re not looking to arm up and storm the Capitol. We just donโ€™t want to be put in concentration camps.โ€

Gun safety with the Socialist Rifle Association

In mid-December, the Socialist Rifle Associationโ€™s local chapter held its monthly โ€œGun-damentalsโ€ class. A dozen people gathered in a ramshackle room at the Lava Community Center in West Philadelphia, where a range of unloaded firearms were displayed on the front table. Many of the attendees said they had little or no experience with guns.

The organization, founded nationally in 2018, tries to take a community-based approach to defense, organizers said. Once a month, its volunteers distribute food and medical supplies to people living on the street in Kensington, and the group also leads first aid and de-escalation training classes.

ย 

The recent gun-safety class was earnest and efficient: two organizers led the group through an information-packed PowerPoint presentation, explaining the legal landscape in Pennsylvania, the process of purchasing a gun, and basic safety tips, using a laser pointer to emphasize certain points.

Despite peopleโ€™s hopes about increasing their safety, researchers have found that higher rates of gun ownership and access is correlated with higher rates of gun-related homicides, suicides, accidental deaths, and injuries. In an effort to reduce that danger, the SRA said it focuses on teaching responsible firearm ownership and safe storage.

The public handgun range at French Creek State Park.
The public handgun range at French Creek State Park.Bradley C Bower / For The Inquirer

An organizer wearing an Eagles cap and a black sweatshirt lingered on a slide about mental health.

โ€œSo guns are weapons, and theyโ€™re really good at what they do, which is killing things,โ€ he said, as some attendees nodded and took notes. โ€œ85% of suicides attempted with firearms lead to death. … So you have to be mindful, if this is something that you do want to bring into your life, that youโ€™re aware of your own mental health going into it.โ€

Doug, a therapist who asked to be identified solely by their first name to maintain professional privacy, joined the SRA after the election. They had been in the Boy Scouts growing up, had shot BB guns at camp, and gone to the shooting range occasionally with friends. But they had never owned a gun.

They attended the gun-safety class. Then in early December, they purchased their first gun, an AR-15. Doug was partly motivated by the fact that their official identifications are gender nonspecific, which could alert authorities to the fact that they are nonbinary. They feared they might not be able to buy a gun in the future.

โ€œThis country is not, I wouldnโ€™t say, on very solid footing,โ€ Doug said. โ€œAs a Boy Scout, Iโ€™d rather be prepared.โ€

Zoe Greenberg
Zoe Greenberg
I write about gender, sexuality, and how people make money and meaning.

The women reliving January 6 while preparing for Trump’s return

Jan 06, 2025 Mariel Padilla Originally published by The 19th

Rep. Becca Balint of Vermont, who was elected to the 118th Congress in 2022, said she was shaped and largely motivated by January 6, 2021 โ€”  the day a mob of President Donald Trumpโ€™s supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol and temporarily halted the certification of the legitimate results of the 2020 election. 

“A lot of the members who ran in the 118th and 119th Congress understood that we were running towards a house on fire and that being honestly democracy itself,” Balint said.

Balint said she vividly remembers January 6, 2021, because it was supposed to be one of the happiest days of her life: She was being sworn in as the first woman to lead the Vermont Senate. When her security team popped into her office to tell her that the U.S. Capitol was under attack, Balint said the footage โ€œshook me to my core.โ€ 

The attack, which the Federal Bureau of Investigation called an act of domestic terrorism, sparked the Department of Justiceโ€™s largest criminal investigation in the countryโ€™s history and led to more than 1,500 people being federally charged. Rioters brought firearms, knives, hatchets, pepper spray, baseball bats, stun guns and explosive devices to fight Capitol Police officers and storm the building where lawmakers were actively voting to certify the 2020 election. Five people died during or soon after the riot, approximately 140 law enforcement officers were injured and $2.9 million worth of damage was done to the Capitol. 

The day after the Capitol riot, Trump referred to the event as a โ€œheinous attackโ€ but has since promised to pardon those who were arrested in connection with the insurrection. Trump himself was indicted on felony charges in 2023 for attempting to overturn the results of the 2020 election โ€”  a criminal case that was dismissed shortly after he won the 2024 presidential election. The president-elect has since started describing January 6 as a โ€œday of love,โ€ as he did on the campaign trail. 

As Congress votes again to certify the results of the 2024 presidential election, the country prepares to welcome back to the Oval Office the same man who denied his loss four years ago and threatened the countryโ€™s tradition of a peaceful transfer of power. 

โ€œIt always sends a shiver down my spine when I hear people say โ€˜Americans donโ€™t care about January 6 anymore โ€” move on,โ€™โ€ Balint said. โ€œIโ€™m not moving on. It was a dark day in our history, and Iโ€™m not moving on.โ€ 

The 19th reached out to every woman in Congress โ€” just as it did in 2021 and 2022 โ€” to collect reflections on how January 6 continues to impact them and the country. Seventeen Democratic congresswomen and one senator responded and talked about their remaining trauma, their concern about the normalization of violence and their strong sense of duty to combat any efforts to whitewash that day.


โ€˜Thereโ€™s a record of this.โ€™ 

Hereโ€™s what they said about how the spread of misinformation and disinformation surrounding that day has downplayed the severity of violence and the gravity of what was almost destroyed.

Rep. Suzanne Bonamici of Oregon: I still have seared in my memory the images of Capitol Police officers and other people being beaten. People lost their lives. โ€ฆ Itโ€™s not like somebody made this up. There are videos. There are pictures. There are statements. Thereโ€™s a record of this. And there were people that were convicted by juries of their peers.

Rep. Deborah Ross of North Carolina: I think the most important thing is to be brutally honest about what happened that day. Many of us were there to witness, and weโ€™re here to testify. We cannot allow Donald Trump and his cronies to deny what needs to be preserved for history. The next generation should know how fragile our democracy is and march forward, clear-eyed and ready to fight.

Balint: My grandfather was killed in the Holocaust and so I was raised in a family in which we were taught to be vigilant when people start eroding rights, upending norms, scapegoating people. When up is down and black is white and we canโ€™t agree on basic facts, that is all an indication that we are headed in a very scary direction as a country.

Rep. LaMonica McIver of New Jersey: I think [Trump] is going to do whatever he can to make January 6 be remembered like itโ€™s July 4. In his mind, I think itโ€™s going to be put in the highest regard and glorify the day as much as he can. And heโ€™s going to have four years to try and get the rest of the country to do the same.

Rep. Chellie Pingree of Maine: I think itโ€™s very troubling that this incoming president could convince people that he either wasnโ€™t responsible or that somehow all that didnโ€™t matter. But sometimes it takes us a while to process big, complicated changes like this. Maybe there will be a time when we can reflect back and say that this was a mistake, that we overlooked it, that it took us time to realize how serious that movement was.

Rep. Jill Tokuda of Hawaii: As we approach January 6 once again, we all have a responsibility to stand up against the normalization of political violence and disinformation. We cannot forget what happened that day and as Americans, it is incumbent on us to reject violence in any form from infecting our politics and our democracy.


โ€˜Deeply, deeply disappointed.โ€™ 

Many of the lawmakers said they are still processing what it means about the state of our country that the same man who incited an insurrection could be re-elected four years later. Several emphasized that those involved in planning, executing or inciting the riot still need to be held accountable before the country can heal and move forward.

Sen. Tammy Duckworth speaks on Capitol Hill on in February 2023, in Washington D.C.
Sen. Tammy Duckworth speaks on Capitol Hill on in February 2023, in Washington D.C. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post/Getty Images)

Sen. Tammy Duckworth of Illinois: As deeply, deeply disappointed as I am that that same twice-impeached president who led a coup against our government is headed back to the Oval Office, make no mistake: My Democratic colleagues and I, unlike many Republicans after the 2020 election, will uphold the will of the American people, fulfill our constitutional duty and do our part to ensure a peaceful transfer of power.

Rep. Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut: As Donald Trump returns to the presidency, I feel an even greater responsibility to ensure that we do not let an election outcome diminish the gravity of what happened that day. His re-election does not change the reality of the insurrection or absolve those who incited and participated in it. It does not erase the trauma experienced by Capitol staff and Capitol Police officers who defended our democracy at great personal risk. 

Rep. Gwen Moore of Wisconsin: Donald Trump, a convicted felon and aspiring autocrat, is promising to let loose dangerous rioters into our communities and threatening lawmakers and journalists with imprisonment. Trumpโ€™s lawlessness and thirst for political revenge is why I have repeatedly said he is unfit for office. 

Rep. Lois Frankel of Florida: People have short memories. People are more consumed with their own lives [when they go to the polls]. And Iโ€™m not saying thatโ€™s a bad thing; itโ€™s just an observation. What was probably on peopleโ€™s minds? Their bank account, their rent, price of food, right? 

Rep. Joyce Beatty of Ohio: We learned a lot of lessons through this last election. The American people know what they want to hear, whether itโ€™s true or not. 

Rep. Judy Chu of California: No matter what happens during Trumpโ€™s second term, the events of January 6, 2021, will forever be his legacy. He refused to concede or even acknowledge that there was a free and fair election in 2020, and he is still pressuring the Justice Department and intends to continue to pressure the Justice Department.

Rep. Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts: Trumpโ€™s return to the highest office in the land, despite his central role in the insurrection, is a gut punch to anyone who cares about our democracy. But it does not absolve us of our responsibility to pursue accountability and continue telling the story of what happened that day.

Rep. Pramila Jayapal of Washington: I still put the onus on the Republicans in the Senate who refused to convict him. Thatโ€™s something I think about all the time being on the Judiciary Committee. I think our founding fathers assumed that perhaps there would be a dictator as president โ€” thatโ€™s envisioned in the Constitution. But they also assumed that an entire party would not just enter into a cult and follow that dictator. They assumed that there would be enough people on both sides of the aisle willing to do what it takes to preserve democracy, and that is clearly not the case. 


โ€˜I still tremble at the mere mention of the date.โ€™ 

For many of the women, there is lingering trauma. 

Jayapal: It will always be a day that is very, very tough emotionally. I started a gallery group after, a very close support group to process the trauma โ€” itโ€™s something that none of us will ever forget. 

Rep. Frederica Wilson of Florida: I still tremble at the mere mention of the date January 6, a day that is forever tainted with fear, violence and terror. To have lived it is to never ever forget it. America can never fathom what we experienced. It was like playing a role in a horror movie and hoping that it would soon come to an end. 

Rep. Teresa Leger Fernandez of New Mexico: It makes me sick to my stomach that the people who desecrated our democracy will be pardoned and potentially invited back into the Capitol. It makes me incredibly sad to think that there will be Capitol Police โ€” police who were brutalized and beaten by the mob โ€” who will just have to stand there.

Rep. Sara Jacobs of California: Iโ€™ve been very nervous thinking about and leading up to January 6. I still have lingering trauma from the first one. I don’t like big crowds and loud noises. And I just keep thinking that they have no incentive to be violent this time, right? But it still makes me very nervous because we havenโ€™t actually done the sort of reconciliation and hard work and accountability work that we need to do as a country. โ€ฆ I know that peopleโ€™s trust and faith in institutions is a key part of addressing political violence because political violence only happens when people donโ€™t feel like the nonviolent, institutional way of doing things is actually going to create the effect they want. 


Rep. Ann McLane Kuster talks to Capitol Police officer Sgt. Aquilino Gonell after he testified before the House Select Committee investigating the January 6 attack on the Capitol.
Rep. Ann McLane Kuster talks to Capitol Police officer Sgt. Aquilino Gonell after he testified before the House Select Committee investigating the January 6 attack on the Capitol on July 27, 2021, in Washington, D.C.
(Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Rep. Ann McLane Kuster of New Hampshire said she is still dealing with lasting post-traumatic stress disorder from January 6, one the โ€œmost impactful eventsโ€ in her life. Kuster was also one of the last five lawmakers to be evacuated from the House floor. She could hear the thundering crowds and pounding on the doors and experienced a panic attack as officers snuck them into an elevator and rushed them through an underground tunnel to safety. Kuster later saw security footage of insurrectionists with backpacks, bear mace and zip ties entering the same hallway she had just evacuated 30 seconds earlier.

โ€œIโ€™m haunted by the idea that if the police hadnโ€™t pushed back five seconds here, five seconds there, pushing back on the bicycle racks, pushing back on the people who were crushed in the doors โ€” that the five of us would have been kidnapped, murdered or maimed,โ€ Kuster said. โ€œIt was only a five-vote majority and if we hadnโ€™t been there, America might not have woken up to Joe Biden as the lawfully elected president of the United States.โ€ 

Kuster decided to retire this year before Trump is sworn in as the 47th President of the United States and attributes January 6 as one of the reasons for that decision. In addition to the lingering trauma, Kuster said sheโ€™s received more and more death threats and has noticed a marked increase of violent rhetoric in public discourse. 

โ€œHe tried to kill me once,โ€ Kuster said. โ€œIโ€™m not available for it again.โ€

Some trans short news videos.

President-elect Donald Trump repeatedly pledged to roll back rights for transgender people during his campaign. Kate Sosin, LGBTQ+ reporter for The 19th, joins “America Decides” to discuss how those Americans are preparing for the incoming Trump administration.

Three transgender youths and their families from Arizona traveled across the country to ensure their voices were heard on the steps of the Supreme Court as justices heard oral arguments for the most important transgender rights case the court has ever reviewed โ€” one that could have significant consequences on the future of lifesaving gender-affirming care for youth in the country. About a third of the teenagers in the United States who identify as transgender live in states that have limited access to puberty-blocking medication and hormone therapies. In an election cycle that saw Republicans spend at least $215 million on attack ads about transgender rights, these families share their fears, hopes, and determination to fight for their right to exist. Lucy Kafanov explores the emotional toll of anti-trans legislation, the fight for bodily autonomy, and what it means for trans youth to lose access to life-saving care.

Ben Shapiro vs Neil deGrasse Tyson: The WAR Over Transgender Issues

Ok I know I posted a clip of this from a different channel but this one gives more of Neil deGrasse Tyson’s full answer with a calmer host who did not chop it up.ย  ย I like this version better because you can see how forceful and direct Tyson is being and that he is clearly amused by the trans hater who think someone’s gender expression is their business.ย  It also shows Shapiro’s growing apprehension as he realizes that Tyson doesn’t agree with him.ย  He clearly thought incorrectly that Tyson would echo his own bigoted opinion.ย  He gets flustered because at the point he normally bullies someone and talks over them, Tyson doesn’t let him do it.ย  This is a beautiful short well crafted answer to any transphobe.ย  ย Hugs

Join renowned astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson and political commentator Ben Shapiro in a thought-provoking debate exploring one of todayโ€™s most complex and polarizing topics: transgender identity and rights.

In this intellectual face-off, Tyson brings his scientific expertise and philosophical perspective, emphasizing individual identity, societal progress, and inclusivity. Meanwhile, Shapiro approaches the topic from a traditionalist and legalistic angle, focusing on biological realities, societal norms, and policy implications.

The discussion between Ben Shaprio and Neil deGrasse Tyson dives deep into the intersections of science, culture, and ethics, tackling questions about gender identity, biological sex, free speech, and the role of government in regulating such matters. As always, both figures present their arguments with their characteristic wit and rigor, challenging viewers to think critically about the nuanced dimensions of the topic.

Whether youโ€™re here to learn, debate, or deepen your understanding of the issues, this conversation promises to spark reflection and dialogue. Don’t forget to share your thoughts in the comments belowโ€”respectful discussion is encouraged!ย 

McDonaldโ€™s is the latest company to roll back diversity goals

https://apnews.com/article/mcdonalds-diversity-dei-goals-845d94cd46511341a43e98e057b0fa8e

Please notice the part of the story that talks about Robby Starbuck, if you don’t know of him clicking on his blue highlighted name leads to another story of how he coerced John Deere.ย  McDonald’s claims they are doing this because of the SCOTUS actions on school admissions, but sorry they are not colleges or universities.ย  ย They are a private business and have the right to set their own no discrimination goals and policies.ย  ย By blaming the court ruling they are trying to divert attention from the real reason.ย  ย 

Back to Robby Starbuck, This sub human pond scum is winning because he uses threats of hurting the profit of these companies.ย  ย Now maybe the shareholders are predetermined to be racist bigots.ย  But if we want this coercion to stop, we must be as loud, willing to band together, and use our money even when it hurts.ย  So far only one company has stood against him and Stephen Miller’s white power legal company.ย  ย We must rise up as we once did, make the haters ashamed again like we did over 1970s to 1990s.ย  We can retire meekly to our self-imposed prisons of our homes and acting straight or cis, but that will only encourage them.ย  This is how it went down in Russia and the Russian controlled influenced nations.ย  ย  The maga cultist and fundamentalist Christian bigots are following the Putin playbook in lockstep.ย  We have to show them the playbook won’t work here.ย  ย And trust me it is easier to do now than in a future where they have removed all sign of the LGBTQ+ people from society.ย  ย Hugs

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A McDonaldโ€™s restaurant stands in Albany, Ore., April 29, 2024. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane, File)

Conservative Boycott of Small LGBTQ Business Backfires BADLY

A small conservative group in Lancaster, Ohio targeted local businesses and institutions that were LGBTQ+ friendly in response to an annual family-friendly pride event that held an outdoor drag show. When the group failed to get the city to penalize drag performersโ€”and ban drag altogetherโ€”they then circulated a boycott list. Local business owners, however, were not harmed by the boycott. In fact, they saw a major influx in traffic after people drove from out of town to support the businesses after seeing them on the anti-LGBTQ+ boycott list.

J.K. Rowling Transvestigates ANOTHER African Cis Woman

Another cis woman from Africa has become the target of a transvestigation from Harry Potter author J. K. Rowling. This time itโ€™s Barbra Banda, a Zambian soccer star who was voted BBCโ€™s footballer of the year. J.K. Rowling insinuated that Banda was a trans woman and that her award was offensive to all women. This comes after she spearheaded a global cyberbullying campaign against Imane Khelif, an Algerian gold medalist who competed in the Paris Olympics.ย 

Only 2 days into 2025 & already multiple terrorist attacks in the U.S.

Joe Rogan GOES OFF After Falling For INSANE Hoax | Hasanabi reacts

This is for those who think Joe Rogan is the top of the right wing media thinkers.ย  Like Tim Pool, he doesn’t think about what he is to say or post.ย  Rogan decided that he needed to post about kids in schools demanding cat litter boxes in schools without ever looking into it claiming it was because of furry kids.ย  During the transphobia panic.ย  ย Not bothering to ask any school about it.ย  Yes some schools did have buckets of cat litter in the classrooms, not for kids who were furries but for kids who were in a mass shooting situation that had to pee.ย  I am tired of these sad right wing media lying assholes.ย  ย  ย Hugs