Central Park Pride Concert Cancelled Over โ€œSecurity Concernsโ€ About Singer Accused Of Being Anti-Israel

Pride events are very expensive to put on.ย  ย Most of the cost is security and insurance.ย  The more threats from haters, normally fundamentalist religious people, the more security needed and the more costly insurance is.ย  It is another weapon the haters of the LGBTQ+ community have learned to use to shut down events for people they hate.ย  So much for freedoms these people keep demanding for themselves but want to deny to others.ย  ย Hugs


ย 

May 7, 2025

New York Cityโ€™s NBC affiliateย reports:

Kehlani โ€˜s planned concert in Central Park next month has been canceled after New York Cityโ€™s mayor raised security concerns about the R&B starโ€™s performance during Pride month, organizers announced Monday.

The โ€œAfter Hoursโ€ singer had been set to headline a June 26 concert billed as โ€œPride with Kehlaniโ€ at the Manhattan park as part of SummerStage, an annual slate of free concerts at parks across the city.

But organizers, in their announcement, cited concerns from Mayor Eric Adamsโ€™ administration about the โ€œcontroversy surrounding Cornell Universityโ€™s decision to cancel Kehlaniโ€™s concert at the University, as well as security demands in Central Park and throughout the City for other Pride events during that same period.โ€

Theย Cornell Sunย reports:

Following the April 10 announcement of Kehlani as the original Slope Day headliner, some students and parents criticized the artistโ€™s anti-Israel rhetoric and social media presence. Cornellians for Israel also launched a petition against the selection of Kehlani as the Slope Day headliner that accumulated over 5,000 signatures.

Cornell revoked Kehlaniโ€™s invitation to headline Slope Day over what President Michael Kotlikoff labeled โ€œantisemitic, anti-Israel sentiments.โ€

But the cancellation sparked criticism from student groups about freedom of speech and institutional neutrality. The Community Slope Day Instagram account urged students to โ€œboycott Slope Day,โ€ writing that Kehlaniโ€™s โ€œopposition to the genocide in Palestine isnโ€™t hatefulโ€ and that the decision was made โ€œwithout representative input of the student body.โ€

It doesnโ€™t appear that Kehlani has any affiliation with NYC Pride itself. The cult is celebrating the cancellation. The recent single below has 32 million views on YouTube.

They’re doing it again, they are so messed up and hurtful. They are destroying everything they touch Part 2

Trump & Deportations: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)

John Oliver discusses the recent deportations by the Trump administration, the conditions in the facility people are being sent to abroad, and why even Henry Winkler could be in danger of being expelled from the U.S. Yeah, even national treasure Henry Winkler.

Support for the LGBTQ+ in the tRump hate era.

FYI, Salt Lake City isn't alone in doing adopting special flags to circumvent the new state law. The Boise City Council did the same thing last night. From @fox13news.bsky.social's sister-station in Boise: http://www.kivitv.com/downtown-boi… #utpol #Utah

Ben Winslow (@benwinslow.bsky.social) 2025-05-07T12:47:58.625Z

On Tuesday night, the Boise City Council voted 5 to 1 to pass a resolution that marks the Pride flag as one of three official city flags.

Boise State Public Radio (@boisestatepublicradio.org) 2025-05-07T14:08:03.774Z

US Complicity In Israel’s Gaza Starvation Is Policy, Not Accident

Trigger warnings for starving and abused kids / people.ย  ย Sadly this is what the US government is supporting and keeping other world leaders from stopping.ย  ย This was because Biden was an old person who remembered being part of Israels founding and thought they were so important that it excused everything they did.ย  tRump doesn’t care about the human cost, he wants the value of the land or as much of the share he can get.ย  This is sickening.ย  Personal note.ย  I was so lacking nutrition in my childhood that my childhood doctors were concerned enough to tell my adopting mother if I did not get more food I would never see five feet in height.ย  I ended up in a child ICU rushed to the hospital by my grandfather and I had clinical death.ย  Hugs

 

They’re doing it again, they are so messed up and hurtful. They are destroying everything they touch Part1

WELKER: Your secretary of state says everyone who's here, citizens and non-citizens, deserve due process. Do you agree?TRUMP: I don't know. I'm not a lawyer. I don't know.WELKER: Don't you need to uphold the Constitution?TRUMP: I don't know

Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) 2025-05-04T13:58:54.479Z

In November, Dhillon appeared on Tucker Carlsonโ€™s podcast to recount โ€œall the crimes committed by Kamala Harris.โ€

Other estimates have placed the cost of the parade at twice the $45 million cited by NBC.

BREAKING: The Supreme Court halts a district court injunction that had blocked Trump's ban on transgender military service. SCOTUS is clearing the way for Trump to enforce his purge of transgender troops. All three liberals dissent. http://www.documentcloud.org/documents/25…

Mark Joseph Stern (@mjsdc.bsky.social) 2025-05-06T18:02:54.696Z

Transgender peopleโ€™s lives at risk of being made โ€˜unliveableโ€™, says Nicola Sturgeon

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2025/may/06/transgender-peoples-lives-at-risk-of-being-made-unliveable-says-nicola-sturgeon

Former Scottish first minister expresses concern about interim advice from EHRC

Nicola Sturgeon

The final years of Nicola Sturgeonโ€™s leadership were dominated by debate around the passing of her gender recognition legislation.ย Photograph: Stuart Wallace/Rex/Shutterstock

The lives of transgender people in the UK are at risk of being made โ€œunliveableโ€,ย Nicola Sturgeonย has said in her first public comments about the supreme court ruling on the legal definition of a woman, which was prompted by legislation she oversaw in the Scottish parliament.

The UK supreme courtย ruledย that the terms โ€œwomanโ€ and โ€œsexโ€ in the Equality Act referred only to a biological woman and to biological sex. This was the conclusion of a long-running court action by the gender critical campaign group For Women Scotland, who objected to a law passed at Holyrood aimed at improving womenโ€™s representation on public boards being extended to transgender women.

Sturgeon said the supreme courtโ€™s ruling โ€“ โ€œby very definition โ€ฆ the law of the landโ€ โ€“ could not be questioned but expressed profound concerns about interim advice published by the Equality and Human Rights Commission amounting to aย blanket banย on trans people using toilets and other services of the gender they identify as.

โ€œThe question for me, and I think for a lot of people, is how that is now translated into practice; can that be done in a way that, of course, protects women, but also allows trans people to live their lives with dignity and in a safe and accepted way.

โ€œI would be very concerned if that interim guidance became the final guidance and I hope that is not the case because I think that potentially makes the lives of trans people almost unliveable.

โ€œIt certainly doesnโ€™t make a single woman any safer to do that because the threat to women comes from predatory and abusive men.โ€

The former first minister and SNP leader added that it was not inevitable that the judgment would make the lives of transgender people โ€œimpossibly difficultโ€, but there was a danger that certain interpretations could put transgender rights at risk.

โ€œIf that is the case, then yes, it would be my view that the law as it stands needs to be looked at,โ€ she told reporters at the Scottish parliament on Tuesday.

The Scottish media and prominent gender critical campaigners have been calling on Sturgeon to respond since the ruling, whichย prompted jubilation among gender critical activists and sent shock wavesย through the trans community.

Sturgeon has been a staunch advocate of transgender rights, and the final years of her premiership were dominated by the increasingly toxic and polarised debate around the passing of her flagship gender recognition reforms in late 2022.

The bill, which was passed with cross-party support at Holyrood, made it easier and less intrusive for individuals to legally change their gender, extending the new system of self-identification to 16- and 17-year-olds for the first time. But it was immediately blocked by the Rishi Sunakโ€™s UK government as cutting across the UK-wide Equality Act.

After this unprecedented veto, Sturgeon accused some opponents of the bill of using womenโ€™s rights as a โ€œcloak of acceptability to cover up what is transphobiaโ€, telling the NewsAgents podcast that some critics of the legislation were also โ€œdeeply misogynist, often homophobic, possibly some of them racist as wellโ€.

On Tuesday Sturgeon rejected the suggestion made by many of her critics that she owed them an apology after the ruling.

โ€œI fundamentally, and respectfully, disagree,โ€ she said. โ€œI recognise the different views on this, Iโ€™ve always recognised the different views on this, but I think its important that respect runs in both directions.โ€

But co-director of For Womenย Scotland, Susan Smith, said Sturgeonโ€™s claim that life would be made โ€œunliveableโ€ was โ€œfrankly wrong and quite disturbingโ€. Smith told BBC Scotland News that single-sex spaces were needed to provide women with โ€œprivacy, dignity, safety at time when theyโ€™re vulnerableโ€.

Peace & Justice History for 5/7

May 7, 1954
The battle at Vietnamโ€™s Dien Bien Phu ended after 55 days with Viet Minh insurgents overrunning French colonial forces, and forcing their surrender. An agreement for complete French withdrawal was negotiated within two months in Geneva, Switzerland.
The battle began in March, when a force of 40,000 Vietnamese troops armed with heavy artillery surrounded 15,000 French soldiers holding the French position under siege. The Viet Minh guerrillas had been fighting a long and bloody war against French colonial control of Vietnam since 1946.

French prisoners being marched by Viet Minh out of Dien Bien Phu, May 7, 1954
May 7, 1955
The Reverend George Lee, one of the first black people registered to vote in Humphreys County, Mississippi, and who used his pulpit and his printing press to urge others to vote, was murdered in his hometown of Belzoni.

Rev George Lee
The county sheriff had initially refused to accept Reverend Leeโ€™s poll tax (a tax collected before someone was allowed to vote, which became unconstitutional in 1964), but he was later allowed to vote after contacting federal authorities. That, and the subsequent registration of 92 other negro citizens he helped register, angered some white residents of the county.
His assailants were never caught, and Reverend Lee is considered the first martyr of the civil rights movement.ย 
More on Reverend Leeย 
May 7, 1984

American veterans of the Vietnam War reached a $180-million out-of-court settlement with sevenย chemical companies in a class-action suit relating to use of the herbicide Agent Orange in Vietnam. The veterans charged they had suffered injury and illness from exposure to the defoliant used widely in the war to eliminate jungle cover for Vietnamese forces opposing the U.S. military presence.
Book review about the ongoing effects of Agent Orangeย 
May 7, 1996
15,000 protesters demonstrated against the import of French nuclear waste to Gorleben, Germany. Water cannons were used to disperse the crowd.

https://www.peacebuttons.info/E-News/peacehistorymay.htm#may7

“Queer History 101: The Day They Burned Our History”

by Wendy

(Language alert)

When books burn, humans follow โ€“ a warning we cannot afford to ignore Read on Substack

When I tell you that fascists don’t start with violenceโ€”they start with booksโ€”I’m not speaking in fucking hypotheticals. On May 6th, 1933, while the ink was barely dry on Hitler’s chancellorship, young Nazis stormed the Institute of Sexual Research. They ransacked the place that night, and then four days later, they took more than 20,000 books from the Instituteโ€™s library to Berlinโ€™s Bebelplatz Square and burned them.

They didn’t just burn paper. They burned hope. They burned sanctuary. They burned the world’s first transgender clinic and decades of groundbreaking research that might have spared generations of queer people unimaginable suffering.

The Forgotten History of the World's First Trans Clinic | Scientific  American

I’m not being dramatic when I say this is one of the most gut-wrenching episodes in queer history. The visceral image of Magnus Hirschfeldโ€”a gay Jewish doctor and pioneering advocate for gay and transgender rightsโ€”watching on television as his life’s work went up in flames should haunt us all. Because make no mistake: these weren’t military operations. These were everyday people, your neighbors, your classmates, who decided certain knowledge was too dangerous to exist.

A Haven of Revolutionary Care

The Institute for Sexual Research wasn’t just ahead of its timeโ€”it was blazing the trail for a future we’re still fighting to reach nearly a century later. Opened in 1919 by Magnus Hirschfeld in Berlin, this non-profit institution provided care that modern transphobes claim is “experimental” today, despite the fact that Hirschfeld was performing these procedures over a hundred years ago.

Initially hesitant about gender-affirming surgeries, Hirschfeld changed his mind when he recognized a simple truth: this was life-saving care that prevented suicide. Think about thatโ€”while most of the world was still living in willful ignorance, this man understood that people would rather die than live in bodies that betrayed them. The Institute provided facial feminization and masculinization surgeries, hair removal, and complex gender reassignment procedures when most doctors wouldn’t even recognize trans people as human.

It’s hard to wrap your mind around just how revolutionary this place was. Hirschfeld recognized that gender identity and sexual orientation were entirely separate entitiesโ€”a concept some people still struggle with a century later. He coined the terms “transsexual” and “transvestite,” creating language for experiences that had been silenced for millennia. The Institute was staffed with every specialist imaginableโ€”psychologists, gynecologists, radiologists, lawyers, general practitionersโ€”providing low-cost or free care to those whom society had abandoned.

History Doesnโ€™t Repeat, But It Does Rhyme

My friend (and my Editor-in-Chief) thepoetmiranda saw the dark echoes of history when one of Trumpโ€™s first orders was for the National Institutes of Health and the Centers for Disease Control to start scrubbing medical literature related to healthcare for transgender Americans from government databases (an erasure policy that has spread beyond healthcare to all historical references of transgender peopleโ€”even on the Stonewall National Memorial website). She wrote the poem linked below, which is a fucking must read:

thepoetmiranda

“Don’t Remember Me for My Resilience” a poem by Miranda

Intro Trump started attacking transgender rights on day 1. By the second week of his administration, his operatives were purging all trans data and resources from government websitesโ€”the largest purgeโ€ฆ

Read more

3 months ago ยท 36 likes ยท 10 comments ยท thepoetmiranda

More Than Medical Careโ€”A Community

Hirschfeldโ€™s clinic wasn’t just a clinic. It was a fucking sanctuary. Hirschfeld and his partner Karl Giese lived in the building, creating a warm, plush space filled with life. They hosted costume parties where queer people could express themselves freely. They recommended local bars and venues where LGBTQ+ folks could find community instead of isolation.

When trans women struggled to find employment after transitioning, Hirschfeld hired five of his own patients to work at the clinic. He fought for the repeal of Paragraph 175, which criminalized homosexuality, and even secured legal identification passes for his trans female patients with a “transvestite” gender marker to prevent them from being arrested for crossdressing.

Instead of the torturous conversion therapy that was common practice, the Institute taught “adaptation therapy,” instructing queer people how to navigate a hostile world while staying true to themselves. Their motto was “Through science to justice”โ€”a radical notion that education and understanding were the path to equality.

The Day Knowledge Became Dangerous

When the Nazi youth and the German Student Union piled the contents of the Institute in the square on May 10th, 1933, they topped it with Hirschfeld’s bust before setting it ablaze. This wasn’t random destructionโ€”it was a deliberate erasure of knowledge they deemed threatening. This happened just three months after Hitler was named Chancellor. It wasn’t soldiers who did this; it was civilians, ordinary Germans who had been convinced that minorities were the root cause of inflation and social problems.

Anyone who wasn’t white, cisgender, and Christian was deemed immoral and dangerous to German youth and the “traditional family.” Sound familiar? It should, because we’re hearing the same bullshit rhetoric recycled today by people who would burn books all over again if given half a chance.

Hirschfeld, who was out of the country, watched the destruction on television. He never returned to Germany and died of a stroke in 1935, his life’s work reduced to ashes. The loss was immeasurableโ€”not just papers and books, but decades of research that could have advanced trans healthcare by generations.

The Brutal Reality of Lost Knowledge

We lost so much ancestral knowledge about our community in this one raid. The world’s first transgender clinicโ€”gone. Groundbreaking research on gender identityโ€”gone. Records of successful gender-affirming surgeriesโ€”gone. Resources for queer people to find communityโ€”gone. All of it, up in smoke because knowledge in the wrong hands threatened the status quo.

The memorial for this event bears the quote, “Where they burn books, in the end, they will burn humans, too”โ€”a line from Hirschfeld’s own library that would prove prophetic. The Nazis began with books but ended with concentration camps where thousands of queer people wore pink triangles to their deaths.

Practical Tools for Preserving Our History

  • Document and digitizeย queer history in multiple locations and formats
  • Support LGBTQ+ archivesย financially and through volunteer work
  • Learn and shareย the stories of pioneers like Magnus Hirschfeld
  • Recognize warning signsย when marginalized communities are blamed for societal problems
  • Protect trans healthcareย by understanding its long history and scientific basis

Community Connection

The story of the Institute’s destruction isn’t ancient historyโ€”it’s a warning. When you hear politicians targeting trans healthcare, when you see books about queer experiences being banned from libraries, when you witness the demonization of drag performances, remember the Institute. Remember what happens when fear and ignorance are weaponized against knowledge.

Today, organizations like the Magnus Hirschfeld Foundation continue his legacy, but the threat remains. Every time a state bans gender-affirming care, every time a library removes LGBTQ+ books, every time a transgender person is denied basic dignity, we’re watching echoes of that burning pile in Berlin.

Conclusion

Knowledge is a form of rebellion, and the facts and history you carry in your mind can never be taken away from you. Education and queer joy are our greatest protections right now, just as they were in Hirschfeld’s time.

When we learn about the Institute for Sexual Research, we’re not just studying historyโ€”we’re resurrecting knowledge that fascists tried to erase. When we speak the names of Magnus Hirschfeld and his patients, we’re undoing their work of erasure. Every time we share these stories, we’re rebuilding what they tried to destroy.

The memorial’s warning echoes across time: “Where they burn books, in the end, they will burn humans, too.” We must never forget this. We must never allow it to happen again.

Because our history isn’t just about the pastโ€”it’s about fucking surviving the present and building a future where institutes like Hirschfeld’s aren’t revolutionary; they’re just how we treat each other.


References:

  1. Hirschfield, M. 1912 โ€œDie Transvestiten: Eine Untersuchung รผber den Erotischen Verkleidungstriebโ€
  2. Hirschfield, M. 1920 โ€œDie Homosexualitรคt des Mannes und des Weibesโ€
  3. Hirschfield, M. 2017 (Reprint) โ€œBerlinโ€™s Third Sexโ€

Cis men are the problem not trans women