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Posts tagged with "support"

LGBTQ* Check Yourself Post
There has been a ton of privilege and way too much (trans*, cis-*, geronto-, bi-*, pan-, *too many to name*)—PHOBIA around Tumblr since we went on hiatus.
Let’s start leading by example and remember that we cannot request equal support with a clear mind if we don’t show the same with an understanding heart.
-Rebecca, creator of KNOWhomo

“I have decided to stick to love…Hate is too great a burden to bear.” ― Martin Luther King Jr., A Testament of Hope: The Essential Writings and Speeches

Photo Source: University of Chicago, Queer and Associates 
 

LGBTQ* Check Yourself Post

There has been a ton of privilege and way too much (trans*, cis-*, geronto-, bi-*, pan-, *too many to name*)—PHOBIA around Tumblr since we went on hiatus.

Let’s start leading by example and remember that we cannot request equal support with a clear mind if we don’t show the same with an understanding heart.

-Rebecca, creator of KNOWhomo

“I have decided to stick to love…Hate is too great a burden to bear.” 
― Martin Luther King Jr.A Testament of Hope: The Essential Writings and Speeches

Photo Source: University of Chicago, Queer and Associates 

 

Apr 4

If you are a woman, if you’re a person of colour, if you are gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, if you are a person of size, if you are a person od intelligence, if you are a person of integrity, then you are considered a minority in this world.

…And it’s going to be really hard to find messages of self-love and support anywhere. Especially women’s and gay men’s culture. It’s all about how you have to look a certain way or else you’re worthless. You know when you look in the mirror and you think ‘oh, I’m so fat, I’m so old, I’m so ugly’, don’t you know, that’s not your authentic self? But that is billions upon billions of dollars of advertising, magazines, movies, billboards, all geared to make you feel shitty about yourself so that you will take your hard earned money and spend it at the mall on some turn-around creme that doesn’t turn around shit.

When you don’t have self-esteem you will hesitate before you do anything in your life. You will hesitate to go for the job you really wanna go for, you will hesitate to ask for a raise, you will hesitate to call yourself an American, you will hesitate to report a rape, you will hesitate to defend yourself when you are discriminated against because of your race, your sexuality, your size, your gender. You will hesitate to vote, you will hesitate to dream. For us to have self-esteem is truly an act of revolution and our revolution is long overdue.

- — Margaret Cho

LGBTQ* Quotes and Quips
Paul Newman

LGBTQ* Quotes and Quips

Paul Newman

Oct 9
LGBTQ* Quotes You May Have Missed

Actress Sally Field

LGBTQ* Quotes You May Have Missed


Actress Sally Field

Jul 2
LGBTQ* Quotes & Quips

Anderson Cooper on love and support

(You can read the entire email HERE)

LGBTQ* Quotes & Quips

Anderson Cooper on love and support

(You can read the entire email HERE)

LGBTQ* Prides and Education
 Ten Colleges With A History of Gay Pride
 (Please note: all of the following test and above graphic from The Best Colleges Online’s website. I am aware that Berkeley is not in SoCal.)
Every June, Americans recognize Gay Pride Month via famous parades and other advocacy events promoting marriage equality, adoption, health, teen bullying and suicide prevention, and other social and political issues related to LGBT rights, which directly impact an estimated 10% of the population (and indirectly impact a far higher percentage of loved ones). Because the country is still slowly growing to accept sexual and gender identity minorities, this means many college students head off to their higher education careers isolated, lonely, depressed — or worse. Most campuses these days offer some semblance of a support structure to ensure a safe experience for all LGBT students, and queer studies courses, minors, and majors have started popping up in catalogs across the country. And it’s all thanks to some of the following pioneers, who took a chance on equality when such things still stood as highly taboo.
1.  CITY COLLEGE OF SAN FRANCISCO:
In 1989, City College of San Francisco revolutionized LGBT and queer studies when Jack Collins established America’s very first department promoting the inchoate field. Founded upon Dan Allen’s pioneering 1972 gay literature course taught in the English department, the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender Studies Department really wowed students, teachers, and administrators when it launched, attracting hundreds of enrollees for some of its courses. Because the school sits in one of the world’s most LGBT-friendly cities, the classes beneath the organization’s umbrella often benefit from the surrounding communities’ participation and input.
2.  INDIANA UNIVERSITY:
More famous for Alfred Kinsey’s in-depth studies of American sexual habits at a time when such things popped monocles and inspired pearl-clutchings, Indiana University also happens to exist as a largely LGBT-friendly campus. Activist Shane Windmeyer of Campus Pride fame also established the Lambda 10 project here alongside the school’s Greek leaders in 1995. Today, it exists as the only nonprofit fully dedicated to making fraternity and sorority houses safe spaces for LGBT students. Notable, because neither institution enjoys the healthiest reputation for inclusiveness, tolerance, and equitability.
3.  UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY:
Spring 1970 saw this historically progressive college offering up the nation’s very first undergraduate course in queer theory. Other schools in Illinois, New York, and even Nebraska quickly followed suit, paving the way for an entire academic field. The Gay Bears Collection pulls from Berkeley’s extensive archives — as well as its own inquiries — to provide students, faculty, staff, and visitors with detailed information about both hidden and not-so-hidden names, dates, and faces involved in the campus’ LGBT history.
4.  UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN:
Many — if not most — colleges and universities these days sport some form of official LGBT outreach, usually through an organization or dedicated student services department. University of Michigan launched the very first back in 1971, inspiring more and more to follow suit and provide comfort and safety to an unfairly marginalized segment of the community. Known as the Spectrum Center, it has spent the past four decades ensuring an equal place for LGBT students, faculty, and staff.
5.  KENT STATE UNIVERSITY:
One of the oldest, most inspiring LGBT student organizations in the nation started at Kent State University in 1971, following the precedent set by Berkeley’s groundbreaking undergraduate courses. It started out as the Kent Gay Liberation Front and set about organizing talks, rallies, and even classes on the cause of equality. More than 70 people showed up to the very first meeting scheduled by sociology student Bill Hoover and English professor Dolores Knoll, and the school’s administrators largely supported their banding together and coming out.
6.  YALE UNIVERSITY:
When it comes to the more staunchly traditional Ivy League schools, one probably doesn’t think them bastions of LGBT tolerance and equality, though Yale has historically held a more progressive stance on the matter than its associates. It became the first of its type to organize a Gay Rights Week, rally, and dance celebrating sexual and gender diversity in 1977. Three years later, the school established a Gay and Lesbian Co-Op, which continued promoting LGBT rights, hosting lectures, promoting poetry and film, and other events furthering the cause.
7.  UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO:
Thanks to LGBT Phoenixes, America’s third-largest city enjoyed its very first gay rights organization, which quickly branched out into groups and events not affiliated with an academic establishment. The University of Chicago Gay Liberation Front banded together in 1969, and OutLaw — dedicated to LGBT law students — followed suit in 1984. By 1992, it was offering the very same domestic partnership benefits to lesbian and gay couples as it did heterosexuals.
8.  OBERLIN COLLEGE:
Oberlin College frequently lands on lists of the most LGBT-accepting institutes of higher learning in the United States. While its older nature meant at some point it did, in fact, reflect the overarching climate’s prejudices, by the 1960s some semblance of sociopolitical revolution began burbling to the surface at the Conservatory. The 1970s saw more organizations, rallies, dances, and other events bringing the fight to campus, with the Oberlin Gay Liberation Front establishing itself in 1971. More contemporary scholars enjoy the Oberlin College LGBT Community History Project, which offers up first- and second-person accounts of LGBT community history both at the school and the broader social climate.
9.  COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY:
Yale may be one of the most notable Ivy League schools when it comes to sexual and gender identity equality, but it certainly doesn’t fly solo. Since 1967, the Columbia Queer Alliance has served as a safe haven and political rallying point for its LGBT student community — the very first of its kind in the world. Originally known as the Student Homophile League, organizers had to fight, fight, fight, and bite, bite, bite for years before Columbia officials finally green-lighted their group. It stood as one of the cornerstones of the equality movement before the Stonewall Riots two years later inspired others to action.
10.       WILLIAMS COLLEGE:
Thanks to the efforts of Daniel R. Pinello and his 1971 Williams Advocate article “The Homosexual at Williams: Coming Out,” students felt inspired to embrace their sexuality and group together in 1976 as the Williams Gay Support Organization. Reaction to its establishment and subsequent events, which included frank discussions about AIDS, coming out, and even a support hotline, showing love and support to a marginalized minority proved extremely mixed, if not outright hostile. In fact, much of the administration actively shot down attempts to celebrate diversity and promote equality. It wasn’t until 1985, when instances of bullying whipped up a crowd of 300 supporters, that the campus started turning around.

LGBTQ* Prides and Education

 Ten Colleges With A History of Gay Pride

 (Please note: all of the following test and above graphic from The Best Colleges Online’s website. I am aware that Berkeley is not in SoCal.)

Every June, Americans recognize Gay Pride Month via famous parades and other advocacy events promoting marriage equality, adoption, health, teen bullying and suicide prevention, and other social and political issues related to LGBT rights, which directly impact an estimated 10% of the population (and indirectly impact a far higher percentage of loved ones). Because the country is still slowly growing to accept sexual and gender identity minorities, this means many college students head off to their higher education careers isolated, lonely, depressed — or worse. Most campuses these days offer some semblance of a support structure to ensure a safe experience for all LGBT students, and queer studies courses, minors, and majors have started popping up in catalogs across the country. And it’s all thanks to some of the following pioneers, who took a chance on equality when such things still stood as highly taboo.

1.  CITY COLLEGE OF SAN FRANCISCO:

In 1989, City College of San Francisco revolutionized LGBT and queer studies when Jack Collins established America’s very first department promoting the inchoate field. Founded upon Dan Allen’s pioneering 1972 gay literature course taught in the English department, the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender Studies Department really wowed students, teachers, and administrators when it launched, attracting hundreds of enrollees for some of its courses. Because the school sits in one of the world’s most LGBT-friendly cities, the classes beneath the organization’s umbrella often benefit from the surrounding communities’ participation and input.

2.  INDIANA UNIVERSITY:

More famous for Alfred Kinsey’s in-depth studies of American sexual habits at a time when such things popped monocles and inspired pearl-clutchings, Indiana University also happens to exist as a largely LGBT-friendly campus. Activist Shane Windmeyer of Campus Pride fame also established the Lambda 10 project here alongside the school’s Greek leaders in 1995. Today, it exists as the only nonprofit fully dedicated to making fraternity and sorority houses safe spaces for LGBT students. Notable, because neither institution enjoys the healthiest reputation for inclusiveness, tolerance, and equitability.

3.  UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY:

Spring 1970 saw this historically progressive college offering up the nation’s very first undergraduate course in queer theory. Other schools in Illinois, New York, and even Nebraska quickly followed suit, paving the way for an entire academic field. The Gay Bears Collection pulls from Berkeley’s extensive archives — as well as its own inquiries — to provide students, faculty, staff, and visitors with detailed information about both hidden and not-so-hidden names, dates, and faces involved in the campus’ LGBT history.

4.  UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN:

Many — if not most — colleges and universities these days sport some form of official LGBT outreach, usually through an organization or dedicated student services department. University of Michigan launched the very first back in 1971, inspiring more and more to follow suit and provide comfort and safety to an unfairly marginalized segment of the community. Known as the Spectrum Center, it has spent the past four decades ensuring an equal place for LGBT students, faculty, and staff.

5.  KENT STATE UNIVERSITY:

One of the oldest, most inspiring LGBT student organizations in the nation started at Kent State University in 1971, following the precedent set by Berkeley’s groundbreaking undergraduate courses. It started out as the Kent Gay Liberation Front and set about organizing talks, rallies, and even classes on the cause of equality. More than 70 people showed up to the very first meeting scheduled by sociology student Bill Hoover and English professor Dolores Knoll, and the school’s administrators largely supported their banding together and coming out.

6.  YALE UNIVERSITY:

When it comes to the more staunchly traditional Ivy League schools, one probably doesn’t think them bastions of LGBT tolerance and equality, though Yale has historically held a more progressive stance on the matter than its associates. It became the first of its type to organize a Gay Rights Week, rally, and dance celebrating sexual and gender diversity in 1977. Three years later, the school established a Gay and Lesbian Co-Op, which continued promoting LGBT rights, hosting lectures, promoting poetry and film, and other events furthering the cause.

7.  UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO:

Thanks to LGBT Phoenixes, America’s third-largest city enjoyed its very first gay rights organization, which quickly branched out into groups and events not affiliated with an academic establishment. The University of Chicago Gay Liberation Front banded together in 1969, and OutLaw — dedicated to LGBT law students — followed suit in 1984. By 1992, it was offering the very same domestic partnership benefits to lesbian and gay couples as it did heterosexuals.

8.  OBERLIN COLLEGE:

Oberlin College frequently lands on lists of the most LGBT-accepting institutes of higher learning in the United States. While its older nature meant at some point it did, in fact, reflect the overarching climate’s prejudices, by the 1960s some semblance of sociopolitical revolution began burbling to the surface at the Conservatory. The 1970s saw more organizations, rallies, dances, and other events bringing the fight to campus, with the Oberlin Gay Liberation Front establishing itself in 1971. More contemporary scholars enjoy the Oberlin College LGBT Community History Project, which offers up first- and second-person accounts of LGBT community history both at the school and the broader social climate.

9.  COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY:

Yale may be one of the most notable Ivy League schools when it comes to sexual and gender identity equality, but it certainly doesn’t fly solo. Since 1967, the Columbia Queer Alliance has served as a safe haven and political rallying point for its LGBT student community — the very first of its kind in the world. Originally known as the Student Homophile League, organizers had to fight, fight, fight, and bite, bite, bite for years before Columbia officials finally green-lighted their group. It stood as one of the cornerstones of the equality movement before the Stonewall Riots two years later inspired others to action.

10.       WILLIAMS COLLEGE:

Thanks to the efforts of Daniel R. Pinello and his 1971 Williams Advocate article “The Homosexual at Williams: Coming Out,” students felt inspired to embrace their sexuality and group together in 1976 as the Williams Gay Support Organization. Reaction to its establishment and subsequent events, which included frank discussions about AIDS, coming out, and even a support hotline, showing love and support to a marginalized minority proved extremely mixed, if not outright hostile. In fact, much of the administration actively shot down attempts to celebrate diversity and promote equality. It wasn’t until 1985, when instances of bullying whipped up a crowd of 300 supporters, that the campus started turning around.

May 9

LGBTQ* In Case You Missed It

Ellen’s audience gives President Obama a standing ovation


read more about President Obama’s support HERE

LGBTQ* Religion and Political Cartoons

You are the company you keep. 

LGBTQ* Religion and Political Cartoons

You are the company you keep. 

LGBTQ* Charts and Graphs

HRC Polls Christian Support 
Christian LGBTQ Support Graph

LGBTQ* Charts and Graphs

HRC Polls Christian Support 

Christian LGBTQ Support Graph

LGBTQ* Support History
Above is a copy of the M.I.T. (Massachusetts Institute for Technology) Homophile League support flyers from 1970. The League formed in 1969. It was the third Boston area student gay and lesbian organization. GaMIT is M.I.T.’s active LGBTQ* and friends student alliance on campus today.

LGBTQ* Support History

Above is a copy of the M.I.T. (Massachusetts Institute for Technology) Homophile League support flyers from 1970. The League formed in 1969. It was the third Boston area student gay and lesbian organization. GaMIT is M.I.T.’s active LGBTQ* and friends student alliance on campus today.

LGBTQ* Quotes and Quips

Newman’s (Own) Perspective

LGBTQ* Quotes and Quips

Newman’s (Own) Perspective

LGBTQ* Ally, Support and Good Advice 

Be the change you want to see in the world. — Mahatma Gandhi 

LGBTQ* Ally, Support and Good Advice 

Be the change you want to see in the world— Mahatma Gandhi 

LGBTQ* Blogs You Should Know

Oh The Things Mommies Do

Crystal Tompkins and Lindsey Evans

This wonderful blog follows a  married couple in Austin, Texas as they go through the trials, tribulations, memories, and events in their lives as they start on the path to become mothers-to-be. Follow this journey through motherhood and share your support as they add to their family.

Blog: Oh The Things Mommies Do

Tumblr: Follow the creators on Tumblr (their posts, favorite posts, insight and recommendations)

LGBTQ* Quotes and Quips
Republican Maureen Walsh
comment taken from Walsh’s speech before Washington voted to equalize same-sex marriage 
You can watch the video HERE

LGBTQ* Quotes and Quips

Republican Maureen Walsh

comment taken from Walsh’s speech before Washington voted to equalize same-sex marriage 

You can watch the video HERE

LGBTQ* Tumblr Websites You Should Know
Soffa Support - Tumblr resource for significant others, friends, families, and allies of the trans* community. Questions, submissions, articles, insight, advice, and discussions about the trans* community are shared here with respect and consideration.

LGBTQ* Tumblr Websites You Should Know

Soffa Support - Tumblr resource for significant others, friends, families, and allies of the trans* community. Questions, submissions, articles, insight, advice, and discussions about the trans* community are shared here with respect and consideration.