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latoyapeterson-blog
latoyapeterson

Heartbreak #5: Coexistence simply isn’t enough. As much as is made about this being the most diverse generation on the forefront of a racially shifting America, the end result is that a twenty-one year old white man was under the impression he was a soldier on the front lines of a race war. Visitors to Dylann Roof’s Facebook page will note the prominence of black friends. But racism has consistently proven itself deeper than ties of friendship or romantic relationships. Anti-racism, and the ability to confront and counter these ideas before they take deep root in young people, has been pushed to the wayside in favor of uncritical celebrations of diversity. But the simple presence of diversity is not enough to change deeply ingrained attitudes.

Today, on thisisfusion, I break down the 9 heartbreaks I’m feeling from last night’s news about the senseless murders in South Carolina:  http://fusion.net/story/152991/the-9-heartbreaks-of-the-charleston-shooting/

kristinnoeline
everyoneisgay

“What is the queer community’s role in the #BlackLivesMatter movement?”

- Question submitted by Anonymous and answered by Broderick Greer as part of Everyone Is Gay: Second Opinions*

Broderick Says:

When I visited Ferguson in late August 2014, I went because I was helpless. I was embarking on my third and final year of seminary and had never felt as lost, confused, or displaced as I felt in the days and weeks following the lynching of Michael Brown. As I joined 40 other young adults on the 28 hour bus ride from Washington, D.C. to Ferguson, MO and back again, I was allowing my body to be, in some way, transported to a place where I - a queer, cisgender, black man - could be in solidarity with the death of a straight, cisgender, black teenager.

Nearly a year before Michael’s death, the queer black women - Patrisse Cullors, Alicia Garza, and Opal Tometi - penned a “love note to black people” when they created the hashtag #BlackLivesMatter. This hashtag was created in the wake of Trayvon Martin’s - a straight, black cisgender teenager - lynching in 2012. So when you ask about the queer community’s role in this movement, I have to take pause, because queer black women are the collective genesis of this movement. Further, queer-identified black people like Alexis Templeton, Brittany Ferrell, Larry Fellows III, Darnell Moore, and DeRay McKesson have used their platforms and activism to center the stories and voices of queer and trans folks.

When black people are lethally targeted by law enforcement officers and vigilantes, those officers and vigilantes don’t see queer bodies, they see black bodies. They see another threat. They see another menace. They see “enemy forces”. There is no discrimination of gender expression or sexual orientation when it comes to state-sponsored violence against black people. This indiscriminate disdain for black life is, therefore, a clarion call for us to bring attention - in the spirit of writer Zach Stafford - to people like our brother Dionte Greene, a gay black man killed in Kansas City in 2014. If the United States government and local law enforcement officials won’t properly investigate and prosecute in the case of deaths like his, Rekia Boyd’s, and Tamir Rice’s, then we must pressure them until they do.

On Twitter, a number of us have asserted that, at this critical juncture in American history, our nation needs an intersectional human rights movement that will confront and transform the systemic realities of racism, white supremacy, sexism, heterosexism, transantagonism, income inequality, and educational disparities. In the words of Audre Lorde, “There is no such thing as a single-issue struggle, because we do not live single- issue lives.” Since none of us suffer alone, none of us will be liberated alone. If I am oppressed for being black and gay, then I will not be liberated until I am able to operate in the world as a whole, integrated person. And since my identity cannot be parsed, I will either be affirmed for who I am or not at all. You cannot affirm and celebrate my blackness without affirming and celebrating my queerness.

Thankfully, in Patrisse Cullors, Alicia Garza, and Opal Tometi, and so many others, the movement has voices who understand that our common liberation - whether it be as trans people, people of color, women, queer people, or a combination or cross section of all those ways of being, existing, and identifying in the world - is something deep, broad, and complex. Too many of us are dying due to unchecked, state-sanctioned racism, heterosexism, transantagonism, for us to not see the ways in which the violence waged against us is interrelated.

***

*We want to take a moment to express our outrage and sadness at the recent shootings in Charleston, SC. We are posting Broderick’s piece early as we wanted his words (written before Charleston, but after so many other horrific acts of violence that mirror this one) in the universe as soon as possible.

Click through to read more about Broderick and our other Second Opinions Panelists

“On Saturday, June 27 from 2pm to 4pm, Everyone Is Gay and Autostraddle will host an all ages pride party at Bluestockings Bookstore in NYC. The event is one of the only youth-oriented events available during NYC Pride. As adult leaders in the...

“On Saturday, June 27 from 2pm to 4pm, Everyone Is Gay and Autostraddle will host an all ages pride party at Bluestockings Bookstore in NYC. The event is one of the only youth-oriented events available during NYC Pride. As adult leaders in the LGBTQIA community, it is our duty and honor to provide a safe and sober space for our queer youth to celebrate pride. Everyone Is Gay co-founder Kristin Russo, along with Autostraddle’s Gabby Rivera, will emcee, with music by Jenny Owen Youngs and Mal Blum, and spoken word by Gabby Rivera and Khalin Vasquez. Admission is free and open to the public with a suggested door donation of $5 to benefit the work done by Everyone Is Gay, Autostraddle, and Bluestockings.” via You Should Go: NYC All-Ages Pride Party with Everyone is Gay and Autostraddle at Bluestockings

Source: autostraddle.com
nycpride lgbt youth lgbt lesbian queer gay transgender autostraddle mal blum jenny owen youngs gabby rivera khalin vasquez everyone is gay pride party