Page 405
-
Supreme Court hands victory to transgender students in locker room case
The court declined to take up a case brought by a group of parents who didn’t want their kids using the same facilities as trans kids.
-
Gay teen suspended for wearing nail polish to Texas school
“I am a gay male and I’m beyond proud. This is unjust and not okay.”
-
Trump-loving nuts filmed themselves taking down “gay” mystery monolith. Now it’s back.
They drove over five hours to vandalize the structure because they hate “illegal aliens.” It has returned in less than two days.
-
Joe Biden makes pledge to lead the “most pro-equality administration in history” of America
President-elect Biden made the promise in congratulating House Speaker Nancy Pelosi for winning an “LGBTQ History Maker” award.
-
A police officer used a harmful gay stereotype to describe a protester. He received a suspension.
Internal Affairs determined the officer needed to be punished because he “did not accept that there was anything wrong with the assumptions, description, and stereotype he made.”
-
North Carolina’s ban on LGBTQ rights ordinances has expired & cities are ready to pass new ones
Some cities are already looking at expanding their local nondiscrimination ordinances to include LGBTQ protections.
-
Cowardly Nazi gets confronted by strangers as he posts hateful stickers all over a California town
One man followed him through the city, telling him, “You keep putting them up if you want and I will keep ripping them off.”
-
Trump supporter caught on camera spouting anti-gay slurs but claims she’s the real victim
When footage of her vile slurs and outrageous conspiracy theories went viral, her only real comment on the issue was “I was attacked online.”
-
Federal judge rules requiring “proof” of gender identity for a passport is unconstitutional
The judge granted a transgender man a passport, saying the government violated his Fifth Amendment rights.
-
Funeral home settles lawsuit that led to landmark LGBTQ rights Supreme Court ruling
The decision established that LGBTQ people are protected under federal civil rights laws, but Aimee Stephens passed away a few weeks before the ruling.