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I have to say that yesterday’s ruling was bittersweet for me. 

I’m glad I now have the right to marry. I’m glad so many others can also indulge in this institution. However, we must remain vigilant as a community. The conversation surrounding marriage has eclipsed nearly all other issues plaguing our community. From the atrocities bravely highlighted by Jennicet Gutiérrez, to homelessness faced by many queer and trans youth, to the way organizations leading to this historic moment were headed by drone companies, and to the very colonial attitudes that shape our perceptions of gender and sexuality — all must be considered to truly move our community forward. 

In other words: celebrate (if you like) but understand why others aren’t celebrating and take this as an opportunity to learn about the struggles we need to learn about and solve.

Don’t let us be a deradicalized community that only celebrates milestones when it benefits the capitalistic, heterosexist, colonial power structure and silences the most vulnerable among us. 

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After a mural depicting LGBT Latinos, created by Maricón Collective in the Mission District of San Francisco, was defaced a second time this week, the San Francisco Police Department is investigating the incident as an anti-LGBT hate crime, a police spokeswoman confirmed to The Advocate.

The Special Investigations Division is currently reviewing surveillance footage from a camera trained on the mural, located outside La Galería de la Raza on 24th Street, which allegedly shows the suspects committing the crime. If SFPD's investigators are unable to identify the suspects from that footage, they will release images to the media to get the public's help, the spokeswoman tellsThe Advocate.

When the mural was vandalized the first time, "it was hard to say that it was specifically because of the mural being LGBT, but after the second one, we have more to go on to investigate it as a hate crime, rather than just saying it is a vandalism," says the SFPD spokeswoman.

The artist who created the mural, Manuel Paul, is working with Galería's director, Ani Rivera, to organize a community-building block party where volunteers will reinstall the mural for a third time, Paul tells The Advocate. The pair met late into the evening on Tuesday in Los Angeles to strategize after the mural was found defaced Tuesday morning.

The mural was originally scheduled to remain up for just one month — but now Paul has bigger plans for his piece, which depicts illustrations in the classic cholo style of a gay couple, a lesbian couple, and a trans man at the center, positioned above the words "Por Vida" ("For Life").

Paul tells The Advocate La Galería is now "working on ways of using a lacquer on the mural that can wash off paint," in case the mural is defaced again.

After facing threats and name-calling on social media, Paul says he only wants to spread a positive message — in the Mission and beyond.

"We want to thank the community, thank the gallery, thank the people of the Mission," Paul says. "We were invited there; we didn't mean any disrespect to the people who view it as negative. We came with good intentions. If anything, we want to spread the message of love."

Paul says he and his fellow members of the Maricón Collective were surprised by the ferocity of the negative response to the mural, especially from other Chicanos. But this experience has made him realize the importance of this image being plastered on such a visible wall in the Mission. "We [gay Latinos] exist," says Paul. "From that little boy in the neighborhood to that old veterana... we're just trying to spread love and enjoyment. This is all about community and building people up, giving people a platform to speak."

Paul, who lives in Los Angeles, recognizes that his mural is creating conversation among Latinos and among LGBT people, particularly in San Francisco.

He says the collective — which began as a group of four queer Chicano DJs hosting parties and creating original artwork to raise awareness about other queer Chicano artists — was "intended to create a brown space for the people that don't really have it."

"Everything is segregated," Paul continues, "even within the gay community — where some gay Latinos aren't accepted."

After the repeated vandalism of the mural, people from San Francisco's historically LGBT-friendly Castro District have been coming down to the Mission to help out, which Paul sees as "building in the gay community too."

Paul concludes that this experience has actually made him more politically active. It's opened his eyes to the possibility that art can bring people together. And he hopes to continue that trend with proceeds from print replicas the gallery is selling of his mural. He's currently looking into San Francisco–based organizations where he can donate those funds.

"That's my contribution to all this," he says. "To put it to help someone else, preferably San Francisco–based, to give back to that community."

Galería de la Raza is currently accepting donations to re-install the mural for a third time.

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transsource

You Can't Cheer for Laverne and Boo Jennicet

Jennicet Gutiérrez is the first transgender person to publicly call out the president around immigration and the torture and rape transgender immigrants often experience inside detention centers. Gutiérrez was in a room full of national LGBT leaders who gathered to celebrate the many accomplishments of the movement. You would imagine this would be a place to feel seen, safe, and validated. That was not the case.

As soon as Gutiérrez proceeded to speak truth and ask the President as to why he is not releasing our trans detainees who face violence, the crowd began to jeer, boo, and hiss. As she continued, the crowd then began to drown her and chant, “OBAMA! OBAMA!”

A transgender woman of color and undocumented leader in the immigrant rights and LGBT movement was booed and silenced by not only the state, but by the very same movement that purports to uplift and celebrate the transgender community.

As her voice, filled with passion and conviction, broke through the White House room, she was met by negativity, intolerance, and stares of disapproval from her peers. Her voice was carried by the thousands of transgender women considered disposable by the nation, facing deportation, detention, and brutal transphobic violence.

Her voice and visibility in that moment was shunned and shamed as inappropriate by a roomful of leaders who then applauded as the President lamented violence against transgender women of color, violence that his actions have contributed to by not taking action against the detention centers. Her voice is one of few transgender women of color immigrants who are bringing national visibility to this issue of the detention centers. Her voice carried the weight of the communities who are screaming inside detention centers demanding to be freed. Her voice was heard and ridiculed by many who claim to fight for transgender communities and also are involved in LGBT immigrant rights issues.

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Sylvia Rivera’s 1973 Christopher Street Liberation Day Rally Speech

[trigger warning for transphobia, racism, rape, police brutality, and general violence]

This is 1973 video of Sylvia Rivera speaking at the Christopher Street Liberation Day Rally, where she literally had to fight her way to the stage, past a crowd of transphobes and racists who tried to silence her. When Sylvia finally gets to the stage, she looks at the audience, grabs the mic, and shouts, “Y’all better quiet down!”. Sylvia immediately starts denouncing the gay community for ignoring the struggles outside the cis-white-gay spectrum. This video is amazing.

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By Jennicet Gutiérrez

Pride celebrations of the LGBTQ community are taking place throughout the nation. The community takes great pride in celebrating our diversity and the progress we have made throughout the years. However, for the immigrant LGBTQ community progress has not been fully realized because of the continuous discrimination and violence we face in our daily lives.

I was fortunate to be invited to the White House to listen to President Obama’s speech recognizing the LGBTQ community and the progress being made. But while he spoke of ‘trans women of color being targeted,’ his administration holds LGBTQ and trans immigrants in detention. I spoke out because our issues and struggles can no longer be ignored.

Immigrant trans women are 12 times more likely to face discrimination because of our gender identity. If we add our immigration status to the equation, the discrimination increases. Transgender immigrants make up one out of every 500 people in detention, but we account for one out of five confirmed sexual abuse cases in ICE custody.

The violence my trans sisters face in detention centers is one of torture and abuse. The torture and abuse come from ICE officials and other detainees in these detention centers. I have spoken with my trans immigrant sisters who were recently released from detention centers. With a lot of emotional pain and heavy tears in their eyes, they opened up about the horrendous treatment they all experienced. Often seeking asylum to escape threats of violence because of their gender identity and sexuality, this is how they’re greeted in this country. At times misgendered, exposed to assault, and put in detention centers with men.

Last night I spoke out to demand respect and acknowledgement of our gender expression and the release of the estimated 75 transgender immigrants in detention right now. There is no pride in how LGBTQ immigrants are treated in this country and there can be no celebration with an administration that has the ability to keep us detained and in danger or release us to freedom.

It is heartbreaking to see how raising these issues were received by the president and by those in attendance. In the tradition of how Pride started, I interrupted his speech because it is time for our issues and struggles to be heard. I stood for what is right. Instead of silencing our voices, President Obama can also stand and do the right thing for our immigrant LGBTQ community.

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projectqueer
As I reflect on what just happened at the White House, I am outraged at the lack of leadership that Obama demonstrated. He had no concern for the way that LGBTQ detainees are suffering. As a trans woman, the misgendering and the physical and sexual abuse – these are serious crimes that we face in detention centers. How can that be ignored? It’s heartbreaking to see the LGBTQ community I am part of turning their back on me, and the LGBTQ people in detention centers: how can they tolerate that kind of abuse?

Jennicet Gutiérrez

An undocumented transgender woman who interrupted President Obama during the Pride Month Reception at the White House Wednesday called on the administration to release LGBT immigrants from detention, before being escorted out. Jennicet Gutiérrez, who works with LGBT advocacy organizations Familia: TQLMand GetEqual, was removed shortly after she interrupted Obama’s speech.

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micdotcom

Jennicet Gutiérrez, an undocumented transgender woman from Mexico, interrupted Obama’s remarks with a declaration of her own: “Release all LGBTQ in detention centers,” Gutiérrez said “Stop the torture and abuse of trans women in detention centers.” The media was quick to cheer Obama, but Gutiérrez actually made some important points.

The smug look on his face makes me feel like he knows he can get a bunch of gay liberals to cheer for the President with a record number of deportations talking down to an immigrant trans woman, at what is supposed to be a Pride event, and totally be lionized for it in the media.

Source: mic.com
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jarochomx

African slaves in Mexico

Angolan slaves made majority of the Africans in Mexico followed by São Toméan. During 1631 - 1640 Angolan slaves made 96.21% of the total African slave population in Mexico.

Christians, Blasphemers, and Witches: Afro-Mexican Ritual Practice in the Seventeenth Century:

Bristol’s work is vital in that it is more attentive than earlier works have been to the African background of a population that was largely born in Africa, especially in focusing, using recent Africanist scholarship, on the appropriate areas of Africa. It is also important in that it pays full attention to the specific character of the seventeenth-century African cohort in Mexico that hailed from Christian Angola.

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Okay so since I keep my tumblr a little semi-anon this is a lot of info I’m about to give out so here goes:

I was born in San Luis Potosi, Mexico and was brought to the U.S. at the age of 6 to central Texas where I’ve grown up for the rest of my life. I attend Texas State University as a Geography (GIS) major & German minor.

I’m currently having financial troubles regarding my university tuition. Because of my severe depression and undocumented status I will be charged as an out-of-state student come my senior year. As an undocumented students this is incredibly expensive and my family and I can no longer afford it. I’m desperate at this point because I truly don’t want to drop out when I’m so close to finishing. Please help me finish my senior year of university. In my GoFundMe page I have added more details about myself.

My GoFundMe page: http://www.gofundme.com/txstsenior & paypal: k.rod91@yahoo.com

Please reblog.

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