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Jul 22, 2006 12:55

Being queer has no bearing on race or class or creed my white publicist said true love is never affected by color or country or the carnal need for cash I curb the flashes of me crashing across the table to knock his blond skin from Manhattan to Montego Bay to witness the bloody beatings of beautiful brown boys accused of the homosexual crime of buggery amidst the new fangled fallacies of sexual and racial freedom for all these under-informed self-congratulating pseudo-intellectual utterances reflect how apolitical the left has become I don’t know why but the term lesbian just seems so confrontational to me why can’t you people just say you date other people? Again I say nothing tongue and courage tied with fear I am at once livid ashamed and paralyzed by the neo-conservatism breeding malicious amongst us Gay Lesbian Bisexual Transgender Ally Questioning Two spirit Non-gender conforming-every year we add a new letter our community is happily expanding beyond the scope of the dream stonewall sparked within us yet everyday I become more afraid to say black or lesbian or woman-everyday under the pretense of unity I swallow something I should have said about the epidemic of AIDS in Africa or the violence against teenage-girls in East New York or the mortality rate of young boys on the south-side of Chicago even in friendly conversation I get the bell hooks-ian urge to kill mother-fuckers who say stupid shit to me all day bitter branches of things I cannot say out loud sprout deviant from my neck fuck you-you-fucking-racist-sexist-turd fuck you for wanting to talk about homophobia while you exploit the desperation of undocumented immigrants to clean your hallways bathe your children and cook your dinner for less than you and I spend on our tax deductible lunch! I want to scream all oppression is connected you dick! at the heart of every radical action in history stood the dykes who were feminists the anti-racists who were gay rights activists the men who believed being vulnerable could only make our community stronger as the violence against us increases where are the LGBT centers in those neighborhoods where assaults occur most frequently? as the tide of the Supreme Court changes where are the LGBT marches to support a woman’s right to an abortion? what say we about health insurance for those who can least afford it? HIV/AIDS was once a reason for gay white men to act up now your indifference spells the death of straight black women and imprisoned Latino boys apparently if the tragedy does not immediately impact you you don’t give a fuck offer a social ladder to those of us inclined to climb and watch the bottom of a movement fall out a revolution once pregnant with expectation flounders without direction the privileged and the plundered grow listless apathetic and individualistic no one knows where to vote or what to vote for anymore the faces that represent us have begun to look like the ones who used to burn crosses and beat bulldaggers and fuck faggots up the ass with loaded guns the companies that sponsor our events do not honor the way we live or love or dance or pray our life partnerships are deemed domestic and the term marriage is reserved for those unions sanctioned by a church controlled state for all the landmarks we celebrate we are still niggers and faggots and minstrel references for jokes created on the funny pages of a heterosexual world the horizons are changing to keep pace with technology and policy alike the LGBT manifesto has evolved into a corporate agenda and outside that agenda a woman is beaten every 12 seconds every two minutes a girl is raped somewhere in America and while we stand here well-dressed and rejoicing in India in China in South America a small child cuts the cloth to construct you a new shirt a new shoe an old lifestyle held upright by the engineered hunger and misuse of impoverished lives gather round ye fags, dykes trannies and all those in between we are not simply at a political crossroad we are buried knee deep in the quagmire of a battle for our humanity the powers that have always been have already come for the Jew the communist and the trade unionist the time to act is now! Now! while there are still ways we can fight Now! because the rights we have are still so very few Now! because it is the right thing to do Now! before you open the door to find they have finally come for you Tuesday, July 18, 2006 Dear activists and aspiring activists, On Saturday night, I addressed the audience of the opening ceremonies of the Gay Games in Chicago. The response in the Soldiers Field Stadium, in the streets, in restaurants, and in your emails, has been one of the most gratifying experiences of my activist career. Here I was thinking that I was more or less alone with these concerns. Except for one or two whispered conversations, no one was asking the obvious but difficult questions dancing unanswered in my head. But there you were at the end of my delivery, on your feet and numbered (incredibly numbered!), all of us joyful in the discovery that we are only one in a sea of faces that stand up, literally, for social justice. Chicago has been good to us at the Games. Ninety-six degrees and above keep us toasty in the testing of our personal bests. The Pampered Chef convention is also in town. So housewives from around the country enter the elevators giggling and asking how the gays are faring on the field. The Hip Hop Convention will be here this weekend. That should make the mix more interesting. The locals have been very polite, even friendly as we navigate their city of long walks to get anywhere. Chi-Town is one of my favorites in the United States. Yes, it is true that the Windy City cuts brutal at the ear nose and neck in the wintertime, but this summer, it laughs out loud with the swimming dykes, running gay boys, soccer-ing trannies, baseball-ing bisexuals, and spectator-ing allies. It is/was good to be here for these games. It was good to have the opportunity to say the words with which I have been struggling. I write now to remind you of the power of the word. Say them, write them, make them into T-shirts-if you have something to say, find a way to convey it. The community, I believe, will find the way to receive it. The speech/poem/rant is attached. Please pass it on, especially to the people you know most need to read/hear/respond to it. In the tradition of Bayard Rustin, Susan B. Anthony, June Jordan, Harvey Milk, and Audre Lorde, let us interrogate the direction of our freedoms. Let us continue to ask ourselves those questions that are hardest for us to hear. With love and the most affectionate gratitude, Staceyann
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