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Celebrate Pride Month with these trailblazing LGBTQ figures

Celebrate Pride Month with these trailblazing LGBTQ figures
pride has always been *** moment of great, you know, um visibility for our community. That's the important thing to say. We're here, we're out. We're proud of who we are. We're not going back, we're not going back in the closet. The pride flag is an easily recognizable symbol today, But it didn't always exist to tell the story of the pride flag. We have to go back to 1978. It was then in San Francisco, an openly gay politician, Harvey milk commissioned artist Gilbert Baker to create *** symbol of visibility and pride for members of the gay community. Milk, who had become an outspoken leader in the gay community through his camera shop and brave political campaigns helped ignite the movement for gay rights. Milk and baker wanted to create *** flag that unapologetically proclaimed this is who I am inspired by the colors of the rainbow baker assigned *** meaning to each color. Pink for sexuality, red for life, orange for healing, yellow for sunlight, green for nature, turquoise for magic and art, indigo for harmony and violet for spirit. And the first pride flag flew on june 25th, 1978 sadly Milk was assassinated in november of that year, fearing that he would be killed. Milk recorded *** tape in which he said, If *** bullet should enter my brain, let that bullet destroy every closet door. The night of his assassination, his nephew Stuart Milk came out of that closet And since then has continued Harvey's fight for gay rights. Milk's legacy lives on through the pride flag, which over the years has greatly evolved in 1979, pink was dropped due to the difficulty of finding the fabric Turquoise was also eliminated, leaving the flag with six stripes so that the flag could be evenly split in half. For *** march. In response to Milk's death, The six color flag became the most common flag worldwide. In 2017, the flag added black and brown stripes. The stripes represent the contributions of people of color and was unveiled at the philadelphia pride parade. That year. In 2019, artist Daniel Quasars launched *** Kickstarter for *** new design known as the progress flag. He wanted to deepen the meaning by including white, blue and pink stripes that represented the trans community in 2020 the Q P. O. C. Flag was created to stand in solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement. It grew in popularity in 2020 because of the notion that there is *** considerable overlap in both of those communities. In 2021, Valentino Vecchi et designed the intersex inclusive progress pride flag to include intersex people. Over time, the pride flag is branched off into other flags, giving visibility to specific identities within the community. The bisexual flag was created in 1998 by Michael Page. The three colors, an overlap of blue and pink represent attraction to the same, different and multiple genders. The transgender flag was designed in 1999 by Monica helms. This flag takes the traditional baby blue and pink for boys and girls and white meaning intersects or neutral by flying the colors together. It shows always finding correctness in our lives and being correct in one agenda, The pan sexual flag was popularized in 2010 by creator Jasper V. It represents attraction to all genders. The *** sexual flag came about from the group haven. It took inspiration from an ace of spades playing card. The Demi sexual flag represents individuals who require an emotional bond before attraction. It shares common colors with the *** sexual flag and includes *** black triangle. Omni sexual feel attraction to all genders individually. It uses shades of pink, blue and dark purple to represent those identities individually. The lesbian pride flag is the most widely used flag in the lesbian community. It's seven colors represent the following from top to bottom gender, Nonconformity, independence community, unique relationships to womanhood, serenity and peace. Love and sex and femininity. The gender queer flag was created in 2011 by Maryland Roxy. The three colors lavender, white and chartreuse green represent androgyny gender neutrality and people without identities respectively. The non binary flag was created in 2014 by Kyle Rowland who didn't feel represented by the gender queer flag. The color show yellow meaning people identifying outside of the cis gender by name. The intersex flag was created as *** rejection of the gender stereotypes of blue and pink. In 2013 Morgen Carpenter created *** flag using *** purple circle and yellow background to show wholeness and completeness. The gender fluid flag was created by J. J. Pool in response to the gender queer flag feeling too broad. The pink, white, purple, black and blue represent femininity, *** gender combinations of both. All other genders and masculinity, respectively. The age gender flag followed in 2014 via online discussions. Black, white, gray and green represent the range of absence of gender to non binary identities. The two spirit flag is used to identify queer native americans and relate to traditional leadership and healing roles that occupy *** third gender in many indigenous north american cultures, the two feathers are masculine and feminine, joined by *** circle that shows unification into another gender as the L. G. B. T. Q. Community continues having dialogues. New flags will continue to emerge and fly under the original rainbow banner. To date, there are over 50 pride flags in existence. These symbols serve an important reminder that they are valid and visible to others.
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Celebrate Pride Month with these trailblazing LGBTQ figures
This year’s Pride Month comes at an arduous time for many people, as restrictions on drag performances, transgender health care and other LGBTQ rights take center stage in many states.Still, the month is a time for celebration and, of course, pride. To commemorate the month, CNN is highlighting five major LGBTQ elders – some who have passed on, and some who haven’t – highlighting their achievements. From a drag king who fought discrimination on the streets of New York to a famous mathematician who stood up to adversity despite legal limitations, here are five LGBTQ figures to know.Bayard RustinBayard Rustin was instrumental in the civil rights movement, leading and organizing many protests. But Rustin wasn’t only a leader in the movement – he was also someone who helped push Martin Luther King Jr. toward nonviolent ideas and tactics.Rustin studied in India for seven weeks to learn Gandhian philosophies in 1948, and he passed those teachings down to King. Following the success of the Montgomery bus boycott in 1956, Rustin became a close confidant of the iconic reverend and later organized the March on Washington in 1963. Rustin also played a significant role in the formation of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, also known as SCLC. Still, though Rustin was an out gay man, some believed his sexuality would undermine the movement. In 1953, Rustin was arrested for having sex with another man in a parked car, landing him on the sex offender registry.The charge was used against him – most notably by former Sen. Strom Thurmond, a segregationist, who read his arrest record on the Senate floor and used it to delegitimize the civil rights movement. Almost 70 years later, Rustin was pardoned by California Gov. Gavin Newsom.Larry KramerWhen playwright and activist Larry Kramer published his essay "1,112 and Counting" in 1983, AIDS was a highly stigmatized, little-understood disease primarily affecting gay men. "Our continued existence as gay men upon the face of this earth is at stake," he wrote. "Unless we fight for our lives, we shall die. In all the history of homosexuality, we have never before been so close to death and extinction. Many of us are dying or already dead."Kramer’s essay spared no punches, criticizing everyone from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to doctors and local politicians. And it was no less than tide-shifting, motivating thousands of people to protest and, eventually, propelling a nationwide response to the crisis. Just a few years later, Kramer also founded ACT UP (AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power), an organization known for organizing die-ins, political funerals and speeches against officials, all in an attempt to encourage AIDS research and advocate for LGBTQ people. Though he died in 2020, his impact was deep – with Anthony Fauci, former director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, crediting Kramer for changing medicine in the US.Miss Major Griffin-GracyAlongside transgender activists like Marsha P. Johnson, Miss Major was on the frontlines of the Stonewall uprising in New York in 1969. But that’s not where her activism ended.A prominent figure in both Chicago, where she was born, and New York, the road hasn’t been easy for Miss Major. After being kicked out of two colleges for wearing dresses, Miss Major relied on sex work and drag work for money.But a year after Stonewall, Miss Major was arrested for robbery, landing her with a five-year prison sentence. Her time in incarceration directly impacted her advocacy for transgender and gender-nonconforming people behind bars. Decades after her release, Miss Major spent time as the executive director of the Transgender Gender Variant Intersex Justice Project. She also wrote letters to people in prison and helped those who were newly released find jobs, while also supporting young drag performers and other young LGBTQ folks – earning her the nickname “Mama Major.”Stormé DeLarverieRumored to have thrown the first punch at Stonewall, Stormé DeLarverie spent her life fighting "ugliness" – her word for discrimination of any kind.Dubbing herself the "guardian of the lesbians in The Village," DeLarverie would patrol the streets of Greenwich Village in New York with a concealed rifle (and a state gun permit), ensuring the safety of lesbians and kids at night. She was also a drag king performer, known for her work with the Jewel Box Revue, a traveling company of drag performers, mostly drag queens and the first racially integrated company of its kind.Born in New Orleans to a Black mother and White father, DeLarverie first saw success as a jazz singer in nightclubs as a teenager. She spent her life performing for and protecting the community she loved."Be a smartass and start putting people down, I won't have it. You don't do it around me. Just don’t try it," she said in a 2009 interview. "That's inexcusable. Ugliness is totally unnecessary."Related video above: Gay Pioneers of the NFL Alan Turing Alan Turing’s mind was one of the best. Not only was Turing active in cracking Germany’s Enigma code and deciphering messages sent by the Nazis during World War II, he later worked on designing the ACE (Automatic Computing Engine) at the National Physical Laboratory in England. That design was so revolutionary, it’s considered a predecessor to the modern computer.And yet, Turing was arrested in 1952 after calling the police to report a burglary in his home. Officers discovered Turing was in a relationship with a man and arrested him. Turing was found guilty of “gross indecency,” which at the time was punishable by a lifetime jail sentence.Though he accepted a punishment of chemical castration, Turing remained open about his sexuality. Two years later, he died of cyanide poisoning, with a half-eaten apple found nearby – though some people have argued that Turing may not have intended to die by suicide. Still, his legacy continues. The 2014 movie “The Imitation Game” brought his story to the big screen. Three years later, the Turing Law was passed, allowing anyone convicted of consensual gay sex in the UK to be pardoned.

This year’s Pride Month comes at an arduous time for many people, as restrictions on drag performances, transgender health care and other LGBTQ rights take center stage in many states.

Still, the month is a time for celebration and, of course, pride. To commemorate the month, CNN is highlighting five major LGBTQ elders – some who have passed on, and some who haven’t – highlighting their achievements.

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From a drag king who fought discrimination on the streets of New York to a famous mathematician who stood up to adversity despite legal limitations, here are five LGBTQ figures to know.

Bayard Rustin

Bayard Rustin was instrumental in the civil rights movement, leading and organizing many protests. But Rustin wasn’t only a leader in the movement – he was also someone who helped push Martin Luther King Jr. toward nonviolent ideas and tactics.

Rustin studied in India for seven weeks to learn Gandhian philosophies in 1948, and he passed those teachings down to King. Following the success of the Montgomery bus boycott in 1956, Rustin became a close confidant of the iconic reverend and later organized the March on Washington in 1963.

American civil rights activist Bayard Rustin was a close confidant of Martin Luther King Jr.
Patrick A. Burns/New York Times Co./Getty Images
American civil rights activist Bayard Rustin was a close confidant of Martin Luther King Jr.

Rustin also played a significant role in the formation of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, also known as SCLC. Still, though Rustin was an out gay man, some believed his sexuality would undermine the movement. In 1953, Rustin was arrested for having sex with another man in a parked car, landing him on the sex offender registry.

The charge was used against him – most notably by former Sen. Strom Thurmond, a segregationist, who read his arrest record on the Senate floor and used it to delegitimize the civil rights movement. Almost 70 years later, Rustin was pardoned by California Gov. Gavin Newsom.

Larry Kramer

When playwright and activist Larry Kramer published his essay "1,112 and Counting" in 1983, AIDS was a highly stigmatized, little-understood disease primarily affecting gay men.

"Our continued existence as gay men upon the face of this earth is at stake," he wrote. "Unless we fight for our lives, we shall die. In all the history of homosexuality, we have never before been so close to death and extinction. Many of us are dying or already dead."

Larry Kramer is seen here at the Village Voice AIDS conference on June 6, 1987, in New York.
Catherine McGann/Getty Images
Larry Kramer is seen here at the Village Voice AIDS conference on June 6, 1987, in New York.

Kramer’s essay spared no punches, criticizing everyone from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to doctors and local politicians. And it was no less than tide-shifting, motivating thousands of people to protest and, eventually, propelling a nationwide response to the crisis.

Just a few years later, Kramer also founded ACT UP (AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power), an organization known for organizing die-ins, political funerals and speeches against officials, all in an attempt to encourage AIDS research and advocate for LGBTQ people.

Though he died in 2020, his impact was deep – with Anthony Fauci, former director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, crediting Kramer for changing medicine in the US.

Miss Major Griffin-Gracy

Alongside transgender activists like Marsha P. Johnson, Miss Major was on the frontlines of the Stonewall uprising in New York in 1969. But that’s not where her activism ended.

A prominent figure in both Chicago, where she was born, and New York, the road hasn’t been easy for Miss Major. After being kicked out of two colleges for wearing dresses, Miss Major relied on sex work and drag work for money.

But a year after Stonewall, Miss Major was arrested for robbery, landing her with a five-year prison sentence. Her time in incarceration directly impacted her advocacy for transgender and gender-nonconforming people behind bars.

Miss Major is seen here in the film "Major," a documentary about her life and campaigns.
Floating Ophelia Productions
Miss Major is seen here in the film "Major," a documentary about her life and campaigns.

Decades after her release, Miss Major spent time as the executive director of the Transgender Gender Variant Intersex Justice Project. She also wrote letters to people in prison and helped those who were newly released find jobs, while also supporting young drag performers and other young LGBTQ folks – earning her the nickname “Mama Major.”

Stormé DeLarverie

Rumored to have thrown the first punch at Stonewall, Stormé DeLarverie spent her life fighting "ugliness" – her word for discrimination of any kind.

DeLarverie is pictured in front of portraits of herself in New York on June 8, 1994.
Michelle V. Agins/The New York Times/Redux
DeLarverie is pictured in front of portraits of herself in New York on June 8, 1994.

Dubbing herself the "guardian of the lesbians in The Village," DeLarverie would patrol the streets of Greenwich Village in New York with a concealed rifle (and a state gun permit), ensuring the safety of lesbians and kids at night. She was also a drag king performer, known for her work with the Jewel Box Revue, a traveling company of drag performers, mostly drag queens and the first racially integrated company of its kind.

Born in New Orleans to a Black mother and White father, DeLarverie first saw success as a jazz singer in nightclubs as a teenager. She spent her life performing for and protecting the community she loved.

"Be a smartass and start putting people down, I won't have it. You don't do it around me. Just don’t try it," she said in a 2009 interview. "That's inexcusable. Ugliness is totally unnecessary."

Related video above: Gay Pioneers of the NFL

Alan Turing

Alan Turing’s mind was one of the best.

Not only was Turing active in cracking Germany’s Enigma code and deciphering messages sent by the Nazis during World War II, he later worked on designing the ACE (Automatic Computing Engine) at the National Physical Laboratory in England. That design was so revolutionary, it’s considered a predecessor to the modern computer.

And yet, Turing was arrested in 1952 after calling the police to report a burglary in his home. Officers discovered Turing was in a relationship with a man and arrested him. Turing was found guilty of “gross indecency,” which at the time was punishable by a lifetime jail sentence.

A portrait of the famous early computer inventor and war hero Alan Turing is seen here.
Geopix/Alamy Stock Photo
A portrait of the famous early computer inventor and war hero Alan Turing is seen here.

Though he accepted a punishment of chemical castration, Turing remained open about his sexuality. Two years later, he died of cyanide poisoning, with a half-eaten apple found nearby – though some people have argued that Turing may not have intended to die by suicide.

Still, his legacy continues. The 2014 movie “The Imitation Game” brought his story to the big screen. Three years later, the Turing Law was passed, allowing anyone convicted of consensual gay sex in the UK to be pardoned.