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WorldPride 2025 Promise
An energized global movement takes on Washington, D.C., with an urgent cause and a note of hope…
By Doug Wallace
The tour guide from DC Pride Walks is disclosing one of the more risqué chapters in the 2SLGBTQI+ history of Washington, D.C., when US President Donald Trump’s helicopter lands on the White Home South Lawn – right before our eyes. This may explain the snipers on the roof. All in a day’s operate, I guess.
I’m in town for WorldPride 2025, coinciding this year with the 50th anniversary of Washington’s Capital Pride. And while I’m not the biggest activist in the nature, being part of this event to connect with and help empower the global community was beyond cool. When our place in society is creature attacked as it is – with the far right weaponizing gay rights, escalating anti-2SLGBTQI+ sentiment and rising hate crimes all over the world – showing up just seems like the right thing to do. Throw in the WorldPride Human Rights Conference, a two-day song festival, a couple of massive street festivals, dozens of events and parties, and Jennifer Lopez, and I have no allow to stay home, despite the warnings of a few worried friends. “Be safe
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Pride Month has started but what does that mean? A look at what it is, how it's celebrated
Pride Month has officially started as of June 1 and there’s a lot to celebrate.
Throughout history, people who identify with the LGBTQ+ community contain struggled to gain matching rights within and to overcome adversity and discrimination.
But what is Pride Month exactly? Here's a watch at the history of how it came to be and how it is celebrated.
Rainbow flag meaning: A brief history lesson on how the Celebration flag came to beWhat is Pride Month?
Pride Month commemorates the 1969 Stonewall Uprising in New York and celebrates the LGBTQ community and the contest for equal rights.
The Stonewall Uprising began on June 28, 1969, when police raided the Stonewall Inn, a prominent gay prevent in Manhattan’s Greenwich Village. The protests that followed are credited with a shift in LGBTQ+ movement in the U.S.
The accompanying year saw some of the first Pride parades in Chicago, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Brand-new York. Despite the decisive role transgender people and women of color played in the riots, including trans activist Marsha P. Johnson, they were largely excluded from early Identity festival celebrations.
"Th
Some global LGBTQ travelers are skipping America this Pride season
For many European gays, the festive Eurovision Song Contest each May marks the unofficial kickoff to the global Lgbtq+ fest season.
As usual, there were soaring highlights and scandalous lowlights among the competing Eurovision nations at the 2025 edition of the competition in Basel, Switzerland, this month. But another country was on the lips of many gay jet-setters this year: the United States, with its spate of new anti-trans and anti-immigrant policies that are causing some LGBTQ travelers to reconsider their upcoming American itineraries.
SeveralEuropean countries, including Denmark, Finland and Germany, have issued official cautions for LGBTQ travelers visiting the U.S., particularly those with an “X” gender listed on their passport. Meanwhile, out of concerns for participant safety, Canada’s principal LGBTQ rights team, Egale Canada, pulled out of participation in WorldPride DC, and the African Human Rights Coalition has called for a boycott of this edition of the international Identity festival event, coordinated by InterPride and usually held every two years.
“It doesn’t experience right to at the moment,” Karl Krause told NB