vaspider:

autismserenity:

wouldn’t it be cool if sylvia rivera or marsha p. johnson were still alive and you could see what kind of activism they were doing now, and support it, and follow them on social media?

“It sure would!”

Gosh, imaginary reader, I agree! And you know what?

MISS MAJOR IS *ALSO* A TRANS WOMAN OF COLOR WHO WAS AT STONEWALL, AND SHE’S STILL ALIVE AND AMAZING AND I ALMOST NEVER SEE ANYBODY MENTION HER

And yes, that’s her Instagram, @missmajor1. And yes, you can look her up on Facebook under Miss Major Griffin-Gracy, and she even follows back 😮

Looks like she’s even on Twitter, @immissmajor.

From missmajor.net:

Miss Major is a veteran of the Stonewall Rebellion and a survivor of Attica State Prison, a former sex worker, an elder, and a community leader and human rights activist.

Miss Major’s personal story and activism for transgender civil rights intersects LGBT struggles for justice and equality from the 1960s to today. At the center of her activism is her fierce advocacy for her girls, trans women of color who have survived police brutality and incarceration in men’s jails and prisons.

Miss Major is formerly the long-time executive director of the San Francisco-based Transgender Gender-Variant Intersex Justice Project (TGIJP), which advocates for trans women of color in and outside of prison. She is also the subject of a new documentary feature film currently showing around the country, MAJOR!

She even has a GoFundMe, where people make one-time or recurring monthly donations to support this activist legend through her retirement:

https://www.gofundme.com/MsMajorRetirement

Since June and Pride commemorate the anniversary of the Stonewall Riots, I thought it’d be a good time to boost her story. Happy Pride! 💖💜💙

Boost boost.

List of Participants!

hdconsentfest:

Here is a list of all 55(!!!) of our participants! Thank you to each and every one of you for contributing you time, your energy, and your labour to this fest. You’ve make it more than we every imagined. Honestly.

Remember that authors and artists love comments, so if you’ve got love to share, please consider commenting on the AO3 posts as you read/gaze.

agentmoppet
aibidil
alpha_exodus
anokaba
articcat621
bangyababy
carpemermaid
crazyparakiss
darkestbliss
donnarafiki
dot_the_writer
Drarryismymuse
enchanted_jae
FleetofShippyShips
frnklymrshnkly
GingerTodgers
GoldenTruth813
gracie137
HenryMercury
icarusinflight
IlluminatedWeasel
jeni_andtheafterthought
Juh_Nunes
Korlaena
LadyOfTheAttic
leelamalfoy
leontina (Leontina)
LowerEastSide
lq_traintracks (lumosed_quill)
Lynds
maraudersaffair
Marshview
mycatisthecutest
neveranygoodupthere
Novaa
oceaxe
owlpost
PalenDrome (nerdherderette)
pansypxrkinson
parkkate
phdmama
postjentacular
QueenofThyme
SailorSlash
SliceOSunshine
squadofcats
starlillie
Thealmostrhetoricalquestion
TrishJames
unadulteratedstorycollector
untilourapathy (gwendolen_lotte)
VagueDisclaimer
violetclarity
XxTheDarkLordxX
Yesimawriter

queeranarchism:

nokiabae:

The best thing coming out of Black Panther is the renewed calls for the release of jailed Black Panther members who’ve been incarcerated for decades. The FBI’s terrorism unit had labeled them “black identity extremists”, claiming that activists fighting police brutality posed a violent threat. 

An incomplete list of
Black Liberation political prisoners

(Black Panthers and other groups) still inside:

startingwithstars:

swingandswirl:

italeteller:

setmyfaceonfire:

Don’t invalidate people’s struggles because you’ve been through worse. If someone is tired after working for 5 hours and you worked for 7, it doesn’t mean that they’re not allowed to be tired. It doesn’t mean they can’t feel what they’re feeling just because you’ve had it worse.

don’t play pain olympics. don’t be that person

Best thing my therapist ever told me: ‘Just because someone else’s leg is broken doesn’t mean your sprained ankle can’t hurt.’

It works the other way, too. Don’t be a dick just because you don’t think other people haven’t suffered enough. 

The tragic thing is that there’s this opportunity for connection. Rather than one upmanship or “I know how you feel” you can instead share in the common experience to know you can mutually support each other. But so often people instead choose to drive a deeper wedge between themselves and others.