Friend --
On this day, 53 years ago in the early
morning, “Public Morals Squad” officers waited outside a small bar in
the New York City neighborhood of Greenwich Village. The roughly 200
patrons inside were doing what most folks do at bars, drinking,
dancing, and trying to have a good time. It wasn’t a nice bar. It
didn’t have running water behind the bar, it was owned by the mafia,
and the patrons were all criminalized by the society at the time. It
was, however, a place where these folks could be themselves, if only
for a few hours.
What followed is, as they say, history. The subsequent police
raid and eventual violent uprising would go on to be memorialized to
this day as one of the sparks that ignited the modern queer rights
movement. For years now, we’ve used this day to look back and comment
on how far we’ve come, but this year it feels like we’ve never been so
close to returning to that time as a society.
A society that treats drag performers as dangers to children
and the public. A society that treats queer people as existential
threats to society and tries to legislate away our rights to
healthcare. A society that looks once again to criminalizing our love,
our bodies, and our existence.
Having pride in this climate is hard. It's easy to feel
demoralized when everything we’ve fought for over decades seems so
fragile – so close to disappearing. It's times like these we need to
remember Stormé DeLarverie, standing handcuffed in police custody
outside the Stonewall Inn in the early morning all those years
ago.
"Why don't you guys do something?" she shouted at the
bystanders.
She was under attack, and together with her queer community
they demanded their rights and stood up to a society that saw them as
less than, deviant, and immoral. For days they rioted in the streets
throwing bottles and dropping bricks through windshields of police
cars. They marched in the streets. They confronted oppression where it
lived and made themselves unavoidable.
It's that activism that lives at the core of who we are as
Greens. When the climate is threatened and the duopoly is standing by
impotent, we’re shouting “Why don’t you guys do something!?” When our
black and brown siblings are victimized by police violence, we are
marching in the streets shouting "Why don't you guys do something!?"
When queer rights are threatened we confront those enabling it and set
forth our vision for a more just society.
The Green Party of the United States has centered LGBTQIA+
rights since its inception. It has stood arm in arm with the oppressed
across this country and demanded justice. On this anniversary, we ask
you to continue that fight with us in any way you can, whether that is
with your activism, your time, or
your generous donation.
Our mission has never been more important and your support has
never been so needed.
In Solidarity, Daniel Bumbarger & Margaret
Elisabeth National Lavender Green Caucus Co-Chairs
|