After the words “transgender” and “queer” were removed from the National Park Service’s website for the Stonewall National ...
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Meridian WTOK-TV on MSNStonewall hosts 5th annual Clarke County Mardi Gras ParadePeople from all over Clarke County and some from out of state came to Stonewall today to participate in the parade.
The National Park Service has removed references to transgender and queer people on its web page for the Stonewall National ...
References to "transgender" and "queer" were scrubbed from the Stonewall website following muliple executive orders from the ...
Several hundred people with LGBTQ flags rallied at the Stonewall National Monument on Friday, a day after references to ...
“Stonewall would not be Stonewall without the T,” trans demonstrator Chloe Elentari told Salon. “National Park Service: You ...
The National Park Service eliminated references to transgender people from its Stonewall National Monument website on ...
Voices in the Lower Hudson Valley's LGBTQ+ community react to the removal of transgender references from sites run by the ...
The National Park Service has removed transgender references from its website commemorating the 1969 Stonewall Uprising, ...
The website deleted all mentions of "transgender" and "queer" in its history of the Stonewall riots, and only referred to the riots' impact on lesbian, gay and bisexual people.
The “T” was removed in references to L.G.B.T.Q.+ on the official site for the Greenwich Village monument, which marks a milestone in the fight for gay rights. Later, the Q+ also disappeared.
On the National Park Service website, the acronym LGBTQ+ has been shortened to LGB, standing for lesbian, gay and bisexual.
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