Query a Queer: Caring about the black community after Black History Month
February is over and with that brings an end to Black History Month. There are ways to still care about the Black community outside of the one month of the year.
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February is over and with that brings an end to Black History Month. There are ways to still care about the Black community outside of the one month of the year.
There are more stories in black history than Harriet Tubman, Tamir Rice and Martin Luther King Jr.
White privilege is going to any store and being able to buy products for your hair and skin type.
Correction appended.
November is National Homeless Youth Awareness month. According to The Covenant House, there are over 2 million homeless youth in the United States of America alone. Studies show that young people are especially at risk for homelessness, as 40 percent of our country’s homeless population are under 18 years old. The LGBT community is even more at risk of becoming homeless than any other demographic. According to The University of Chicago, there is up to 120 percent greater risk of being homeless for queer people. Transgender people are often discriminated when trying to found housing and will be turned away, leaving them homeless. Studies by The National Center for Transgender Equality report one in five trans folk will be denied. People of color, such as black people or hispanic people, also face a higher risk of homelessness. Surprisingly, the risk of homelessness between rural and urban areas are the same.
Most people believe that there are two sexes: male and female. The truth is that sex is more complicated than that.
Recently, a friend of mine said they did not like when people say the phrase “preferred pronouns.” I can’t see what is wrong with that.
Being bisexual