June is Pride Month. If you're new to it, Trudy Ring (THE ADVOCATE) explains:
"Pride started with a protest."
That’s a slogan used often to remind us of the origins of LGBTQ+ Pride Month, celebrated each June in the U.S. and many other countries. It’s used especially by those who feel Pride parades and festivals have become too corporate and not as political as they should be, although 2025 Prides will doubtlessly feature acts of protest against the Trump administration. But Pride Month and the attendant events endure, having survived pandemics, hostile politicians, and internal controversies
And they will survive Chump . Pride Month usually means joy however the Convicted Felon's encouragement of and support for hatred can make right now feel like one of the bleakest Pride Months in years.

Look at the reports out over the last week. For example,
For many European gays, the festive Eurovision Song Contest each May marks the unofficial kickoff to the global Pride season.
As usual, there were soaring highlights and scandalous lowlights among the competing Eurovision nations at the 2025 edition of the contest in Basel, Switzerland, this month. But another country was on the lips of many queer 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.
Several European 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 leading LGBTQ rights group, 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 Pride event, coordinated by InterPride and usually held every two years.
“It doesn’t feel right to at the moment,” Karl Krause told NBC News at Eurovision in Basel, referring to travel to the U.S. Krause, who is German by birth, lives in Amsterdam with his Dutch partner, Daan Colijn, and together they are travel-focused content creators known to their followers as Couple of Men. In 2021, Lonely Planet awarded them its first Best in Travel LGBTIQ Storyteller Award, a nod to their work for the LGBTQ community.
Brooke Migdon (THE HILL) notes, "Between May 1, 2024, and May 1, 2025, GLAAD's ALERT Desk, an online tracker of anti-LGBTQ extremism in the U.S., recorded 932 anti-LGBTQ incidents in 49 states and Washington, D.C., the equivalent of 2.5 incidents each day. Violent attacks over the past year have resulted in 84 injuries and 10 deaths, the group said Monday." GLAAD adds, " 52% of all incidents were also specifically targeting transgender and gender non-conforming people. Violent attacks included in this year’s count resulted in 84 injuries and 10 deaths; eight of which involved fatal violence against people of color."
Daniel Villarreal (LGBTQ NATION) reports:
Jonathan Joss.
Gay 59-year-old Native American actor Jonathan Joss was shot to death by his neighbor in San Antonio, Texas on Sunday, according to Joss’ husband Tristan Kern de Gonzales. Police arrested the neighbor and charged him with murder.
Joss voice-acted Native American character John Redcorn in the Texas-based comedic cartoon series King of the Hill and also portrayed Native American tribe leader Ken Hotate in the comedy TV series Parks and Recreation.
In a public Facebook post published on Monday afternoon, de Gonzales wrote that he and Joss recently visited the site of their home (which burned down in February) in order to obtain a victim’s fire fund check from its still-standing mailbox. While visiting, Joss saw the skull and harness of one of their three dogs who perished in the fire, causing both men “severe emotional distress.”
“We began yelling and crying in response to the pain of what we saw,” de Gonzales wrote. “While we were doing this, a man approached us. He started yelling violent homophobic slurs at us. He then raised a gun from his lap and fired.”
“[Joss] was murdered by someone who could not stand the sight of two men loving each other…. Jonathan and I had no weapons,” de Gonzales added. “We were not threatening anyone. We were grieving. We were standing side by side. When the man fired, Jonathan pushed me out of the way. He saved my life.”
Every day seems to bring news of another attack and every day seems to be another attack from Donald Chump. Michael Collins (USA TODAY) reports on the rich history of Stonewall -- where gay men, lesbians, bisexuals and transgendered people stood up to the bullying and said "no more." And how the administration has worked this year to strip trans people out of that important historical moment:
Less than a decade later, President Donald Trump wants Americans to remember only part of the story. In February, the National Park Service stripped references to transgender people from the monument’s website. The move was part of Trump’s broader campaign to recognize the existence of just two sexes – male and female – and combat what he calls “gender ideology.”
Trans people who battled police alongside gay men and lesbians at Stonewall have now been erased from the government’s official history of that event.
“That’s just wrong,” said Miss Major Griffin-Gracy, who participated in the riots and now lives in Little Rock, Arkansas. Miss Major, as she is known, is a transgender activist who has argued for years that trans Americans’ involvement in Stonewall has never been fully acknowledged.
Mark Segal, a gay rights activist from Philadelphia who was inside Stonewall the night of the raid, is appalled by Trump’s attempt at trans-washing LGBTQ+ history.
“I am a witness to history, and my trans brothers and sisters were with me that night,” Segal said. “I won’t allow him to censor history. I want people to realize that when a government tries to erase a group of people, that's dangerous.”
Chump wants to censor history and he and Pete Hegseth are working to destroy the military as well. Madison Maier (FEMINIST MAJORITY FOUNDATION) notes:
This Memorial Day, like so many others, was filled with quiet moments of reflection, flags waving, wreaths laid, heads bowed in remembrance. But too often, when we honor those who have served and sacrificed, we forget about the women who were there as well. Women have been part of the U.S. military for more than 200 years. They have driven convoys through war zones, served as medics under fire, flown combat missions, and led troops into battle. They have always been there. And now, the right for women to serve in those roles is in danger of being taken away.
[. . .]
For women of color, LGBTQ+ service members, and others at the intersections of identity, those obstacles are even steeper. Racism, sexism, and homophobia often compound and go unaddressed. Transgender service members have faced outright bans and policy whiplash, putting their service and safety in constant question. The military has never been an easy place for women, but it is made even harder when the top brass or elected leaders try to turn back the clock.
It's one blow of hatred after another from Hegseth. Konstantin Toropin (MILITARY.COM) reports:
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has ordered the Navy to take the rare step of renaming a ship, one that bears the name of a gay rights icon, documents and sources show.
Military.com reviewed a memorandum from the Office of the Secretary of the Navy -- the official who holds the power to name Navy ships -- that showed the sea service had come up with rollout plans for the renaming of the oiler ship USNS Harvey Milk.
A defense official confirmed that the Navy was making preparations to strip the ship of its name but noted that Navy Secretary John Phelan was ordered to do so by Hegseth. The official also said that the timing of the announcement -- occurring during Pride month -- was intentional.
Of course it was.
But here's the thing, OVERCOMPENSATING. Have you caught the series on AMAZON PRIME yet? It's a visual delight. Comedian Benito Skinner's series zips along quickly through eight episodes. Things kick off with Benito's football jock Benny leaving home (and parents played by Connie Britton and Kyle MacLachlan) to go off to college -- the same college his older sister Grace (Mary Beth Barone) attends. There she's paired with Peter (Adam DiMarco) and man who wants to be the BMOC, really, really wants to be but, like Pete Hegseth, Peter's seen as an idiot.
Benny kind of hooks up with Carmen (Wally Baram) but Benny has issues. He's gay. And is he going to stay in the closet and study business like his father wants, or is he going to learn how to be himself?
Again, eight episodes and it pulls you in as it zips along leading up to a cliffhanger ending that will make you demand AMAZON puts season two into production immediately.
The show is funny and it's touching but most important it has a look. Television is a visual medium -- that's apparently a secret to most show runners who deliver repetative and static shots that are dull and predictable. FRINGE debuted in 2008 and the series had a unique look for TV -- one that borrowed heavily from John Farrow's film classic THE BIG CLOCK. More recently, Gregg Araki's NOW APOCALYPSE had a unique look in set design and set ups for shots that made it a visual delight.
You can toss in THE WHITE LOTUS and David E. Kelley's various productions as other shows with unique visuals. But you can't toss in many more because most of the rest just look the same as everything that was on TV before and is on TV now and will be on TV forever.
OVERCOMPENSATING stands out.
And people who stream it? They love it.
Hegseth needs to pack it in because he's not going to win this one.
Let's step back a moment.
Diana Ross was the first Black actress to make the top 20 of box office stars. She did it two years -- once with LADY SINGS THE BLUES and once with MAHOGANY. You have to wait until the 80s for another woman to make that list: Whoopi Goldberg.
With Diana's two films noted and THE WIZ, broadcast TV had three films that they could work into an otherwise overwhelmingly White list of films. Whoopi focused more on volume when she emerged. Meaning, she made one film after another -- some good ones, some bad ones, and a few classics. And those went into broadcast circulation as well. And never again was film going to be 'a White thang.'
People of color were part of the storytelling and kids could grow up seeing actors who looked like them in films that they watched.
This is true of LGBTQ+ people as well.
In the sixties, there were real efforts at bringing LGBTQ+ characters into the conversation. THE CHILDREN'S HOUR, THE FOX, THE DETECTIVE, MIDNIGHT COWBOY, WOMEN IN LOVE, etc. The seventies saw Paul Newman repeatedly try to tun Patrica Nell Warren's THE FRONT RUNNER into a film but the reluctance of many (including Robert Redford who has forever been skittish about being gay on the screen) buried that project.
Even so, the films of John Waters as well as films like THE BOYS IN THE BAND, DOG DAY AFTERNOON, LA CAGE AUX FOLLES and THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW resulted in a more expansive cinema world. The 80s brought SILKWOOD, PERSONAL BEST, MAKING LOVE, LAWS OF DESIRE, PRICK UP YOUR EARS, VICTOR/VICTORIA, COME BACK TO THE FIVE AND DIME JIMMY DEAN JIMMY DEAN. TONGUES UNITED, DESERT HEARTS and PARTING GLANCES -- among others. The 90s saw an explosion of independent films, we saw feature films from studios with big budgets as well as more personal statements from auteurs with stories they couldn't wait to put on film resulting in great movies like GO FISH, TRICK, KISS ME GUIDO, PHILADELPHIA, PARIS IS BURNING, THE WATERMELON WOMAN, HEAVENLY CREATURES, MY OWN PRIVATE IDAHO, WAITING FOR GUFFMAN, BOUND, CHASING AMY, THE CRYING GAME, HIGH ART, BUT I'M A CHEERLEADER, THE BIRDCAGE, THE OBJECT OF MY AFFECTION, IN & OUT, MIDNIGHT IN THE GARDEN OF GOOD AND EVIL, LONGTIME COMPANION, THE OPPOSITE OF SEX, BILLY'S HOLLYWOOD SCREEN TEST, CHOCOLATE BABIES, THE LIVING END, I SHOT ANDY WARHOL, EDGE OF SEVENTEEN, CHASING AMY, THE WEDDING BANQUET, SET IT OFF, etc.
Now in the 21st century, we've had even more: BROS, MILK, HEDWIG AND THE ANGRY INCH, DEAR WHITE PEOPLE, MOONLIGHT, BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN, TRANSAMERICA, FAR FROM HEAVEN, Y TU MAMA TAMBIEN, CAROL, CALL ME BY YOUR NAME, BOOKSMART, BOTTOMS, SINGLE ALL THE WAY, DISCLOSURE, NORMAL, SOLDIER'S GIRL, I LOVE YOU PHILIP MORRIS, ALL OF US STRANGERS, THE DREAMERS, FEMME, MONSTER, THE KIDS ARE ALL RIGHT, NYAD, YOU PEOPLE, RUSTIN, TAR, etc.
LGBTQ+ people are not going away no matter how hard Pete Hegseth rubs the tiny lump in the front of his pants. Their stories are our stories. They are not outsiders and they can no longer be othered.
For any who aren't grasping the seismic shift that has taken place, Monday saw the VFW issue the following:
WASHINGTON -- June is Pride Month, and the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) stands with our fellow Americans honoring the invaluable contributions and sacrifices of all who have served our nation, including lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ) veterans.
It is estimated that there are a little more than 1 million LGBTQ veterans in the United States. They are among us, counted with us and are one of the less than 1% of us who serve or have served our great nation. Our veterans, regardless of their background or identity, have stepped forward to protect our country, bravely defending the freedoms we all cherish. Their dedication, courage and selfless commitment are foundational to our nation's strength and security.
The VFW believes that the bond forged in service transcends all differences. Our mission remains steadfast: to foster camaraderie among veterans, to advocate for their earned benefits, and to perpetuate the memory and history of our fallen brothers and sisters-in-arms. We are dedicated to ensuring that every veteran feels valued and has access to the resources and community they deserve.
This June, the VFW encourages all Americans to reflect on the diverse tapestry of service members and veterans who have contributed to our nation's defense. It is through recognizing and valuing the service of all who have served that we truly uphold the ideals of liberty and justice for everyone.
The more than 1.4 million members of the VFW and its Auxiliary salute all LGBTQ veterans, past, present, and future, and say “thank you” for your service to our great nation.
The page has turned. Hate merchants will continue their desperation tactics, but the page has turned and it's the hate merchants, not LGBTQ+ people, who are out of step with history, with today and with this country. Bleak though it may sometime feel, take Pride in the fact that mountains have been moved. Much remains to be done, but find the joy in what has been achieved and the strength to keep fighting.
------------------------
A note:
If you're not pleased with some of the sources cited in this article, we agree with you. It is way too heavy on outlets that would be identified as MSM or as gay. Where are the lesbians? Where are the women identified sites?
We went looking. What did we find?
WOMEN'S ENEWS doesn't like transgender people. Up through 2016, they did and had a folder for their news on "lesbian and transgender." But they dropped that folder and they dropped coverage. In fact, WOMEN'S ENEWS last did a story mentioning a transgender woman in . . . 2023. When we learned of PINK NEWS' transphobia months ago, that outlet was dead to us. We feel the same way regarding WOMEN'S ENEWS. And if you're wondering when they last mentioned a lesbian or lesbian issue at WOMEN'S ENEWS? It was April 26 of 2021.
Remember that and make a point to avoid WOMEN'S ENEWS -- they'll never be linked to by any community site again. Another way to celebrate Pride is by exposing homophobes and transphobes.