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cherry valley forever
Not today Justin
Peter Solarz
NASA
we're not kids anymore.
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Three Goblin Art

tannertan36
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wallacepolsom

Janaina Medeiros
hello vonnie

blake kathryn
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Today's Document
sheepfilms
Jules of Nature
Cosmic Funnies

ellievsbear

oozey mess

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@gabouy
Same — Please support us on Patreon https://ift.tt/3aKuz6Y
gay😔irl
AIN’T THAT THE TRUTH. :(
THIS NEEDS TO STOP NOW, RIGHT NOW.
C’MON ADULTS AND SOCIETY, AND FELLOW CLASSMATES GET YOUR HEAD OUT OF YOUR ASS. ALAN AND SPENCER
#SupportTransKids
I show not your face but your heart’s desire
LGBT - Just Kiss !
I believe it’s best to be yourself
Jordan Steffy
This Teen Is Being Called A Hero After He Fought Back Against A Homophobic Bully
Jordan Steffy is a junior at LaPorte High School in Indiana, and he has become an Internet hero after a video of him slapping the crap out of a homophobic bully went viral. Now, violence is never okay, but there is something pretty satisfying about watching someone get whacked in the face after they use a slur, which might explain the popularity of the video.
Steffy spoke with Insider about his stand, saying he’s been getting bullied ever since he came out in seventh grade. On the day of the fight, his classmate posted a homophobic message on Snapchat with a photo of him, and he lost it.
“He made an anti-gay post with a picture of me on it saying how he hated gays and a bunch of throwing up emojis all over it,” Steffy said. “I walked up to him and said ‘Why did you post this?’ He said ‘It was just a post.’ And I said ‘Well, it’s not just a post. It’s a post about me, saying how you dislike who I am, and I don’t appreciate that.‘”
“He went on to say ‘Okay, but what are you going to do about it?’ I said ‘I’m not going to deal with this, this is the last time I’m called anything.’ And then he said ‘What are you going to do about it, f*ggot?’ And that’s when I was like ‘No, I’m not doing this.'”
HAPPY PRIDE MONTH!🏳️🌈🏳️🌈🏳️🌈
Tyler Alvarez on Instagram Stories
Always worth a reblog!
Come on all y’all, let’s keep this going. I’m with @htbjadg
I’m tired
I’m gay. I’m tired.
I texted one of my best friends this morning and asked, “Did you hear about Orlando?” because the first time I ever went to a gay club and pretended like I was “out” was with him when we were fresh out of high school. Out of all my friends, he’s probably spent the most time in gay clubs. Which means I’m more worried about him than about my other friends. So I texted him.
I’m tired.
They want people to give blood, but it’s gay people who need the blood and it’s gay people who can’t donate. But we’re in crisis mode! We’ll take your tainted gay blood for today only!
I’m tired.
I held hands with a man last week and thought, “Oh no, we’re in a small town in Utah and this is dangerous because we’re both gay,” before I remembered that he’s a guy and I’m a girl so no, it’s not dangerous. But the next time I hold hands with a girl, will someone see us and get mad enough to shoot 50 gay people? Will I feel responsible when I read the news? Will I feel like a danger to society for being gay?
I’m tired.
I went to Pride in Salt Lake City last weekend and I complained as I stood in line in the hot sun and I complained about the ticket prices and I complained about the festival being smaller than it was last year and I complained. When it was over, I was still alive. I’m still alive. I can’t believe I complained.
I’m tired.
Bury your gays. Currently on television, 4 percent of characters identify as LGBT. In 2016, about 40 percent of that 4 percent have already died. Yesterday, that might’ve been the issue I wanted to discuss. Yesterday, I might’ve been angry about fictional gays dying. Yesterday. Art imitates life, life imitates art, and I am tired.
I’m tired.
A year ago I put a rainbow flag around my shoulders and celebrated the legalization of gay marriage in the United States. A year ago there was no law banning transgender people from using the bathroom of their choosing. A year ago a man hadn’t shot 50 gay people dead because he saw two men kissing and got angry. “Now that gay marriage is legal, what more do you people want?” Well, I want to stay alive, for one thing.
I’m tired.
There aren’t gay coffee shops or gay restaurants – there are gay nightclubs. Gay nightclubs where LGBT people can meet other LGBT people and feel safe. I want to meet other LGBT people and make friends with LGBT people, but I also don’t want to die.
I’m tired.
My existence is controversial. Even though I’m out, I have to be careful about how “gay” I “act.” What happens if I’m at work and offend a customer? What happens if someone I know reads these words and decides to punish me for them? What happens if someone gets so angry about my sexuality that they shoot 50 people?
I’m gay. I’m tired.