4 lessons from ACT UP you can use against the Trump administration today


THE WORLD'S MOST FOLLOWED LGBTQ NEWS SOURCE
Top Headlines for Tuesday Feb 21, 2017

Top Story4 lessons from ACT UP you can use against the Trump administration today
The HIV/AIDS direct action group's bold, decisive actions helped bring about real change. So what can we learn from their tactics and how can we use it today?
Thumbnail
Soccer legend Abby Wambach announces engagement to Christian mom blogger
The unlikely couple announced they were dating last November, shortly after Melton and Wambach ended their marriages, to a man and a woman, respectively.

Thumbnail
Retired pro race car driver Danny Watts comes out after 17-year marriage
"You feel like you have to hide it within motorsport because it's a very masculine sport," Watts said.

Thumbnail
Teen suicide attempts plummeted after same-sex marriage was legalized
Suicide attempts dropped 7 percent among all students and 14 percent among gay kids.

Thumbnail
BREAKING: Publisher cancels Milo’s book
Yiannapolous himself confirmed that after a weekend of controversy Simon & Shuster has canceled publication of his forthcoming book.

Thumbnail
U.S. Customs blocked a Canadian gay man over the content of his Scruff profile
Reports of travelers being barred from entering the United States after cell phone searches have increased following Trump's anti-Muslim travel ban, but the practice isn't new.

Thumbnail
In Trump’s America, Christian proselytizing is another form of oppression
For this administration, there's an impenetrable wall between "mosque and state" and "synagogue and state," but not for "church and state."

Thumbnail
Burglar breaks into church, leaves Bible verse condemning gays and thieves
Looks like whoever perpetrated this crime won't be entering "the Kingdom of God."

Thumbnail
Milo Yiannopoulos denies he defended pedophilia in newly unearthed videos
Yiannopoulos says videos of him defending pedophilia are "deceptively edited." See for yourself.

Thumbnail
Love letters reveal a World War II soldier’s secret same-sex romance
When Gilbert Bradley mailed his love letters to Gordon Bowsher, he signed them simply, ‘G,' to avoid detection.