harvey milk

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America Needs Another Harvey Milk Right Now.

randyreport.blogspot.com

It is Harvey Milk day. We remember a man that America has never seen the like of again. And my Gods they really need another Harvey now to lead the fight for full equal rights. Our youth need to have safe lives, free of fear, intimidation and violence.
I was 19 when I first saw ‘The Times Of Harvey Milk’. It was my first experience of being in cinema sharing grief, but then also the feeling of abject disgust at the ‘fate’ of Dan White was revealed. It changed me totally. It made me a total protest junkie, as that is our duty as humans to stand up against what is wrong.

IMHO, America has not come nearly far enough since the 70′in regard to gay rights. But then many gay men spent the 80′s struggling to survive in the face of the virus. It is now the duty of the new generation to fight for what their elders could not do as they were dying. This is their duty to Harvey and the many men who dies. It is not enough to just remember Harvey on one day a year. You have to fight as he did. Yes, balls are needed. Apply within your heart. We shall not be second class citizens anymore.

Stuart Milk, nephew of Harvey Milk and founder and president of the Harvey Milk Foundation, celebrates the day created in his uncle’s honor with a moving and intimate statement. Read it after the jump.

Writes Stuart in a letter posted to HarveyMilkDay.co:

Today my uncle would have been 82 years old, however, he gave us his life 32 years ago knowing that the first of any civil rights movement, who so clearly and loudly proclaim their right to equality, most often meets a violent and sudden end.

I am frequently asked if I am deeply saddened that my uncle Harvey did not get to see all those elected officials who would come to stand on his shoulders, or all the places where the light of equality burns brighter than the darkness of antiquated prejudice, and I have long replied that he did see those open and proud candidates running for office and winning, and he did see those cities and states and nations that would etch equality into both their laws and their societal values, for he could not have given his life without seeing and visualizing that dream, for he would leave us with a compass of hope, hope born of bullets, not smashing into his brain, but smashing our masks and our fear of authenticity.

82 years ago Harvey came into this world with all the promise and potential that my grandparents Minnie and Bill could have imagined, and he also came into a world that soon would be rocked by a global war driven at its very core by fear, division, and separation. My uncle was profoundly affected by the capacity of communities and nations to turn on each other when the narrative of lies and the myths of prejudice were fed around the globe during WWII. He also was able to see at a young age, visible through his college writing, that we could learn through collaboration, understanding and inclusiveness that we are not weakened by our differences, in fact, that our potential is only reached when the full diversity of all those that make up our communities is celebrated. And today it is this very celebration of our diversity that Harvey had dreamed, the celebration of all of us, not in-spite of our difference, but because of our differences.

Today is the celebration not of a people or community or nation being better than another, but a celebration of the knowledge that we are so much less when we do not embrace, without qualification, all members of our unique and varied humanity. 

My uncle’s legacy has many monuments, all those openly LGBT elected officials, all those who live an authentic and open life, all those strong allies like our President in the United States that fight to keep us embraced, the hope givers who help to full fill our potential of equality.

President Obama said it best, “Harvey gave us hope, All of us, Hope unashamed, Hope unafraid” My uncle was very much with us in spirit as we watched the President and then Speaker Pelosi sign the Matthew Shepard Act and then the repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell. And we were all standing on his shoulders just last week when the President, true to his word in staying on the side of justice, basic dignity and human rights as he endorsed Marriage Equality, becoming the first sitting US President to make that courageous move.

These are the tangible monuments to Harvey’s legacy that have the impact to effect change, real societal change. Today we are here are voicing the hope of a global community set on the path of inclusion – there is no more fitting tribute to my uncles dream, a dream that remains alive in each of us. Today is a day of recognition and appreciation of our own authenticity and that of others, a day to collaborate and reach out to those who still struggle with either self-acceptance or societal acceptance.

Harvey Milk day is a reminder to put hate and separation in their place, a place of learning of wrongs that have been righted and reminders not to repeat them, a day to create the dream and vision of what is possible, even in the all too many places around the world where it is still so hard to visualize that dream, as it was when my uncle spoke out over 38 years ago in the US.

I and the Milk family and Harvey Milk Foundation thank all of you who are working collaboratively today, in dreaming what my uncle dreamed, for seeing, visualizing and making great efforts to co-create our collective full potential. We are are thankful in the celebration of my uncles legacy of hope, hope that tomorrow will be more inclusive then today and that inclusivity is without exception and without qualification. As my uncle said, we gotta give ‘em hope!

UPDATE – BUT HOW VERY HAPPY I AM THAT AN OUT PROUD GAY MAN, ADAM LAMBERT HAS HIT NUMBER ONE ON THE ALBUM CHARTS WITH HIS ALBUM ‘TRESPASSING’. THIS GIVES ME SUCH JOY.

WATCH – Chuck Prophet – ‘White Night,Big City’.

towleroad.com

Via Towleroad, we have “White Night, Big City” from singer songwriter Chuck Prophet, which is a tribute to the riots that happened in San Franscisco after Dan White’s manslaughter conviction in the murders of Harvey Milk and George Moscone. The footage in the video is incredible to watch.

JOIN THE FIGHT FOR GAY RIGHTS NOW.

demotix.com

INCREDIBLY POWERFUL.

WATCH – San Francisco’s Gay Scene In The 70′s.

weareca.org

Charles Roseberry is an early gay documentary filmmaker in 8 mm and Super 8 mm work that was used in the opening sequence of old Castro Street in the ‘Milk’ film. At 82, Charles is still practicing his talents as an film editor and videographer. This film will stir up those old Disco memories and get your blood pumping.

Happy Coming Out Of The Closet Day.

therealstevegray.com

EVERYONE KNOWS SO YOU MAY AS WELL JUST COME OUT GAYBOI. HARVEY DID NOT DIE SO WE COULD LIVE SCARED HALF LIVES.

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