Weekends after Thanksgiving are hit or miss lately. The hustle to be in line for the latest deals has transitioned into anxious scrolling through various apps. Discovering a price low enough to share on social media is the culture now, it seems. One could ask, is this our way as millennials and Gen Z because we have seen the majority of our income squandered by bills and student loans? Then again, who’s really asking this question when we’re so busy? I have made a few definitive calls on items I have had in my cart (for quite some time). Finding a way to squeeze new expenses into a tight budget has found me making Marie Kondo-like decisions: Will the item or does the item bring me joy? I can justify and execute my budget once I have sifted through the possible outcomes and can no longer feel guilty. But why do I feel guilty, one could ask. And I say again, who’s really asking when we are all so busy? Why are we so busy, you ask? Well, rent for one-bedroom apartments in major cities is well over $2,000 or even $3,000. In order to pay said rent, one needs an income that at least hits the mark, times three. Job wage ratios fail to properly compensate for the 40 hour work week in which we are expected to fulfill not only our job description, but that of our supervisors. The average millennial has massive student loan debt, even as groceries become more and more expensive. We haven’t even touched insurance. Millennials are known to be workaholics, juggling two or more jobs and still living paycheck to paycheck. It’s such a shame EGOT recipient Whoopi Goldberg believes we need to work harder in order to reach some form of the “American Dream.” Earlier this month on The View, Goldberg remarked that millennials and Gen Z cannot reach stability and afford housing because they “only want to work four hours” and don’t want to “bust their behinds” like the boomer generation. In short, we are lazy. Let’s pet this elephant. Back in her day, the cost of living was way more affordable. Gen X and Boomers saw lower costs for tuition and buying homes. We simply cannot save money as rent prices continue to skyrocket and as wage increases get eaten by inflation. Entertainment, childcare, transportation, health insurance are all basic needs, and millennials pay more for them than our parents and grandparents did. Whoopi has a platform to be vocal and there are many ways to advocate for younger generations. My question for you is, “What is an EGOT with a silent “T”? Whoop there it is! And it’s pretty loud too.
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Love Rally Recap 2023
October 21st, 2023. An overcast Saturday morning on the street between Christopher Park and the historic Stonewall Inn. Despite the gloom of the gray clouds and persistent chill, the crowd in the Village burns bright with a collective spirit. At what was once the epicenter of the initial fight for queer liberation in the United States, a coalition forms across races, religions, and ethnicities. A cacophony of trans elders greets one another like old girlfriends who had not seen each other for too long. A small but fierce crowd of trans folks marches through the New York City streets and declares them ours. This day was the 2023 Trans Visibility March. It was the march’s first year in New York City. Though an annual occurrence, the Trans Visibility March is also a traveling action; it has traversed many cities and states such as Texas, Indianapolis, and Washington D.C. This year, the march was anchored by start and end points that are major landmarks in the history of queer and trans liberation. It began at the Stonewall Inn and finished on Pier 45, where the rally then took place. Needless to say, the march is hardly a new concept. However, this year also launched the Love Rally. The event featured a collection of speakers who recounted activist efforts within the local community and abroad. Their words stoked revolutionary fervor, and they commemorated the trancestors and those whom we lost far too soon. Organizers intend for the rally to become an annual staple in NYC. “Love to me is a verb – it’s an action – it’s about showing up.” Ms. June The rally included a vast array of speakers, including: Sybastian Smith of the National Center for Trans Equality (in his phenomenal DIY jacket), Alex Santiago of the I Am Human Foundation. Kiara St. James of the New York Transgender Advocacy Group, Brittan Hardgers of the New Pride Agenda, the Reclaim Pride Coalition, and Ms. June, among many others. True to its name, the Love Rally centered love and care. Many of the organizers and speakers already knew each other, and the fondness and intimacy of their interactions were reminiscent of family, like aunties and uncles sharing jokes at a cookout. Founders of a school for trans youth came to share about their burgeoning institution, guided by a commitment to trans children and to nurturing trans futures. The memorialization of trans lives lost throughout the year was shaped by a love for individuals we may not have known but for whom we felt deeply. A queer preacher of multiple religious and spiritual faiths delivered a queer-affirming sermon, offering a reminder that there are many forces beyond us who love us. Even the choice to rally on Pier 45 was a powerful decision. Pier 45, also known as Christopher Street Pier, has been established as not just a popular space of congregation for NYC’s queer inhabitants, but also a safe space for queer and trans youth. In this way, the gathering connected the efforts and livelihoods of trancestors with the efforts of present-day trans activists and the cumulative trans movement toward a better future for subsequent generations. Though this was the first instance of the Love Rally, the organizers were adamant to let us know it would not be the last. May the loving momentum of this year’s event carry into future iterations. Every trans person deserves to experience an energy and space like what the Love Rally created– and our collective efforts will make more such spaces possible. “Every seed that you are growing within yourself – there is someone within this generation and the next that needs it to survive” Brittan Hardgers Eness Scott (They/She/He) Aspiring writer, with interests in ballroom and cultural archivism. I am a pan-afrikanist Black anarchic radical who is darkskinned, neurodivergent, and genderfluid. Everything I do is for fellow queer and trans Afro-Diasporans.
The Sound of Anti-Queer Violence: How “Sound of Freedom” Promotes Hate
Sound of Freedom was released July 4th, 2023 by Angel Studios, a Christian-based distributor. The film targets a far-right audience and perpetuates numerous QAnon conspiracies involving child trafficking and the Illuminati. Its star, Jim Caviezel, is a member of the QAnon conspiracy group and a MAGA member. On the surface, Sound of Freedom appears simply a mediocre police procedural in which the “brave cops” (such as the main character, cishet white male, Tim Ballard) save children from “the evil criminals.” Typical Blue Lives Matter propaganda. However, when you look deeper, the true message emerges: a call to violence against queer and trans people. The movie delivers this mainly through the three antagonists of each of the film’s acts. The first, Ernst, is an allusion to Allyn Walker. His character design shares many elements, such as the hair, glasses, and even manner of dress. The movie makes a major plot point in the book Ernst has written on social justice, an allusion to Walker’s own work. There are frequent contrasts between Ernst and Tim. Ernst is queer coded, portrayed as effete and weak, contrasted with Tim’s toxic masculinity. Ernst’s main character flaw is portrayed as his willingness to trust others even under dire circumstances. Tim exploits and turns this against Ernst, similar to how many fake allies will infiltrate the subvert queer organizations. The message here is clear: those who write in defense of social justice and topics related to queerness are all child predators. And only the incorruptible police can save us from them. And that’s why we should be fine when cops infiltrate our organizations and sabotage efforts to bring about change that threatens their fascist masters. Giselle The second antagonist, Giselle, is coded as a trans woman. The film visually portrays her as an otherworldly beauty, scenes are shot with her as the center of attention, and they make clear she was a former beauty pageant winner. These reflect the way cishet men will treat trans women as “exotic” and fetishize them – the movie is exploiting their lust for trans women and depicting it as evil. It’s also a reference to the recent spate of victories for trans women beauty pageant winners. That Giselle is also Black brings in another trope, one that is openly racist, the “magical negro.” This is when dark-skinned characters are handled as having magical or mystical natures, while having little character or agency of their own. The film has Giselle enter people’s lives like a Fairy Godmother, evoking Disney movies. We learn only bare facts about her history. There is nothing to her character beyond “she does evil things and is pretty.” She has the magic of the Pied Piper and casts a spell on parents and children. Giselle ultimately just serves as a plot device for the white main character to find the damsel in distress. The lesson behind showing her in this way and then making her sinister is to teach the audience to embrace a jingoistic rejection of the other. The third antagonist, El Alacran, reads like a caricature invented by MAGA: a Latin American BIPOC Communist Revolutionary. And of course the movie portrays him as a pedophile, as a nod to the popular alt-right propaganda that arose from Kyle Rittenhouse’s murder of two BLM marchers. Up until this point in the movie, Tim has only used deception and infiltration as tactics. It is here, in the third act, that the movie imparts its main message: in a scene played up for tension and cathartic release, Tim murders Alacran in cold blood. Tim suffers no consequences for this, nor does he wrestle with the morality of taking a human life. If anything, the movie suggests it would have been better if he’d killed Ernst and Giselle, too. The lesson is clear: trickery and lies are not enough. QAnon supporters have to resort to murdering those in their way if they want to “make America great again.” And the people they need to kill are BIPOC queer activists and their allies. Their only way of countering recent victories for human rights is to begin killing us outright. QAnon supporters of the movie raise the counterargument that, since Giselle and Ernst are based on real people, the traits are just reflective of reality. This argument ignores the obvious artistic choices by the writers and directors. And this argument is countered by Alacran, who doesn’t exist. Ballard has admitted the entire third of the film never actually happened. That means the writers specifically chose to portray murder as heroic when they didn’t need to. The intentions of this movie become clear in light of the history of sexual misconduct of the real Tim Ballard, executive producer Paul Hutchinson, and major funder Fabian Marta, who kidnapped a child. Those behind Sound of Freedom are not actually concerned with stopping violence against children. They are the ones doing the harm. The real goal here is to vilify the people saving children’s lives. They know that queer couples and drag queens are safer for children than any cishet white male. They are promoting violence to stop us as a last resort. It’s not a coincidence that the hate in the movie aligns with groups like Atomwaffen and others. We need to double our efforts. We need to get every kid in the country access to queer books, queer mentors, and queer events that will save their lives. We need to teach them to shatter the fascist brainwashing behind this movie. That will be actual freedom.Laura Reyna (They/She) is a queer neurodivergent Latinx finding their authentic self. They are sex positive, kink positive, and sex worker inclusive, and they long for the day when every aspect of colonialism, patriarchy, and fascism are dismantled.
