“I’ve been beat up multiple times in my life,” says Dale Mitchell, who witnessed the Stonewall riots. 50 years later, he’s watching a gay man run for president. “It’s mind-blowing to think that a candidate can be gay and be taken seriously,” he adds.
Chat with us in Facebook Messenger. Find out what's happening in the world as it unfolds.It's easy to forget its solemn origins as a march that commemorated clashes between police and protesters outside a New York gay bar, the Stonewall Inn.The media coverage of what is now called the Stonewall riots reflected the era's homophobic attitudes.
They staged pickets in Washington to protest the exclusion of homosexuals from military service, and gathered in Philadelphia each year on July 4 for"annual reminders" demanding legal protections.Mattachine-New York helped end policies permitting police entrapment. But police raids of bars and bathhouses continued, and a spate of violent homophobic attacks put the LGBTQ community on edge.
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