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PARENTS, PLEASE BE ADVISED: If you are a parent, it is your responsibility to keep any age-restricted content from being displayed to your children or wards. Furthermore, you represent and warrant that you will not allow any minor access to this site or services. This website should only be accessed if you are at least 18 years old or of legal age to view such material in your local jurisdiction, whichever is greater. There has been a large annual march and parade in New York City since 1970, first organized by the Christopher Street Liberation Day Committee, to mark the one-year anniversary of the Stonewall Riots.You are about to enter a website that contains explicit material (pornography).
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Since 1984, the growing event was produced by the nonprofit Heritage of Pride.
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Criticism of the increasingly corporate and rules-heavy event reached a tipping point in 1994 (the 25th anniversary of the Stonewall riots), resulting in the first Drag March. The Queer Liberation March was organized in protest of the corporate-focused sponsorship and participation requirements of the larger march, resulting in dueling Manhattan LGBT marches on the same day in 2019. The Queer Liberation March proceeded uptown on Sixth Avenue in Manhattan, following the path of the original 1970 demonstration. As a result of following the 1970 route, the first Queer Liberation March proceeded in the opposite direction of the New York City Pride March, which travels downtown on Fifth Avenue through most of its route. The Queer Liberation March was organized by the Reclaim Pride Coalition and was endorsed by activist and grassroots organizations including ACT UP NY, God's Love We Deliver, Housing Works, NYC Democratic Socialists of America, and SAGE. Civil rights attorney Norman Siegel worked with the City of New York for an agreement to hold the march on the same day as the larger NYC Pride March. The march sought to embrace the activist intentions some believe have been lost in the larger, celebratory event. The 2019 march began with 8,000 participants at the Stonewall National Monument and grew to 45,000 people as others joined along the way. ^ " 'Queer Liberation March' sets stage for dueling NYC gay pride events"."LGBTQ Group Plans Alternative 'Queer Liberation March' On Pride Day". "Why New York City Is a Major Destination for LGBT Travelers". ^ "Workforce Diversity The Stonewall Inn, National Historic Landmark National Register Number: 99000562"."Stonewall Inn Named National Monument, a First for the Gay Rights Movement". "No Cops, No Sponsors: 50 Years After Stonewall, Pride Goes Back to its Roots". "How the March Gets Made: Reclaim Pride Organizers Share Their Wisdom". "A Radical Challenger to New York City's Pride March". "Peaceful Queer Liberation March Ends With Pepper Spray at Washington Square". ^ " - Christopher Street Liberation Day Committee records"."Pride Can't Go Back to What It Was Before". "Christopher Street Liberation Day 1970". "NYC Activists Plan Alternative Gay Pride March for Same Day". ^ "There's a Corporation-Free Queer Liberation March Happening in NYC"."LGBTQ activists plan an alternative march to celebrate 50 years of Stonewall". "Cops and Corporations Aren't Welcome at This Radical Alternative to NYC's Pride Parade". ^ "The Queer Liberation March: 50th Anniversary of the Stonewall Uprising". "The 2019 Queer Liberation March Reclaimed the Resistance of Pride". ^ Teeman, Tim Rogers, Sarah Miller, Justin ()."45,000 Reclaim Stonewall at NYC's Queer Liberation March". "Stonewall 50: 50 Faces, 50 Stories, From New York City's LGBT World Pride". Black Lives Matter marchers in the NC Pride Parade. It is not okay for North Carolina Pride to violently silence LGBTQ people of color," the letter begins. Titled "Not My Pride: An Open Letter to NC Pride from the Black Queer Woman You Assaulted," the letter appeared Sept. 30 on the website of 28-year-old musician and activist Laila Nur, who lives in Durham.
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Nur alleged that four days earlier, an NC Pride official had used physical force to silence her as she was reading a statement with a Black Lives Matter group in Durham's NC Pride Parade. Then, she claimed, Pride officials had the police remove her group from the parade. "Within a minute of receiving the microphone, I was assaulted," Nur wrote. I was in complete shock and almost in tears." "A Pride affiliate stepped on my foot so I was unable to move, grabbed my arm and ripped the microphone out of my hand while yelling words I do not recall. Nur contextualized the incident in terms of broader discrimination within the LGBTQ community, against people of color in general and transgender ones in particular. "From social dating sites to Pride, and up the ranks of many LGBTQ organizations, we literally and figuratively see-'White Only,'" she wrote.