Happy Pride month to
everyone! This June commemorates the Stonewall riots 50 years ago that helped
catalyze increased rights for LGBT people in the US 
I’m fortunate to live in a
time and place where I can be relatively out in my personal and professional
life and can live without threat of physical harm or routine verbal assaults.
That unfortunately isn’t the case for everyone, and I’ve become aware of quite
a few instances of outright homophobia and violence against LGBT people over
the last month. For example:
-   A police officer and pastor in Tennessee 
-   Pastors in Florida 
-   A young gay scientist
on Twitter reported that his partner had been surrounded and verbally taunted
by 5 teenagers in a bathroom in Dallas ,
 Texas 
-   There have been over 10
reported murders of transgender people this calendar year, and transgender
people of color have been particularly targeted.
-   There has been a
decline in the percentage of young adults comfortable with LGBT people over the
last few years. 
These instances of
homophobia and intolerance are indicative of pervasive discrimination against
LGBT people. Marriage equality notwithstanding, we are far from equal treatment
of all people regardless of sexual orientation and gender identity, either across
the US 
-   In the majority of US
states, it is still perfectly legal to fire an LGBT person or deny them housing
because of their sexual orientation or gender identity.
-   There is no federal
law to protect LGBT people from discrimination although the US House has
recently passed the Equality Act.
-   Although LGBT people
comprise only about 4% of the population, FBI statistics from 2017 show that they
are the target of over 16% of documented hate crimes in the US 
-   The current US 
-   Homosexual activity
is illegal in almost half of the nations on Earth, with severe punishments such
as death in some cases.
The Stonewall riots 50
years ago in New York 
In light of how much
anti-LGBT sentiment still exists in the world, perhaps the lesson 50 years
after Stonewall is that we can never take progress on civil rights for granted.
The US 
| The San Francisco Pride parade in 2015, just days after marriage equality was affirmed by the US Supreme Court. | 
