Rutger published: Trans People Erased from Stonewall Monument's Website Under Trump Directive

Recently, people have been up in arms over a decision by NPS (National Park Service) that took all mentions about transgender folks off Stonewall National Monument's website. This move seems like it's following orders from former President Trump, who wanted less federal acknowledgment when it comes down specifically towards transgender individuals in various aspects throughout civic life.

Remembering what Stonewall stands For

The Stonewall National Monument isn't just any old monument; it marks where, back in 1969, folks rose up against police brutality—a key moment that kickstarted so much in terms within LGBTQ+ rights. Transgender and queer individuals were out front during this push. So, you can imagine what kindling there was when any reference related towards transgender people got scrubbed from its web pages. Understandably upset groups like The Stonewall Inn have scheduled gatherings right at Ground Zero—noon Friday.

The ripple effect from executive orders

Before these changes went live, you could spot "LGBTQ+" scattered all over Stonewall's site. Now, it's been pruned back simply down towards "LGB," neatly clipping out transgender and queer identities entirely. This isn't just some random snip—it mirrors broader guidelines from Trump's Office Of Personnel Management (OPM), released January 29th, cutting any funds going out broadly towards "gender ideology." Any programs, policies, public communications—if it touched on such territory—they wanted off books.

This directive slashes away efforts pushing diversity, equity, inclusion (DEI) across federal lines, encroaching further towards private sectors too. Out clear evidence? A now altered webpage paragraph states: “Before 60s' time—almost anything open-lived by LGB persons: illegal.” And those iconic rainbow Pride banners? They've been reduced simply described: “LGB flags“—not exactly what broader LGBTQ+ places embrace as their term.

The language around "LGB" often finds footing amongst groups urgently pushing against transgender rights. Take UK-based outfit, LGB Alliance, who argue non-stop that trans rights bump up against LGB and women's concerns, contesting anything related towards recognizing gender identities or aiding youth needing gender-affirming care.

The community fights back

Though online content shifted over, physical signs standing sentry at Stonewall still sport "LGBTQ." Folks noticed. New York Governor Kathy Hochul didn't miss a beat; she gave a piece on record slamming these removals as “cruel and petty.” Hochul reminded everyone how pivotal transgender folks remain inside LGBTQ+ movements—New York isn't going anywhere without honoring those contributions.

NYC Council Member Erik Bottcher, living openly gay, joined critique ranks, citing Trump's wordplay actions attempting wiping trans people out, dividing communities in process. Reassurance followed—transgender peers could count continued backing from both lesbians and gays within united LGBTQ+ spheres.

Rallying around protests and advocacy

The Stonewall Inn, together with its nonprofit side, outright condemned what they termed historical disfigurement—hand in hand erasing efforts by transgender women, especially women colored within Stonewall Riots front lines. They're not planning sitting idle while trans legacies blur out.

GLAAD, that LGBTQ+ media champion organization, echoed—calling revisions “blunt attempts discriminating against wiping queer/transgender Americans' histories.” The monument, which former President Obama marked national in 2016, stands alone—first site dedicated embracing LGBTQ+ rights.

Firing back through NYC's LGBTQ+ scene: protests are already in works. Well-known faces, like Peppermint (transgender lady competing on RuPaul's Drag Race), shout loud across social media, spreading word. Their rally cry loud clear: “You can't spell Stonewall without T.“ Community leaders join forces, ensuring their history isn't rewritten nor rights taken away.

This ongoing struggle highlights resilience pulsing through LGBTQ+ veins—standing ever united against actions clouding their shared pasts, watering down inherent diversities therein. As plans head towards protests unfolding, solidarity shines bright—they're set preserving legacies fought hard won.

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