NYC Man Stabbed in Alleged Anti-Gay Attack: WATCH

NYC Man Stabbed in Alleged Anti-Gay Attack: WATCH

Devereaux

Marquis Devereaux says he was stabbed near his home in the Bronx borough of NYC, the NY Daily News reports:

Devereaux was walking home from work and was near Sunset Blvd. and Neptune Lane in Clason Point at 3:30 a.m. Sunday. After the 39-year-old event planner sat by the water in his gated community, he heard someone say, “We’re not going to do any of that boyfriend stuff around here.”

Devereaux kept walking and was accosted by two other men.

One of the men slashed Devereaux in the left armpit with a silver knife and the other called him “homo,” “f—–” and “bumbaclot,” a Jamaican term for a rag used as toilet paper.

Devereaux said the attackers were no older than 25. And it’s the second anti-gay attack he has faced. In 2011 he was stabbed in the leg and his attacker was sent to prison for three years.

Watch ABC7’s report on the attack:

The post NYC Man Stabbed in Alleged Anti-Gay Attack: WATCH appeared first on Towleroad.



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Marcha LGTB 479

Marcha LGTB 479

diciembr0 posted a photo:

Marcha LGTB 479

De esta manera se realizó la marcha del Orgullo Gay en la ciudad de Piura. La marcha estuvo liderada por la Representante de la Red Tras Piura Tonika Anton.
Jueves 7 de julio de 2016
Fotos: Wilson Siancas

Marcha LGTB 479

Limit(less) Project: Netsie

Limit(less) Project: Netsie

mowunna posted a photo:

Limit(less) Project: Netsie

Netsie: Queer Ethiopian-Namibian (USA)

Q. How would you describe your style?

“bell hooks has had a profound effect on my life in a number of ways. When discussing how the black woman watches film, she posits that in order to see ourselves on screen and in stories made for the white, male gaze, we must develop an inverted gaze. That changed the path of my life—I realized that I needed to become a filmmaker, and it also changed the way I saw myself, as a femme woman. From a young age, women are taught that they have no choice in who looks at them and so often, we are held responsible for what other people perceive. We are taught to be presentable, not just for business meetings, but potential friends, mates, and assaulters. At the same time, we are taught never to look threatening, or look back at the people looking at us. We are denied the verb, and forced into the noun. Fuck that. I’m a hard femme with an hourglass silhouette, a goodwill budget, and a firm grasp of anti-capitalist rhetoric. I wear whatever makes me feel comfortable and powerful and safe. I’m too clumsy to own a pair of un-ripped tights. I love wearing bold patterns that clash, things that could be pretty but aren’t, anything to remind people that when they look at me, I am looking right back at them.”

– Netsie (Queer Ethiopian-Namibian, She/Her)

Donate to support the project: HERE

About Limit(less)
Limit(less) is a photography project by Mikael Owunna (@owning-my-truth) documenting the fashion and style of LGBTQ African Immigrants (1st and 2nd generation) in diaspora. As LGBTQ Africans, we are constantly told that being LGBTQ is somehow “un-African,” and this rhetoric is a regular part of homophobic and transphobic discourse in African communities. This line of thinking, however, is patently false and exists an artifact of colonization of the African continent. Identities which would now be categorized as “LGBTQ” have always existed, and being LGBTQ does not make us “less” African.

Limit(less) explores how LGBTQ African immigrants navigate their identities and find ways to overcome the supposed “tension” between their LGBTQ and African identities through their fashion and style. The project seeks to visually deconstruct the colonial binary that has been set up between LGBTQ and African identities, which erases the lives and experiences of LGBTQ Africans. ‪#‎LimitlessAfricans‬

Donate to support the project: HERE

Website:
limitlessafricans.com/

Facebook Page:
facebook.com/limitlessafricans

Tumblr:
limitlessafricans.tumblr.com

Limit(less) Project: Netsie