The Fight For LGBTQ+ Rights Is Far From Over, And Young Queer People Are Leading The Charge
By Sarah Emily Baum
By several accounts, it would seem like the fight for LGBTQ+ equality In America has been successful. Same-sex marriage was
legalized in 2015. LGBTQ+ folks are stars of
stage, screen, and
sports; occupy public office; and
head multi-billion dollar companies. World Pride in New York City drew in
millions of people from across the globe, and queer issues were a talking point at the 2019 Democratic primary debates —
even if the delivery was a little fumbled.
Although LGBTQ+ people in the U.S. Still
lack several federal civil rights protections and face
disproportionate rates of homelessness,
mental illness, and
bullying while
hate crimes against LGBTQ+ people are on the uptick. Around the world, while some countries are moving to protect LGBTQ+ people —
others have issued more and more hateful laws against them. Since Donald Trump was inaugurated in 2016,
his administration has assigned anti-LGBTQ+ justices to the Supreme Court; erased resources for the LGBTQ+ community off federal websites; rolled back Obama-era protections for trans students; released a memo dictating that gender be defined as a
“biological, immutable condition decided by a person’s genitalia at birth;” made it easier to
discriminate against trans people seeking healthcare; and sought to develop a
trans military ban.
Such attacks may be permeating into a greater cultural consciousness: In June, the LGBTQ+ advocacy company GLAAD released its yearly Accelerating Acceptance survey which polled 2,000 people aged 18-34. While 80 percent of cisgender, heterosexual respondents mentioned they support the community, fewer than ever mentioned they imagined themselves to be allies, and for the second year in a row, “acceptance” among the youngest people polled by GLAAD went down.
“It concerns me,” 12-year-old Rebekah Bruesehoff, a transgender activist from New Jersey, who testified in support of her residence state's
LGBTQ+-inclusive curriculum bill and has spoken at events across the nation, including at 2019
World Pride, told MTV News. “Really, it scares me. I don't like to think about things getting worse for trans youth who already struggle so much.”
This survey has dominated the national conversation — from
the USA TODAY headline which read, “The young are regarded because the most tolerant generation. That's why results of this LGBTQ+ survey are ‘alarming’” to the
Time Magazine article which declared “Young Residents of the
U.S. Are More and more 'Uncomfortable' With LGBTQ Community, GLAAD Study Shows.” However several activists, including Rebekah, mention these pieces aren’t telling the full story about young America’s views of the LGBTQ+ community.
“I visualize so much love, acceptance, and visibility, it's almost hard to believe we might would be getting much less tolerant,” Rebekah mentioned. “But the hate and setbacks of the past few years clearly can't be underestimated.”
Community organizer and LGBTQ+ rights activist Erin Bailey mentioned she was “shocked” by the results of GLAAD’s survey. The 19-year-old Columbus, Ohio, native is the founder of
Columbus Pride, the LGBTQ+ pride parade which marches in the hometown of Vice President Mike Pence after the years he spent
advocating for homophobic and transphobic policies.
“People I know and also strangers have reached out to me telling me about how they used to be closed-minded and anti-LGBTQ+ however have since changed their thinking,” mentioned Bailey, who attends the Herron School of Art and Design in Indianapolis. “Personally, I’ve seen an increase in support for the LGBTQ+ community from the younger demographics.”
Erin and Rebekah aren’t alone — young people across the country are echoing the claims that while surveys and reports might show a resist in acceptance of LGBTQ+ people, they still have hope.
Sage G. Dolan-Sandrino, a 18-year-old student and activist from New York, feels that not only acceptance of LGBTQ+ people among her peers, nevertheless also the public of LGBTQ+ youth itself is growing. She referenced
a 2016 survey by J. Walter Thompson Innovation Group which noticed that much less than half of these surveyed between the ages of 13 to 20 years old identified as “exclusively heterosexual.” She believes Generation Z is “
the most diverse, queer and intersectional generation yet.”
“With every intersectional identity we occupy comes an inherent level of political fluidity, [and] different political and cultural identities that expand our ideas of community,” Sage told MTV News. “The majority of us inhabit the elaborate intersectional identity that cause us to be more understanding. And that forces us to work with each other to prepare new systems of language, education, healthcare, and career systems that are available to and understanding of our identities.”
As with several historic movements, like because the Vietnam War protests and the
March For Our Lives, youth activists are integral to pushing for change. Sameer Jha, a 17-year-old non-binary activist from California, is on the frontlines of the fight for LGBTQ+ acceptance among students as a member of
GLSEN’s National Student Council and because the founder of
The Empathy Alliance. Their non-profit works toward “educating the educators” on ways to make more inclusive classrooms for queer students, the Alliance’s website says.
“I feel like things are changing for LGBTQ+ youth in an enormous way,” the Stanford University student mentioned. “Visibility and accessibility used to be huge restrictions for queer youth, especially in conservative areas, although right now we are able to break by means of the silence and confront the harsh realities of homophobia and transphobia.”
Though they acknowledge the harmful impact of
anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric in the media along with because the
rollback of LGBTQ+ protections under the Trump administration. Sameer, like Sage, feels that their generation has boosted queer visibility and acceptance. They cite celebrities like 20-year-old
Lil Nas X and activists like 19-year-old Emma Gonzalez as positive examples of LGBTQ+ representation and mention that no matter how intelligence capture the current climate, it’s worth holding onto the belief that, largely, their peers are getting things right.
“Growing up, queer and trans issues were totally stigmatized (especially in my South Asian community), however these past few years immediately after I came out I've procured nothing nevertheless love from other youth,” they added. “The work is hard, however the gains we're making are incredible.”
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