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4.40 upon 5 (4187 votes)New military ban on Confederate flags also bans LGBTQ Celebration flags
On June 23 of last year, I held the microphone as a gay man in the New Orleans City Council Chamber and related a lost piece of queer history to the seven council members. I told this story to disabuse all Fresh Orleanians of the notion that silence and accommodation, in the face of institutional and official failures, are a path to healing.
The story I related to them began on a typical Sunday overnight at a second-story bar on the fringe of Brand-new Orleans’ French Quarter in 1973, where working-class men would gather around a white baby grand piano and belt out the lyrics to a tune that was the anthem of their hidden community, “United We Stand” by the Brotherhood of Man.
“United we stand,” the men would sing together, “divided we fall” — the words epitomizing the ethos of their beloved UpStairs Lounge bar, an egalitarian free territory that served as a forerunner to today’s queer guarded havens.
Around that piano in the 1970s Deep South, gays and lesbians, ivory and Black queens, Christians and non-Christians, and even preceding gender minorities could cast aside the racism, sexism, and homophobia of the time
Pride Flags in Schools: The Legal Issues
By John R. Vile, published on February 24, 2024
Adobe Stock photo
Flags serve as crucial symbols. The U.S. flag is especially prominent, and it remains common for school children to salute this flag, which is sometimes displayed next to the state flag.
West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette (1943) has clearly established that educational facility students cannot be forced to salute the flag against their convictions.
Court decisions, most notably in Texas v. Johnson(1989) and United States v. Eichman (1990), own affirmed the right of protestors to burn the flag in protest of governmental policies as an act of symbolic speech, with due regard for moment, place, and manner restrictions. Tinker v. Des MoinesIndependent Community Institution District (1969) (in that case wearing black armbands to demonstrate the Vietnam War) had previously extended some rights of symbolic speech to public school children.
Some flags, most notably a flag representing the Ku Klux Klan or the Confederate States of America, might represent or provoke violence, and many schools hold banned such flags or other attempts at symbolic intimidation. In Mel Students at a southern Missouri high educational facility displayed a Confederate flag in the school’s lunchroom last week in response to students supporting LGBTQ rights handing out rainbow flags the prior time, sparking widespread debate online about independence of speech. Rose, a 15-year-old sophomore at West Plains Sky-high School, said she and her friends ordered about 60 rainbow flags on Dec. 9 and began handing them out to other students in a show of inclusiveness. In response, said Rose, some students responded with anti-gay slurs and others ran out of the cafeteria and called their parents to take them home. In addition, several students shared photos of classmates holding up a large Confederate flag along with comments superimposed over the images. "I ponder it is a problem that we have an entire month dedicated to someone's sexuality and only a night for veterans," one student wrote. "You have the right to fly your LGBTQ flag just like I contain the right to fly my American and/or rebel flag." Rose said she had no idea that the gesture would cause controversy. "I wMissouri high school students hoist Confederate banner after classmates hand out rainbow flags