"Silence kills the soul, it diminishes its possibility to rise and fly and explore. Silence withers what makes you human. The soul shrinks, until it's nothing."
-- Marlon Riggs
"Always admit when you're wrong. You'll save thousands in therapy later -- and a few friendships too." -- Harvey Fierstein
"The good we secure for ourselves is precarious and uncertain until it is secured for all of us and incorporated into our common life."
-- Jane Addams
"I decided that if I could paint that flower in a huge scale, you could not ignore its beauty." -- Georgia O'Keefe
"As long as men are free to ask what they must, free to say what they think, free to think what they will, freedom can never be lost and science can never regress."
-- Marcel Proust
"Change your mind as often as possible. Just because you thought something yesterday doesn't mean you have to think it today. Don't ever become a prisoner of your own opinion."
-- Harvey Fierstein
"If I didn't define myself for myself, I would be crunched into other people's fantasies for me and eaten alive." -- Audre Lorde
"A child cannot be taught by anyone who despises him, and a child cannot afford to be fooled." -- James Baldwin
“Equality is more than tolerance, compassion, understanding, acceptance, benevolence, for these still come from a place of implied superiority: favors granted to those less fortunate. These attitudes suggest that there is still something wrong, something not quite right that must be overlooked or seen beyond."
-- Suzanne Pharr
"The trouble is that not enough people have come together with the firm determination to live the things which they say they believe."
-- Eleanor Roosevelt
"To me an unnecessary action, or shot, or casualty, was not only waste but sin." -- Thomas Edward Lawrence ("Lawrence of Arabia")
"A man paints with his brains and not with his hands." -- Michelangelo Buonarroti
"They have to convert our agenda into something aggressive. Two guys wanting to be happy together are invading their marriages. Helping a kid who's getting beaten up at school is promoting homosexuality. If you gave me a million dollars, I wouldn't know how to promote homosexuality. Do I hire Don King?"
-- Barney Frank U.S. Representative
"....Our work for peace must begin within the private world of each one of us. To build for man a world without fear, we must be without fear. To build a world of justice, we must be just. And how can we fight for liberty if we are not free in our own minds? How can we ask others to sacrifice if we are not ready to do so?"
-- United Nations Secretary-General, Dag Hammarskjöld
"To be nobody but yourself in a world which is doing it's best night and day to make you everyone else, means to fight the hardest battle that any human being can fight, and to never stop fighting."
-- e.e. cummings
"Prejudgments become prejudices only if they are not reversible when exposed to new knowledge." -- Gordon W. Allport
"I am the inferior of any man whose rights I trample underfoot." -- Horace Greeley
"There's only one corner of the universe you can be certain of improving, and that's your own self." -- Aldous Huxley
"The only normal people are the ones you don't know very well."
-- Joe Ancis
"Pick battles big enough to matter, small enough to win."
-- Jonathan Kozol
"Wanting to be someone you're not is a waste of the person you are."
-- Kurt Cobain
“In the attitude of silence the soul finds the path in a clearer light, and what is elusive and deceptive resolves itself into crystal clearness. Our life is a long and arduous quest after Truth.”
-- Mahatma Gandhi
“Well-timed silence hath more eloquence than speech.”
-- Martin Fraquhar Tupper
“In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends.”
-- The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
“It is a great thing to know the season for speech and the season for silence.”
-- Seneca
"Silence remains, inescapably, a form of speech."-- Susan Sontag
"Courage is what it takes to stand up and speak. Courage is also what it takes to sit down and listen. ---Winston Churchill
Friday, March 13, 2009
Monday, January 26, 2009
“We remain a young nation, but in the words of Scripture, the time has come to set aside childish things. The time has come to reaffirm our enduring spirit; to choose our better history; to carry forward that precious gift, that noble idea, passed on from generation to generation: the God-given promise that all are equal, all are free, and all deserve a chance to pursue their full measure of happiness.”
-- Barack Hussein Obama, January 20, 2009
"Cowardice asks, is it safe? Expediency asks, is it politic? Vanity asks, is it popular? But conscience asks, is it right? There comes a time when one must take the position that is neither safe nor politic nor popular, but he must do it because conscience tells him, it is right."
~ Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
"I have the audacity to believe that peoples everywhere can have three meals a day for their bodies, education and culture for their minds, and dignity, equality and freedom for their spirits."
~ Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
"So the question is not whether we will be extremists, but what kind of extremists we will be. Will we be extremists for hate or for love? Will we be extremist for the preservation of injustice or for the extension of justice?"
~ Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Letter from a Birmingham Jail - 1963
"We have a lot more work to do in our common struggle against bigotry and discrimination. I say ‘common struggle’ because I believe very strongly that all forms of bigotry and discrimination are equally wrong and should be opposed by right-thinking Americans everywhere. Freedom from discrimination based on sexual orientation is surely a fundamental human right in any great democracy, as much as freedom from racial, religious, gender, or ethnic discrimination."
~ Coretta Scott King
"I still hear people say that I should not be talking about the rights of lesbian and gay people, and I should stick to the issue of racial justice. But I hasten to remind them that Martin Luther King Jr. said 'Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.' I appeal to everyone who believes in Martin Luther King Jr.'s dream to make room at the table of brother- and sisterhood for lesbian and gay people. Homophobia is like racism and anti-Semitism and other forms of bigotry in that it seeks to dehumanize a large group of people, to deny their humanity, their dignity and personhood. This sets the stage for further repression and violence, that spreads all too easily to victimize the next minority group. Gays and lesbians stood up for civil rights in Montgomery, Selma, in Albany, Georgia, and St. Augustine, Florida, and many other campaigns of the civil rights movement. Many of these courageous men and women were fighting for my freedom at a time when they could find few voices for their own, and I salute their contributions."
- Coretta Scott King, in 1999 at the 25th Anniversary luncheon for the Lambda Legal Defense Fund
"Homophobia is hate, and hate has no place in the beloved community." ~ Martin Luther King III, in August 2003 at the 40th anniversary of the 1963 March on Washington
"Some say let's choose another route and give Gay folks some legal rights but call it something other than marriage. We have been down that road before in this country. Separate is not equal. The rights to liberty and happiness belong to each of us and on the same terms, without regard to either skin color or sexual orientation."
-- U.S. Congressman John Lewis, D-Georgia, who was a close associate of Martin Luther King
"Something is happening to the very soul of America. It's more than same-sex marriage. It's more than whether you're gay or straight, black or white. It's about where we are going as a nation. I say this from my heart and gut, as someone who was beaten and arrested on the freedom rides. We've got some real fights ahead of us. But America is ready. So stand up tall and straight. Hold your head high. And do the work. Because we're not gonna go away."
-- U.S. Congressman John Lewis, D-Georgia
"When an individual is protesting society's refusal to acknowledge his dignity as a human being, his very act of protest confers dignity on him."
-- Bayard Rustin, who organized the 1964 March on Washington at which Dr. King made his “I Have a Dream” speech, in the book Strategies for Freedom, p. 42
"People...do not believe there can be tears between men. They think we are only playing at a game and that we do it to shock them."
-- author and activist, James Baldwin, who was African-American and gay
"People should not be discriminated against in the exercise of their civil rights, and the right to marry who you want to marry is one of those rights ... Interracial marriage was regarded with much the same hysteria years ago as gay marriage is today."
-- U.S. Ambassador Carol Mosely Braun, who, as far as we know, is heterosexual
"It is not the style of clothes one wears, neither the kind of automobile one drives, nor the amount of money one has in the bank, that counts. These mean nothing. It is simply service that measures success."
-- inventor, scientist and educator, George Washington Carver, who was African-American and gay
"Good parents are good parents - regardless of their sexual orientation. It's clear that the sexual orientation of parents has nothing to do with the sexual orientation of their children."
-- Former U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Joycelyn Elders, who, as far as we know, is heterosexual
"A family doesn't have to be a man, woman and children. A family can be two men or two women and children. A family can be nearly anything you want it to be as long as it is full of genuine love, respect and care."
-- Clarence J. Fluker, who is a staff person at National Youth Advocacy Coalition, Next Generation Editor for Arise magazine, and sits on the Board of Directors for DC Black Lesbian & Gay Pride, the largest annual Black pride festival in the world.
"Silence kills the soul, it diminishes its possibility to rise and fly and explore. Silence withers what makes you human. The soul shrinks, until it's nothing."
-- documentary filmmaker, Marlon Riggs, who was an African-American man and who died from complications of AIDS in 1994
"I think that gay rights is a human rights issue like the rights of anyone else. I have said throughout my career, less known this campaign, that unless people are prepared to say that gay and lesbian people are not human -- and I don't know anyone in their right mind that would say that -- then why are they not afforded the same rights as any other human being?"
-- former U.S. presidential candidate, Rev. Al Sharpton
"To discriminate against our sisters and brothers who are lesbian or gay on grounds of their sexual orientation for me is as totally unacceptable and unjust as Apartheid ever was."
-- Archbishop Desmond Tutu, from a sermon delivered one year ago this month. Read the text of the sermon at http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acns/articles/37/50/acns3772.cfm"We have inflicted on gay and lesbian people the tremendous pain of having to live a lie or to face brutal rejection if they dared to reveal their true selves. But oppression cuts both ways. Behind our ‘safe’ barriers of self-righteousness, we deprive ourselves of the rich giftedness that lesbian and gay people have to contribute ..."
-- Archbishop Desmond Tutu
"For death, or life, or toil,To thee myself I join;I take thy hand in mine,With thee I would grow old."-- From an ancient Chinese male-male wedding ceremony
"Everybody's journey is individual. If you fall in love with a boy, you fall in love with a boy. The fact that many Americans consider it a disease says more about them than it does about homosexuality."
-- James Baldwin
"Love takes off masks that we fear we cannot live without and know we cannot live within."-- James Baldwin
"Penguins accept same-sex commitments. Why do some people have so much trouble with the idea?"-- Canadians for Equal Marriage, headline
"Love is the big booming beat which covers up the noise of hate."-- comedian and activist, Margaret Cho, weblog, 01-15-04. Cho is Korean-American. She's married to a man but generally, in interviews, avoids labeling her sexual orientation.
"Where there is great love, there are always miracles."-- Pulitzer Prize winning novelist, Willa Cather, believed by many historians to have been lesbian and who, at the very least, transgressed gender in various ways (http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Oracle/4925/Willa.html; http://mtmt.essortment.com/whowaswillaca_rlui.htm)
"Anyone who thinks that love needs to be cured has not experienced enough of it in their own lives."-- Joan Garry, Executive Director of GLAAD, the Gay Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation
"Love doesn’t just sit there, like a stone; it has to be made, like bread, remade all the time, made new."-- novelist, poet, essayist, translator and children's author, Ursula K Le Guin who writes from a feminist perspective, often with gender-bending or non-heterosexual characters and who's been married to a man, Charles Le Guin, since 1953
"One Year Of Love Is Better Than A Lifetime Alone."-- Freddie Mercury, born Farok Bulsara in Zanzibar in 1946, openly gay lead singer of the band Queen, who passed away in 1991 from complications of AIDS
"For me [marrying] is about finding that person you call home. Realizing that you're traveling with someone that at times may be behind you, beside you or in front of you. We can be completely fine with that without having to prove anything."
-- Denise Newman, discussing her upcoming wedding to Vallerie Wagner in an interview with journalist MacArthur H. Flourney in Arise magazine
"The only abnormality is the incapacity to love."-- author, Anais Nin, who was bisexual
"It takes courage to love, but pain through love is the purifying fire which those who love generously know. We all know people who are so much afraid of pain that they shut themselves up like clams in a shell and, giving out nothing, receive nothing and therefore shrink until life is a mere living death."
-- human rights advocate and U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Eleanor Roosevelt
"Oh! I want to put my arms around you, I ache to hold you close. Your ring is a great comfort. I look at it and think she does love me or I wouldn't be wearing it!"
-- Eleanor Roosevelt, in a letter to Lorena Hickok, March 7, 1933
"Love looks not with the eyes, but with the mind; And therefore is winged Cupid painted blind."-- William Shakespeare, A Midsummer Night's Dream, Act i. Sc. 1. (Some historians believe that Shakespeare wrote love sonnets about men as well as women)
"The most successful marriages, gay or straight, even if they begin in romantic love, often become friendships. It's the ones that become the friendships that last.”
-- Andrew Sullivan
"It is that deep, spiritual affection that is as pure as it is perfect. It dictates and pervades great works of art like those of Shakespeare and Michelangelo, and those two letters of mine, such as they are. It is in this century misunderstood, so much misunderstood that it may be described as the 'Love that dare not speak its name,' and on account of it I am placed where I am now. It is beautiful, it is fine, it is the noblest form of affection. There is nothing unnatural about it."
-- Oscar Wilde, at his trial
"Who, being loved, is poor?"-- Oscar Wilde
"There is no good reason for denying these [same-sex] couples the rules, the responsibilities, and the respect of marriage. Allowing these families to be stronger is not going to take anything away from anybody else."
-- Evan Wolfson
-- Barack Hussein Obama, January 20, 2009
"Cowardice asks, is it safe? Expediency asks, is it politic? Vanity asks, is it popular? But conscience asks, is it right? There comes a time when one must take the position that is neither safe nor politic nor popular, but he must do it because conscience tells him, it is right."
~ Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
"I have the audacity to believe that peoples everywhere can have three meals a day for their bodies, education and culture for their minds, and dignity, equality and freedom for their spirits."
~ Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
"So the question is not whether we will be extremists, but what kind of extremists we will be. Will we be extremists for hate or for love? Will we be extremist for the preservation of injustice or for the extension of justice?"
~ Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Letter from a Birmingham Jail - 1963
"We have a lot more work to do in our common struggle against bigotry and discrimination. I say ‘common struggle’ because I believe very strongly that all forms of bigotry and discrimination are equally wrong and should be opposed by right-thinking Americans everywhere. Freedom from discrimination based on sexual orientation is surely a fundamental human right in any great democracy, as much as freedom from racial, religious, gender, or ethnic discrimination."
~ Coretta Scott King
"I still hear people say that I should not be talking about the rights of lesbian and gay people, and I should stick to the issue of racial justice. But I hasten to remind them that Martin Luther King Jr. said 'Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.' I appeal to everyone who believes in Martin Luther King Jr.'s dream to make room at the table of brother- and sisterhood for lesbian and gay people. Homophobia is like racism and anti-Semitism and other forms of bigotry in that it seeks to dehumanize a large group of people, to deny their humanity, their dignity and personhood. This sets the stage for further repression and violence, that spreads all too easily to victimize the next minority group. Gays and lesbians stood up for civil rights in Montgomery, Selma, in Albany, Georgia, and St. Augustine, Florida, and many other campaigns of the civil rights movement. Many of these courageous men and women were fighting for my freedom at a time when they could find few voices for their own, and I salute their contributions."
- Coretta Scott King, in 1999 at the 25th Anniversary luncheon for the Lambda Legal Defense Fund
"Homophobia is hate, and hate has no place in the beloved community." ~ Martin Luther King III, in August 2003 at the 40th anniversary of the 1963 March on Washington
"Some say let's choose another route and give Gay folks some legal rights but call it something other than marriage. We have been down that road before in this country. Separate is not equal. The rights to liberty and happiness belong to each of us and on the same terms, without regard to either skin color or sexual orientation."
-- U.S. Congressman John Lewis, D-Georgia, who was a close associate of Martin Luther King
"Something is happening to the very soul of America. It's more than same-sex marriage. It's more than whether you're gay or straight, black or white. It's about where we are going as a nation. I say this from my heart and gut, as someone who was beaten and arrested on the freedom rides. We've got some real fights ahead of us. But America is ready. So stand up tall and straight. Hold your head high. And do the work. Because we're not gonna go away."
-- U.S. Congressman John Lewis, D-Georgia
"When an individual is protesting society's refusal to acknowledge his dignity as a human being, his very act of protest confers dignity on him."
-- Bayard Rustin, who organized the 1964 March on Washington at which Dr. King made his “I Have a Dream” speech, in the book Strategies for Freedom, p. 42
"People...do not believe there can be tears between men. They think we are only playing at a game and that we do it to shock them."
-- author and activist, James Baldwin, who was African-American and gay
"People should not be discriminated against in the exercise of their civil rights, and the right to marry who you want to marry is one of those rights ... Interracial marriage was regarded with much the same hysteria years ago as gay marriage is today."
-- U.S. Ambassador Carol Mosely Braun, who, as far as we know, is heterosexual
"It is not the style of clothes one wears, neither the kind of automobile one drives, nor the amount of money one has in the bank, that counts. These mean nothing. It is simply service that measures success."
-- inventor, scientist and educator, George Washington Carver, who was African-American and gay
"Good parents are good parents - regardless of their sexual orientation. It's clear that the sexual orientation of parents has nothing to do with the sexual orientation of their children."
-- Former U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Joycelyn Elders, who, as far as we know, is heterosexual
"A family doesn't have to be a man, woman and children. A family can be two men or two women and children. A family can be nearly anything you want it to be as long as it is full of genuine love, respect and care."
-- Clarence J. Fluker, who is a staff person at National Youth Advocacy Coalition, Next Generation Editor for Arise magazine, and sits on the Board of Directors for DC Black Lesbian & Gay Pride, the largest annual Black pride festival in the world.
"Silence kills the soul, it diminishes its possibility to rise and fly and explore. Silence withers what makes you human. The soul shrinks, until it's nothing."
-- documentary filmmaker, Marlon Riggs, who was an African-American man and who died from complications of AIDS in 1994
"I think that gay rights is a human rights issue like the rights of anyone else. I have said throughout my career, less known this campaign, that unless people are prepared to say that gay and lesbian people are not human -- and I don't know anyone in their right mind that would say that -- then why are they not afforded the same rights as any other human being?"
-- former U.S. presidential candidate, Rev. Al Sharpton
"To discriminate against our sisters and brothers who are lesbian or gay on grounds of their sexual orientation for me is as totally unacceptable and unjust as Apartheid ever was."
-- Archbishop Desmond Tutu, from a sermon delivered one year ago this month. Read the text of the sermon at http://www.anglicancommunion.org/acns/articles/37/50/acns3772.cfm"We have inflicted on gay and lesbian people the tremendous pain of having to live a lie or to face brutal rejection if they dared to reveal their true selves. But oppression cuts both ways. Behind our ‘safe’ barriers of self-righteousness, we deprive ourselves of the rich giftedness that lesbian and gay people have to contribute ..."
-- Archbishop Desmond Tutu
"For death, or life, or toil,To thee myself I join;I take thy hand in mine,With thee I would grow old."-- From an ancient Chinese male-male wedding ceremony
"Everybody's journey is individual. If you fall in love with a boy, you fall in love with a boy. The fact that many Americans consider it a disease says more about them than it does about homosexuality."
-- James Baldwin
"Love takes off masks that we fear we cannot live without and know we cannot live within."-- James Baldwin
"Penguins accept same-sex commitments. Why do some people have so much trouble with the idea?"-- Canadians for Equal Marriage, headline
"Love is the big booming beat which covers up the noise of hate."-- comedian and activist, Margaret Cho, weblog, 01-15-04. Cho is Korean-American. She's married to a man but generally, in interviews, avoids labeling her sexual orientation.
"Where there is great love, there are always miracles."-- Pulitzer Prize winning novelist, Willa Cather, believed by many historians to have been lesbian and who, at the very least, transgressed gender in various ways (http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Oracle/4925/Willa.html; http://mtmt.essortment.com/whowaswillaca_rlui.htm)
"Anyone who thinks that love needs to be cured has not experienced enough of it in their own lives."-- Joan Garry, Executive Director of GLAAD, the Gay Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation
"Love doesn’t just sit there, like a stone; it has to be made, like bread, remade all the time, made new."-- novelist, poet, essayist, translator and children's author, Ursula K Le Guin who writes from a feminist perspective, often with gender-bending or non-heterosexual characters and who's been married to a man, Charles Le Guin, since 1953
"One Year Of Love Is Better Than A Lifetime Alone."-- Freddie Mercury, born Farok Bulsara in Zanzibar in 1946, openly gay lead singer of the band Queen, who passed away in 1991 from complications of AIDS
"For me [marrying] is about finding that person you call home. Realizing that you're traveling with someone that at times may be behind you, beside you or in front of you. We can be completely fine with that without having to prove anything."
-- Denise Newman, discussing her upcoming wedding to Vallerie Wagner in an interview with journalist MacArthur H. Flourney in Arise magazine
"The only abnormality is the incapacity to love."-- author, Anais Nin, who was bisexual
"It takes courage to love, but pain through love is the purifying fire which those who love generously know. We all know people who are so much afraid of pain that they shut themselves up like clams in a shell and, giving out nothing, receive nothing and therefore shrink until life is a mere living death."
-- human rights advocate and U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Eleanor Roosevelt
"Oh! I want to put my arms around you, I ache to hold you close. Your ring is a great comfort. I look at it and think she does love me or I wouldn't be wearing it!"
-- Eleanor Roosevelt, in a letter to Lorena Hickok, March 7, 1933
"Love looks not with the eyes, but with the mind; And therefore is winged Cupid painted blind."-- William Shakespeare, A Midsummer Night's Dream, Act i. Sc. 1. (Some historians believe that Shakespeare wrote love sonnets about men as well as women)
"The most successful marriages, gay or straight, even if they begin in romantic love, often become friendships. It's the ones that become the friendships that last.”
-- Andrew Sullivan
"It is that deep, spiritual affection that is as pure as it is perfect. It dictates and pervades great works of art like those of Shakespeare and Michelangelo, and those two letters of mine, such as they are. It is in this century misunderstood, so much misunderstood that it may be described as the 'Love that dare not speak its name,' and on account of it I am placed where I am now. It is beautiful, it is fine, it is the noblest form of affection. There is nothing unnatural about it."
-- Oscar Wilde, at his trial
"Who, being loved, is poor?"-- Oscar Wilde
"There is no good reason for denying these [same-sex] couples the rules, the responsibilities, and the respect of marriage. Allowing these families to be stronger is not going to take anything away from anybody else."
-- Evan Wolfson
Tuesday, December 23, 2008
4 - hours in which the world loses acres of tropical forest equivalent in size to the island of Manhattan
20 - percent of all global CO2 emissions caused by deforestation
2 trillion - amount in dollars that burning and clearing forests costs the global economy every year as valued through lost fresh water, food and timber and carbon reduction
70 - number of species of South and Central American frogs that have gone extinct, likely due to climate change
95 - percent of living coral Australia’s Great Barrier Reef may lose by 2050 due to climate change
25 - percent of all land animals and plants at risk of extinction due to climate change
25 - percent of all emissions reductions called for by 2050 that could be achieved by conserving and restoring tropical forests
143 million - acres of forest Conservation International has helped conserve over the last three years
40 - number of cars, trucks and SUVs’ yearly emissions offset by conserving just one acre of threatened tropical forest
15 - the cost in dollars for protecting one acre of forest with Conservation International. Protect an acre today
20 - percent of all global CO2 emissions caused by deforestation
2 trillion - amount in dollars that burning and clearing forests costs the global economy every year as valued through lost fresh water, food and timber and carbon reduction
70 - number of species of South and Central American frogs that have gone extinct, likely due to climate change
95 - percent of living coral Australia’s Great Barrier Reef may lose by 2050 due to climate change
25 - percent of all land animals and plants at risk of extinction due to climate change
25 - percent of all emissions reductions called for by 2050 that could be achieved by conserving and restoring tropical forests
143 million - acres of forest Conservation International has helped conserve over the last three years
40 - number of cars, trucks and SUVs’ yearly emissions offset by conserving just one acre of threatened tropical forest
15 - the cost in dollars for protecting one acre of forest with Conservation International. Protect an acre today
Monday, December 01, 2008
"Battling racism and battling heterosexism and battling apartheid share the same urgency inside me as battling cancer."
-- poet Audre Lorde
"I've been out most of my life. I don't feel like I have a choice about it. I look Gay." -- MSNBC talk show host Rachel Maddow
"I think it's pretty obvious who I'm seeing [Samantha Ronson]. I think it's no shock to anyone that it's been going on for quite some time. ... She's a wonderful person and I love her very much. ... Maybe [I'm Bisexual]. No [I'm not a Lesbian]. I don't want to classify myself. First of all, you never know what's going to happen - tomorrow, in a month, a year from now, five years from now. I appreciate people, and it doesn't matter who they are."
-- Actress, model and singer Lindsay Lohan
“Never discourage anyone… who continually makes progress, no matter how slow.” -- Greek philosopher Plato
"The most common way people give up their power is by thinking they don't have any." -- novelist and poet, Alice Walker
"...[W]e have been socialized to respect fear more than our own needs for language and definition, and while we wait in silence for that final luxury of fearlessness, the weight of that silence will choke us."
- author Audre Lorde
"[Her] genius resided in her insistence on bringing her whole self to whatever she was doing." -- novelist Jewell Gomez, describing poet Audre Lorde
"It's our hearts and brains that we should exercise more often...You can put on all the makeup you want but it won't make your soul pretty."
-- make-up artist to the stars, Kevyn Aucoin
"If you wanna change the world
Then you gotta change yourself
If you want
To open up your mind and let it in
Then free your heart
And let the light shine in
There’s no one else
Has all the magic that you have inside
Or knows the way
To share the gift that only you provide" -- poet, singer, songwriter Magdalen Hsu-Li
"I think anytime you face some type of fear, you're going to grow in some way. You're going to learn more about who you are in a tough spot."
-- comedian, actor, talk-show host Ellen DeGeneres
"I hate the idea that people think being gay is a choice…I was born this way and I've grown to love this part of me." -- Olympic gold-medalist Greg Louganis
"Love s the big booming beat which covers up the noise of hate." -- comedian, social activist Margaret Cho
"Sexuality and gender don't change anyone's performance on the [basketball] court." -- WNBA star, Sheryl Swoopes
"Sometimes when we are generous in small, barely detectable ways it can change someone else's life forever." -- comedian, social activist Margaret Cho
"Three events propelled my vision into reality: grief at losing my best friend, Marvin; fear at finding out that I, too, was positive; and rage at the heterosexual world because two boys, skinheads, had stabbed me and run away laughing as I lay bleeding in the gutter. These three moments together changed my life."
-- human rights activist, Cleve Jones, on what led him to found the NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt
"It has been 25 years since the [AIDS epidemic] began, and 25 million people have perished. Last year, more than 3 million people died of AIDS. That’s three million coffins, three million eulogies, three million families. But the war is far from over. Every 10 seconds, someone on the planet dies of AIDS. More than 8,000 people will die today from this disease...As long as there is one person living with this virus, we cannot give up. Until there is a cure, there must be a fight…You see, we are the cavalry. We are the ones we have been waiting for."
-- author and activist, Keith Boykin
"When California passed Prop 8 [which stripped gay and lesbian couples of the right to marry] ... I felt like I was being attacked, personally attacked, our community was attacked. I got married October 25. You know, I don't really talk about my sexual orientation, I didn't feel like I had to, I was just living my life and, not necessarily in the closet, but I was just living my life. Everybody that knows me personally, they know I'm Gay. And that's the way people should be able to live their lives. We shouldn't have to be standing out here demanding something that we automatically should have as citizens of this country. And I got pissed off. They pissed me off. I said, You know what, now I gotta get in your face. And that's what we all have to do now. They pissed off the wrong group of people. They have galvanized a community. We are so together now and we all want the same thing and we are not going to settle for less. Instead of having Gay marriage in California, no, we're gonna get it across the country. When my wife and I leave California, I want to have my marriage also recognized in Nevada, in Arizona, all the way to New York. ... I'm proud to be a woman, I'm proud to be a black woman and I'm proud to be Gay."
-- Comedian Wanda Sykes
-- poet Audre Lorde
"I've been out most of my life. I don't feel like I have a choice about it. I look Gay." -- MSNBC talk show host Rachel Maddow
"I think it's pretty obvious who I'm seeing [Samantha Ronson]. I think it's no shock to anyone that it's been going on for quite some time. ... She's a wonderful person and I love her very much. ... Maybe [I'm Bisexual]. No [I'm not a Lesbian]. I don't want to classify myself. First of all, you never know what's going to happen - tomorrow, in a month, a year from now, five years from now. I appreciate people, and it doesn't matter who they are."
-- Actress, model and singer Lindsay Lohan
“Never discourage anyone… who continually makes progress, no matter how slow.” -- Greek philosopher Plato
"The most common way people give up their power is by thinking they don't have any." -- novelist and poet, Alice Walker
"...[W]e have been socialized to respect fear more than our own needs for language and definition, and while we wait in silence for that final luxury of fearlessness, the weight of that silence will choke us."
- author Audre Lorde
"[Her] genius resided in her insistence on bringing her whole self to whatever she was doing." -- novelist Jewell Gomez, describing poet Audre Lorde
"It's our hearts and brains that we should exercise more often...You can put on all the makeup you want but it won't make your soul pretty."
-- make-up artist to the stars, Kevyn Aucoin
"If you wanna change the world
Then you gotta change yourself
If you want
To open up your mind and let it in
Then free your heart
And let the light shine in
There’s no one else
Has all the magic that you have inside
Or knows the way
To share the gift that only you provide" -- poet, singer, songwriter Magdalen Hsu-Li
"I think anytime you face some type of fear, you're going to grow in some way. You're going to learn more about who you are in a tough spot."
-- comedian, actor, talk-show host Ellen DeGeneres
"I hate the idea that people think being gay is a choice…I was born this way and I've grown to love this part of me." -- Olympic gold-medalist Greg Louganis
"Love s the big booming beat which covers up the noise of hate." -- comedian, social activist Margaret Cho
"Sexuality and gender don't change anyone's performance on the [basketball] court." -- WNBA star, Sheryl Swoopes
"Sometimes when we are generous in small, barely detectable ways it can change someone else's life forever." -- comedian, social activist Margaret Cho
"Three events propelled my vision into reality: grief at losing my best friend, Marvin; fear at finding out that I, too, was positive; and rage at the heterosexual world because two boys, skinheads, had stabbed me and run away laughing as I lay bleeding in the gutter. These three moments together changed my life."
-- human rights activist, Cleve Jones, on what led him to found the NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt
"It has been 25 years since the [AIDS epidemic] began, and 25 million people have perished. Last year, more than 3 million people died of AIDS. That’s three million coffins, three million eulogies, three million families. But the war is far from over. Every 10 seconds, someone on the planet dies of AIDS. More than 8,000 people will die today from this disease...As long as there is one person living with this virus, we cannot give up. Until there is a cure, there must be a fight…You see, we are the cavalry. We are the ones we have been waiting for."
-- author and activist, Keith Boykin
"When California passed Prop 8 [which stripped gay and lesbian couples of the right to marry] ... I felt like I was being attacked, personally attacked, our community was attacked. I got married October 25. You know, I don't really talk about my sexual orientation, I didn't feel like I had to, I was just living my life and, not necessarily in the closet, but I was just living my life. Everybody that knows me personally, they know I'm Gay. And that's the way people should be able to live their lives. We shouldn't have to be standing out here demanding something that we automatically should have as citizens of this country. And I got pissed off. They pissed me off. I said, You know what, now I gotta get in your face. And that's what we all have to do now. They pissed off the wrong group of people. They have galvanized a community. We are so together now and we all want the same thing and we are not going to settle for less. Instead of having Gay marriage in California, no, we're gonna get it across the country. When my wife and I leave California, I want to have my marriage also recognized in Nevada, in Arizona, all the way to New York. ... I'm proud to be a woman, I'm proud to be a black woman and I'm proud to be Gay."
-- Comedian Wanda Sykes
Friday, November 21, 2008
“Why do I deserve more rights as a heterosexual man than my mothers? I think I have turned out terrific from my family-if being a son who values fairness and open-mindedness is somehow bad for society, then I am not sure this is a society I want to be a part of.”
-- Camilo Ortiz, the adoptive son of two lesbian moms, at a rally about Proposition 8, which changed the California Constitution to forever prohibit same-sex couples’ marrying
''We don't think that capitalist countries have a monopoly on freedom, democracy and human rights. People in socialist countries should also enjoy freedom, democracy and human rights.”
-- Prime Minister Li Peng of China
“Our rights as Americans do not depend on the approval of others. Our rights depend on us being Americans." -- U.S. Congressman, African-American man and civil rights veteran, John Lewis
“Gays and lesbians are oppressed. Period. And it's still legal throughout the country. That's the crime. The crime is not that gays want the right to love without prejudice. Blacks and gays may not be the same, but neither are blacks and Hispanics or blacks and women. What does that prove? At the end of the day, it shouldn't matter which group was first oppressed or whether they are identically oppressed. What matters is that no group of people should be oppressed.”
-- author/journalist Keith Boykin, who is African-American and gay
'"Times can blind us to certain truths and later generations can see that laws once thought necessary and proper in fact serve only to oppress. As the Constitution endures, persons in every generation can invoke its principles in their own search for greater freedom."
-- U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy
"[My openly gay Sunday school teacher] made it very clear that you have a special gift, and as long as you lead your life with dignity, and are a human being of your word, and you have good character, the world cannot deny you."
-- Kenneth Reeves, on his own wonderful coming out experience as a teen. Reeves, a City Council Member and former Mayor of Cambridge, Massachusetts from 1992-1995, was the first openly gay African-American man to head a major U.S. city. More at: http://www.pbs.org/pov/pov2002/brotheroutsider/reeves.html
"Gay people are the sweetest, kindest, most artistic, warmest and most thoughtful people in the world. And since the beginning of time all they've ever been is kicked ..."
-- Openly gay singer, Little Richard
“Equality is more than tolerance, compassion, understanding, acceptance, benevolence, for these still come from a place of implied superiority: favors granted to those less fortunate. These attitudes suggest that there is still something wrong, something not quite right that must be overlooked or seen beyond."
-- Openly lesbian author, Suzanne Pharr
"The good we secure for ourselves is precarious and uncertain until it is secured for all of us and incorporated into our common life."
-- Jane Addams, social worker & feminist … she lived long before anyone defined themselves as "lesbian," but she "shared her life for 40 years" with Mary Rozet Smith
"Freedom makes a huge requirement of every human being. With freedom comes responsibility. For the person who is unwilling to grow up, the person who does not want to carry his own weight, this is a frightening prospect."
-- Eleanor Roosevelt, ambassador, first lady, human rights activist … who had two loves in her life, her husband, Franklin, and her partner, Lorena
"There are many persons ready to do what is right because in their hearts they know it is right. But they hesitate, waiting for the other fellow to make the make the first move -- and he, in turn, waits for you."
-- Marian Anderson, opera star who was African-American who, in 1939, when she was prohibited from singing a concert at Constitution Hall in Washington, D.C., sang instead, with the support of first lady Eleanor Roosevelt, at the Lincoln Memorial.
"If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor. If an elephant has its foot on the tail of a mouse and you say that you are neutral, the mouse will not appreciate your neutrality."
-- Bishop Desmond Tutu
“We can love what we are, without hating what –- and who -- we are not. We can thrive in our own tradition, even as we learn from others, and come to respect their teachings.”
-- Kofi Annan, former United Nations Secretary-General and recipient of the 2001 Nobel Peace Prize
"I want American history taught. Unless I'm in that book, you're not in it either. History is not a procession of illustrious people. It's about what happens to a people. Millions of anonymous people is what history is about."
-- James Baldwin, openly gay, African-American novelist, college professor and civil rights activist who lived his latter years in France
"Prejudice is a definitely a learned behavior. You aren't born hating a black person or an obese person or a gay person … Growing into myself, I realized that different is good, and different sets you apart."
-- Marissa Whitley, Miss Teen USA 2002, who is biracial
“A mature person is one who is does not think only in absolutes, who is able to be objective even when deeply stirred emotionally, who has learned that there is both good and bad in all people and all things, and who walks humbly and deals charitably with the circumstances of life, knowing that in this world no one is all-knowing and therefore all of us need both love and charity.”
-- Eleanor Roosevelt, ambassador, first lady, human rights activist … who had two loves in her life, her husband, Franklin, and her partner, Lorena
-- Camilo Ortiz, the adoptive son of two lesbian moms, at a rally about Proposition 8, which changed the California Constitution to forever prohibit same-sex couples’ marrying
''We don't think that capitalist countries have a monopoly on freedom, democracy and human rights. People in socialist countries should also enjoy freedom, democracy and human rights.”
-- Prime Minister Li Peng of China
“Our rights as Americans do not depend on the approval of others. Our rights depend on us being Americans." -- U.S. Congressman, African-American man and civil rights veteran, John Lewis
“Gays and lesbians are oppressed. Period. And it's still legal throughout the country. That's the crime. The crime is not that gays want the right to love without prejudice. Blacks and gays may not be the same, but neither are blacks and Hispanics or blacks and women. What does that prove? At the end of the day, it shouldn't matter which group was first oppressed or whether they are identically oppressed. What matters is that no group of people should be oppressed.”
-- author/journalist Keith Boykin, who is African-American and gay
'"Times can blind us to certain truths and later generations can see that laws once thought necessary and proper in fact serve only to oppress. As the Constitution endures, persons in every generation can invoke its principles in their own search for greater freedom."
-- U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy
"[My openly gay Sunday school teacher] made it very clear that you have a special gift, and as long as you lead your life with dignity, and are a human being of your word, and you have good character, the world cannot deny you."
-- Kenneth Reeves, on his own wonderful coming out experience as a teen. Reeves, a City Council Member and former Mayor of Cambridge, Massachusetts from 1992-1995, was the first openly gay African-American man to head a major U.S. city. More at: http://www.pbs.org/pov/pov2002/brotheroutsider/reeves.html
"Gay people are the sweetest, kindest, most artistic, warmest and most thoughtful people in the world. And since the beginning of time all they've ever been is kicked ..."
-- Openly gay singer, Little Richard
“Equality is more than tolerance, compassion, understanding, acceptance, benevolence, for these still come from a place of implied superiority: favors granted to those less fortunate. These attitudes suggest that there is still something wrong, something not quite right that must be overlooked or seen beyond."
-- Openly lesbian author, Suzanne Pharr
"The good we secure for ourselves is precarious and uncertain until it is secured for all of us and incorporated into our common life."
-- Jane Addams, social worker & feminist … she lived long before anyone defined themselves as "lesbian," but she "shared her life for 40 years" with Mary Rozet Smith
"Freedom makes a huge requirement of every human being. With freedom comes responsibility. For the person who is unwilling to grow up, the person who does not want to carry his own weight, this is a frightening prospect."
-- Eleanor Roosevelt, ambassador, first lady, human rights activist … who had two loves in her life, her husband, Franklin, and her partner, Lorena
"There are many persons ready to do what is right because in their hearts they know it is right. But they hesitate, waiting for the other fellow to make the make the first move -- and he, in turn, waits for you."
-- Marian Anderson, opera star who was African-American who, in 1939, when she was prohibited from singing a concert at Constitution Hall in Washington, D.C., sang instead, with the support of first lady Eleanor Roosevelt, at the Lincoln Memorial.
"If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor. If an elephant has its foot on the tail of a mouse and you say that you are neutral, the mouse will not appreciate your neutrality."
-- Bishop Desmond Tutu
“We can love what we are, without hating what –- and who -- we are not. We can thrive in our own tradition, even as we learn from others, and come to respect their teachings.”
-- Kofi Annan, former United Nations Secretary-General and recipient of the 2001 Nobel Peace Prize
"I want American history taught. Unless I'm in that book, you're not in it either. History is not a procession of illustrious people. It's about what happens to a people. Millions of anonymous people is what history is about."
-- James Baldwin, openly gay, African-American novelist, college professor and civil rights activist who lived his latter years in France
"Prejudice is a definitely a learned behavior. You aren't born hating a black person or an obese person or a gay person … Growing into myself, I realized that different is good, and different sets you apart."
-- Marissa Whitley, Miss Teen USA 2002, who is biracial
“A mature person is one who is does not think only in absolutes, who is able to be objective even when deeply stirred emotionally, who has learned that there is both good and bad in all people and all things, and who walks humbly and deals charitably with the circumstances of life, knowing that in this world no one is all-knowing and therefore all of us need both love and charity.”
-- Eleanor Roosevelt, ambassador, first lady, human rights activist … who had two loves in her life, her husband, Franklin, and her partner, Lorena
Tuesday, October 21, 2008
"I have noticed that as soon as you have soldiers the story is called history. Before their arrival it is called myth, folktale, legend, fairy tale, oral poetry, ethnography. After the soldiers arrive, it is called history."
- Paula Gunn Allen
“You know, as an artist, it’s not my job to fit in; it’s not my job to belong. I’m not a social worker; I’m not a therapist. It’s my job to beat the s*** out of the world. I’m not here to make people feel good…So you’re always battling the basic human need to be loved and accepted. That’s always the conflict with the artistic need to challenge the world.”
-- Sherman Alexie
“My only regret about being gay is that I repressed it so long. I surrendered my youth to the people I feared when I could have been out there loving someone. Don’t make that mistake yourself. Life’s too damn short.”
-- Armistead Maupin
“Look back, to slavery, to suffrage, to integration and one thing is clear. Fashions in bigotry come and go. The right thing lasts.”
-- Anna Quindlen
"What the people want is very simple. They want an America as good as its promise." -- Congresswoman Barbara Jordan
"You can hurt me. You can hate me, but do it because you know me, not because I’m a member of a group. Anyways, people aren’t grapes --- you can’t weigh them in a bunch, but I guess it’s easier than dealing with people as individuals. There, I’ve solved the riddle of prejudice: it saves time."
-- author, Rita Mae Brown
“The reward for conformity was that everyone liked you except yourself.”-- Rita Mae Brown
“No government has the right to tell its citizens when or whom to love. The only queer people are those who don't love anybody.”
-- Rita Mae Brown
“I believe in not being put into ‘either/or’ -- instead, I choose ‘and.’"-- Mandy Carter, black lesbian social justice activist and co-founder of the National Black Justice Coalition, explaining that she doesn’t have one identity that trumps all her other identities
“Always remember that you are absolutely unique. Just like everyone else.”-- Euro-American anthropologist, Margaret Mead
"If we are to achieve a richer culture, rich in contrasting values, we must recognize the whole gamut of human potentialities, and so we weave a less arbitrary social fabric, one in which each diverse human gift will find a fitting place."
-- Margaret Mead
“It was we, the people; not we, the white male citizens; nor yet we, the male citizens; but we, the whole people, who formed the Union.... Men, their rights and nothing more; women, their rights and nothing less.”
-- Susan B. Anthony
(Was she lesbian? Well, the term hadn’t been coined at that point, but see this perspective: http://www.glbtq.com/social-sciences/anthony_sb.html)
“The emotional, sexual, and psychological stereotyping of females begins when the doctor says, ‘It's a girl.’" -- Congresswoman (and 1972 presidential candidate) Shirley Chisholm
“Feminism is the radical notion that women are people.” -- Cheris Kramarae and Paula Treichler
“Men are taught to apologize for their weaknesses, women for their strengths.” -- Lois Wyse
“I became a feminist as an alternative to becoming a masochist.” -- Sally Kempton, attributed
“How important it is for us to recognize and celebrate our heroes and she-roes!” -- Maya Angelou
“We've begun to raise daughters more like sons... but few have the courage to raise our sons more like our daughters.” -- Gloria Steinem
“There is more difference within the sexes than between them.” -- Ivy Compton-Burnett, Mother and Son
“Homophobia is like racism and anti-Semitism and other forms of bigotry in that it seeks to dehumanize a large group of people, to deny their humanity, their dignity and personhood.”
-- Coretta Scott King
“Homophobia and transphobia pressure straight people to act unkindly or even cruelly towards GLBTQ people and encourage bullying and cruelty toward anyone whose appearance or behavior isn't sufficiently 'macho' or 'feminine' (from the viewpoint of the bully).”
-- Advocates for Youth’s 14 Ways Homophobia and Transphobia Affect Everyone (http://www.advocatesforyouth.org/lessonplans/activistally2.htm) adapted with permission of the Gay-Straight Alliance Network: http://www.gsanetwork.org/
“Bad politicians are sent to Washington by good people who don't vote.” -- William E. Simon
“Always vote for principle, though you may vote alone, and you may cherish the sweetest reflection that your vote is never lost.”
-- John Quincy Adams
“Those who stay away from the election think that one vote will do no good: 'Tis but one step more to think one vote will do no harm.”
-- Ralph Waldo Emerson
“To make democracy work, we must be a notion of participants, not simply observers. One who does not vote has no right to complain.”
-- Louis L'Amour
“People who don't vote have no line of credit with people who are elected and thus pose no threat to those who act against our interests.”
-- Marian Wright Edelman
- Paula Gunn Allen
“You know, as an artist, it’s not my job to fit in; it’s not my job to belong. I’m not a social worker; I’m not a therapist. It’s my job to beat the s*** out of the world. I’m not here to make people feel good…So you’re always battling the basic human need to be loved and accepted. That’s always the conflict with the artistic need to challenge the world.”
-- Sherman Alexie
“My only regret about being gay is that I repressed it so long. I surrendered my youth to the people I feared when I could have been out there loving someone. Don’t make that mistake yourself. Life’s too damn short.”
-- Armistead Maupin
“Look back, to slavery, to suffrage, to integration and one thing is clear. Fashions in bigotry come and go. The right thing lasts.”
-- Anna Quindlen
"What the people want is very simple. They want an America as good as its promise." -- Congresswoman Barbara Jordan
"You can hurt me. You can hate me, but do it because you know me, not because I’m a member of a group. Anyways, people aren’t grapes --- you can’t weigh them in a bunch, but I guess it’s easier than dealing with people as individuals. There, I’ve solved the riddle of prejudice: it saves time."
-- author, Rita Mae Brown
“The reward for conformity was that everyone liked you except yourself.”-- Rita Mae Brown
“No government has the right to tell its citizens when or whom to love. The only queer people are those who don't love anybody.”
-- Rita Mae Brown
“I believe in not being put into ‘either/or’ -- instead, I choose ‘and.’"-- Mandy Carter, black lesbian social justice activist and co-founder of the National Black Justice Coalition, explaining that she doesn’t have one identity that trumps all her other identities
“Always remember that you are absolutely unique. Just like everyone else.”-- Euro-American anthropologist, Margaret Mead
"If we are to achieve a richer culture, rich in contrasting values, we must recognize the whole gamut of human potentialities, and so we weave a less arbitrary social fabric, one in which each diverse human gift will find a fitting place."
-- Margaret Mead
“It was we, the people; not we, the white male citizens; nor yet we, the male citizens; but we, the whole people, who formed the Union.... Men, their rights and nothing more; women, their rights and nothing less.”
-- Susan B. Anthony
(Was she lesbian? Well, the term hadn’t been coined at that point, but see this perspective: http://www.glbtq.com/social-sciences/anthony_sb.html)
“The emotional, sexual, and psychological stereotyping of females begins when the doctor says, ‘It's a girl.’" -- Congresswoman (and 1972 presidential candidate) Shirley Chisholm
“Feminism is the radical notion that women are people.” -- Cheris Kramarae and Paula Treichler
“Men are taught to apologize for their weaknesses, women for their strengths.” -- Lois Wyse
“I became a feminist as an alternative to becoming a masochist.” -- Sally Kempton, attributed
“How important it is for us to recognize and celebrate our heroes and she-roes!” -- Maya Angelou
“We've begun to raise daughters more like sons... but few have the courage to raise our sons more like our daughters.” -- Gloria Steinem
“There is more difference within the sexes than between them.” -- Ivy Compton-Burnett, Mother and Son
“Homophobia is like racism and anti-Semitism and other forms of bigotry in that it seeks to dehumanize a large group of people, to deny their humanity, their dignity and personhood.”
-- Coretta Scott King
“Homophobia and transphobia pressure straight people to act unkindly or even cruelly towards GLBTQ people and encourage bullying and cruelty toward anyone whose appearance or behavior isn't sufficiently 'macho' or 'feminine' (from the viewpoint of the bully).”
-- Advocates for Youth’s 14 Ways Homophobia and Transphobia Affect Everyone (http://www.advocatesforyouth.org/lessonplans/activistally2.htm) adapted with permission of the Gay-Straight Alliance Network: http://www.gsanetwork.org/
“Bad politicians are sent to Washington by good people who don't vote.” -- William E. Simon
“Always vote for principle, though you may vote alone, and you may cherish the sweetest reflection that your vote is never lost.”
-- John Quincy Adams
“Those who stay away from the election think that one vote will do no good: 'Tis but one step more to think one vote will do no harm.”
-- Ralph Waldo Emerson
“To make democracy work, we must be a notion of participants, not simply observers. One who does not vote has no right to complain.”
-- Louis L'Amour
“People who don't vote have no line of credit with people who are elected and thus pose no threat to those who act against our interests.”
-- Marian Wright Edelman
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