Showing posts with label SpiritDay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SpiritDay. Show all posts

Thursday, November 5, 2015

Being Thankful Day Four: LGBT Organizations




               It always helps to have someone on your side and organizations like GLAAD and the Human Right Campaign are the help that we need, and I am thankful that they are there. I am thankful that they take up the fight for the LGBT+ community, that they raise awareness, and sponsor wonderful events like Spirit Day.
               I am thankful for these organizations because they bring awareness to issues in the community that I may not be aware of. They also hold groups like the film and TV industry responsible for fair representation of the LGBT+ community in media. I am thankful for these organizations because they bring of the awareness they bring our struggles for workplace equality. I am thankful because these organization can be a voice for thousands in the LGBT+ community.

Thursday, October 15, 2015

Spirit Day



     Today is Spirit Day and I hope you are wearing purple. Started in 2010 today is a day that we stand against bullying against the LGBTQ+ community, because by the numbers it is pretty bleak. Those of you coming here from my Instagram know some of the numbers, but that is not the full picture. According to www.glaad.org 55.5% of LGBT students felt unsafe at school because of their sexual orientation, 38.7% because of their gender expression. A student shouldn’t have to feel unsafe at school just because they veer a little left of center. This doesn’t even account for those who have experienced cyberbullying (49%) or reported bullying and nothing was done about it (61.6%). Those numbers are just a small sampling of the data reported by glaad.org. A student should feel safe going to school be it elementary school or college

     When you search the deaths of LGBT youth bullying is a common theme that comes up usually followed by the word suicide, and I don’t think we should live in a world where a 15-year-old child commits suicide. Leelah Alcorn, Ash Haffner, Blake Brockington, Taylor Alesana, and Cameron Langrell are just five of the teens who have committed suicide this year because of bullying. I could have found more names but I think that five names in 10 months is more than an adequate representation of the horrors of bullying that is happening right now. How many people have to die before we do something about this?

     If a student was being bullied because of the color of their hair, or their nationality people would be jumping to stop this. We take up campaigns against slut-shaming, and fat-shaming, but we don’t seem as passionate about gay and trans bashing. So this Spirit Day let’s take a stand and start a conversation about bullying. Bring it to your Principal, Dean, or other Administrator that you want your school to stand up again bullying based on sexual orientation or gender expression, and don’t forget to wear purple today.