The New Yorkerのインスタグラム(newyorkermag) - 6月29日 06時47分
On June 28, 1969, a raid by the police and a subsequent uprising at the Stonewall Inn, in Greenwich Village, helped change the course of L.G.B.T.Q. history. Fifty years later, @mashagessen reflects on what has—and hasn’t—changed for the L.G.B.T.Q. community. “I thought we would have retired the concept of sexual orientation by now and would have made a bigger dent in gender,” she writes. “Still, this world is much better than the one I came out in—for now.” Tap the link in our bio to read her story of coming out, and rising up, in the years after Stonewall. Photograph by Larry Morris / NYT / Redux.
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jmbarretta
@theatercriticrichgreen apparently the stone wall was much larger including the adjacent businesses
akron623
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burningelectron
The one thing that doesn't evolve....cops.
theatercriticrichgreen
Wait. They had a restaurant too?
tylerhaz
@brittbeehn ?️???️?
marytmf
My Birthday June 28th!
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