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submitted 5 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) by thelastaxolotl@hexbear.net to c/chapotraphouse@hexbear.net

Starting this month you can throw bricks at chuds

The rainbow flag or pride flag is a symbol of LGBT pride and LGBT social movements. The colors reflect the diversity of the LGBT community and the spectrum of human sexuality and gender. Using a rainbow flag as a symbol of LGBT pride began in San Francisco, California, but eventually became common at LGBT rights events worldwide.

Originally devised by the artists Gilbert Baker, Lynn Segerblom, James McNamara and other activists, the design underwent several revisions after its debut in 1978, and continues to inspire variations. Although Baker's original rainbow flag had eight colors, from 1979 to the present day the most common variant consists of six stripes: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and violet. The flag is typically displayed horizontally, with the red stripe on top, as it would be in a natural rainbow.

LGBT people and allies currently use rainbow flags and many rainbow-themed items and color schemes as an outward symbol of their identity or support. There are derivations of the rainbow flag that are used to focus attention on specific causes or groups within the community (e.g. transgender people, fighting the AIDS epidemic, inclusion of LGBT people of color). In addition to the rainbow, many other flags and symbols are used to communicate specific identities within the LGBT community.

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[-] The_sleepy_woke_dialectic@hexbear.net 11 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

Having lived my entire life far from anything anyone could call "gang activity", is there a good resource anyone knows of for learning about how gangs work that isn't phrenology or copaganda? I think the conditions that they emerge from are pretty obvious to point out, but how I'm made to understand how they actually work doesn't seem to fit. Why do gangs seem to always punch down and lack revolutionary potential, or even basic community building? Is my framing completely wrong from the jump?

What happens that separates, say, Crips from Black Panthers?

[-] Eco@hexbear.net 5 points 4 days ago

do you define gang as "a group of black people"? that's the only way the black panthers could be considered a gang

[-] Le_Wokisme@hexbear.net 13 points 4 days ago

some of the major gangs formed out of the vacuum created by the destruction of the BPP so that question isn't totally naked clownery and i don't think he's implying the BPP was a gang by asking.

I worded that badly sorry, my break was ending and I didn't have time to read it over carefully. I meant to say "What happens that results in a gang vs a non-gang group like the black panthers."

[-] rhubarb@hexbear.net 8 points 4 days ago

Both are organizations of the lumpenproletariat, and I do not believe he meant to call the Panthers a gang, but to ask why specifically do gangs lack revolutionary potential.

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this post was submitted on 01 Jun 2025
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