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The flag was created [5] by American trans woman Monica Helms in 1999, [6] [7] and was first shown at a pride parade in Phoenix, Arizona, in 2000. [8] Helms got the idea after talking with a friend, Michael Page, who had designed the bisexual flag the year prior.
The Unruh Civil Rights Act, section 51 of the California Civil Code, enacted in 1959, did not expressly include a prohibition against discrimination by businesses based on sexual orientation until 2005; however, California courts interpreted the law to prohibit such discrimination as early as 1984 in Rolon v.
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In 2018, artist Daniel Quasar debuted this flag, which added pink and blue stripes to represent the trans community and included the black and brown stripes to represent marginalized communities ...
Blaque was born in Lynwood, California and raised in Walnut, California. She is adopted. [3] In middle school, Blaque began to question her gender identity and started to identify as genderqueer. [4] She began identifying as a trans woman in college. [5] Blaque graduated from the California Institute of the Arts in 2012 with a BFA in character ...
Sanchez's Assembly Bill 89, would require the California Interscholastic Federation, which regulates high school sports for public and private schools, to enact rules prohibiting any "pupil whose ...
At the City's Pride flag raising and press conference on June 2, Mayor Breed announced that Pride had reached a compromise with the police, and she would once again march in the parade. Transgender District director Aria Sa'id attended the flag raising after learning of the new agreement. [14]
The bill would prevent school boards from forcing school staff to inform a student’s parents if they request to use a name or pronoun that does not align with their biological sex.