This article is from before the actions happened, I’m sharing this one because it’s well written and touches on the points we consider most important: intersectionality and solidarity. Also we forgot to plan a post action media release for my city and got absolutely no media attention after the fact oops (except for community radio ♥️♥️♥️3CR❤️❤️❤️).

It’s worth noting that this approach was so overwhelmingly successful that the rally in my city ended up being several times larger than anything we’d anticipated, 3000+ attendees at the peak. If you’re looking at organising a radical campaign like this, use your contacts and ask your allies to mobilise, it’s incredibly powerful stuff and builds power for their movements as well.

The discussion on mainstream queer activism being inadequate and toxic is very important and worth understanding in detail. You can’t build a lasting movement or obtain liberation by throwing minorities under the bus and capitulating to oppressive patriarchal norms that reinforce harmful stereotypes and gender roles.

We’ve experienced this first hand. The day after the rally, an NGO announced their own action appropriating the name we chose and on the same day as a rally for refugees. They silenced all critiques, spat in the face of what we stood for and even claimed they organised one of the rallies in another city. They also have history of silencing the voices and efforts of trans people (especially from other marginalised groups) while platforming the politicians who pass legislation to suppress and erase us. It’s been absolutely awful to deal with, but you cannot be complicit in it.