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    6 commenti

    1. shoogliestpeg on

      Good to see more Pride events doing this. Pride is a protest, it doesn’t exist to launder the reputations of political parties who demonise LGBTQ people.

      E: Thread is rancid with “I don’t personally care BUT” straight cis boys telling us how to run our community like we haven’t for the past few decades.

    2. limeflavoured on

      Good. Basically no party is fully supportive of LGBT people.

    3. MartyTax on

      Is this not a good thing? Keeping distance between political parties and those trying to exert influence over public bodies is a good thing.

    4. SuspiciousAgency5025 on

      Excellent.

      The next stage is to ban corporations that pride-wash. No companies with ANY middle eastern funding. No companies who put rainbows on things in the UK but didn’t even mention anything anywhere else.

      Pride is not the place to advertise how “friendly” you company is. Fuck you.

    5. Hellstorm901 on

      Has the Daily Mail wrote an article claiming the Supreme Court ruling somehow makes this pride event illegal yet?

      I’ve noticed that the bigots over there have increasingly been bringing up the court ruling in almost every article about LGBTQ+ issues doing recently what a lot of people feared they would do after the ruling by trying to wield it as a weapon to persecute LGBTQ+ groups

    6. psyduckwomble on

      Many pride organisations are registered charities and the rules for being a charity say you can’t favour any political party.

      So it may have been a desire to ban one or two parties resulting in all parties being banned to meet their charity obligations.

      Reading between the lines I’d say all these bans are directed at Labour for not being against the supreme court bathroom ruling

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