Corporate/assimilationist contingents at Pride clash with message of Stonewall

Capitol Pride 2015 started out with well over a hour of corporate and assimilationist floats. The first mention of Stonewall came about 15 minutes from the end of the parade, courtesy of the Party for Socialism and Liberation. Certainly the Wells Fargo contingent, whose sponsor invests in private prisons, was not about to mention Stonewall. That is especially true now that people from Ferguson to Baltimore to Texas are once again fighting the police.

Video contrasting traditional contingents and message of Stonewall with corporate contingents

Related Video: Fundamentalist Christians jeered for threatening Pride festival with Hell

Two years ago, the Citibank and Wells Fargo contingents were forcibly halted by the "Booty Bucanners" who stormed onto the route in the name of reclaiming Pride. Despite that strong message of community disapproval, both were back last year and again this year. Just as offensive was the presence of a Gay Washington Nationals fan group. The Nationals stadium was built with about 3/4 billion dollars in taxpayer funds on land taken by eminent domain. An entire Gay neighborhood was bulldozed for this team, yet their fans are invited to march in Pride.

For those who arrived late or stuck it out long enough, the traditional Pride contingents, including the PSL's Stonewall banners, were in the last half, maybe the last third of the parade. This could almost have been two different parades, with the assimilationists in front and the GLBTQ community's traditions riding the back of the bus. When the last contingent passed, the crowd pulled down the barricades and marched behind the parade. This has become a tradition of its own, remembering the days when Pride was a First Amendment activity that needed no corporate sponsors.

One sour note from last year was nowhere to be seen, at least I did not see them. In 2014 Westboro Baptist had the nerve to counterprotest Pride, only to be driven down the route by a crowd of booing bystanders. This year they seem to have stayed away, perhaps having learned the lesson Wells Fargo did not in 2013.

Pride celebrates the June 28,1969 victory where Gays fought back and forcibly repelled a police raid on a Gay bar. This contingent was near the end of the parade

Details of the PSL main banner

Spectacular Latin dancers in one of the last contingents

Wells Fargo is STILL allowed in the Pride parade after years of funding private prisons where transgender inmates face torture and abuse

The Nationals stadium bulldozed an entire Gay neighhborhood, yet Nationals fans marched in Pride. WTF?

Fillipino Pride: a breath of fresh air after all those corporate floats

Barriers pulled down, the crowd takes the streets behind Pride every year

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