Help Patrick Get to United We Dream Congress

February 8, 2014 · Posted in Uncategorized · 2 Comments 

patrick_smallHello friends.
My name is Patrick M. Fierro and I was raised in El Paso, TX. Growing up, my family was always aware of the police and immigration. We lived in fear of them because my father was undocumented. Unfortunately, our biggest fear became a reality when my father was arrested, over criminalized, and given a harsh sentence to set an example because of his immigration status. He was detained for several years and eventually deported. Our family was torn apart.

Without my father, we fell on difficult financial times. Both my mother and I had to hold two jobs in order to make ends meet. We found it difficult to celebrate birthdays, holidays, and life events knowing that my father could not celebrate with us. Sadly, all too many people have similar experiences.I am working with activist all over the country to change that.

This is why I want to be active in the immigrant rights movement and to help GetEQUAL, a national LGBT social justice organization, to fight with my LGBT brothers and sisters living in fear of deportation.

Help me get to The United We Dream Congress 2014 in Phoenix on February 21- February 23. I’ll be able to learn new skills and strategies from more experienced activists and organizers to use in my community. I’m trying to raise $160 to pay for my flight, anything you can give will help get me closer to going. Can you help me get there by donating what you can? Just click the “donate” button below. Thank you so much in advance!

Con Amor,
Patrick M. Fierro

Texas – Light The Way To Justice

March 27, 2013 · Posted in Events, home, Uncategorized · Comments Off 

LGBTmarriageOn March 25th and 26th, thousands of Texans gathered throughout the state, in their local communities, to rally for marriage equality. These are the stories of history in the making!

Stay tuned to this page, we are adding media as it is found.

http://storify.com/getequal_tx/texas-light-the-way-to-justice

Texas A&M Students fight back against discrimination

March 25, 2013 · Posted in Uncategorized · 25 Comments 

200px-GLBT_Aggies_Logo

Media Release from GLBT Aggies:

Texas A&M Student Senate Introduces SB 65-70: Call to Action to STOP Institutionalized Discrimination

 

On Wednesday evening, March 20th, a member of the Texas A&M University Student Senate

introduced S.B. 65-70: The GLBT Funding Opt-Out Bill. This bill proposes “allowing students
who object, for religious purposes, to the use of their student fees and tuition to fund this center
to opt out of paying an amount equal to their share of the Center’s funding from their fee and
tuition bills.” The author suggests that students have the religious right to “opt-out” of the
student fees that go towards maintaining the GLBT Resource Center. However, as currently
constructed this bill is a direct and blatant attack on the LGBT Aggie community. We hope to do
everything possible to ensure that this bill does not pass through the Texas A&M University
Student Senate.
Background:
Texas A&M University is currently ranked the least-friendly public institution for LGBT students
by the Princeton Review. Because of this reality, we are still in the process of fighting to exist
and to be positively acknowledged at Texas A&M.
As it follows, the introduction of S.B. 65-70 is not the first instance that the LGBT community
has been targeted by members of the Student Senate. In 2011, during the 63rd Student Senate
Session, a group of senators introduced S.B. 63-106: The Sexual Education Equality in Funding
Bill. This bill proposed that the student senate support and advocate for an amendment that was
concurrently before the Texas Legislature “to require GLBT resource centers to provide
matching funds to traditional sexual education” and asked Texas A&M University “that such
funding not be acquired through increased student fees.” In effect, the bill would have created
funds for “traditional sexual education” programming by draining funds away from the GLBT
Resource Center, while simultaneously creating a hostile environment on campus.
This bill passed the Student Senate but fortunately was later vetoed by then Student Body
President Jacob D. Robinson; the senate attempted to overturn the veto but was unsuccessful.
S.B. 63-106 was a direct attack on the LGBT community at Texas A&M University. Our
resources were not dispensable in the 63rd session, and they are not dispensable now in the
65th session.
Our Position:
As a community dedicated to respecting diversity, we support measures sincerely aimed at
protecting the religious beliefs of Texas A&M students, including those of many within the LGBT
community. However, while SB 65-70 claims to promote religious freedom, we cannot ignore
that it only allows students with one religious belief to control how their student fees are used:
only religious traditions that disapprove of LGBT interests are given a voice. A bill truly
dedicated to allowing religious designation of fees would make the opportunity available to
students of all faiths toward whatever policy creates a moral conflict of interest for them. Given
the extremely narrow scope of this bill, we can only conclude that its interest lies not in
promoting religious freedom but specifically in targeting the LGBT community. Whatever the
intentions of the bill may be, its effect is clearly discriminatory.
We stand for commitment to each other as fellow students of Texas A&M University. Our LGBT
members are not separate from the community as a whole; they are an integral part of the
backbone of the student body and of campus life. Depriving them of the resources that meet
their unique needs and that help them succeed affects the entire community. The Texas A&M
family includes students with diverse backgrounds, beliefs, and needs, bound together by our
commitment to our university and to each other. An attack on our LGBT students is an attack on
the Aggie spirit we all share.
It is unacceptable that the Texas A&M student senate is willing to institutionalize a forum for the
student body to express its disapproval of LGBT students. This bill sends a clear message of
exclusion to past, current, and prospective LGBT students, as well as staff and faculty.
Action Plan:
In light of these events, it is exceedingly important that we stand together, not only as a
community, but as valued and respected members of the Aggie family. We need support from
EVERYONE! This includes current students, former students, community members, and Allies.
On Wednesday, April 3, at 7:00pm, there will be an open forum in Koldus 144 where
students and community members will be given the opportunity to speak directly to the student
senate, and we need you ALL to show up.
While this show of support will be absolutely crucial to our efforts, we want you to know that
this is not the only action you can take. You DO NOT have to wait until April 3rd to let your
voice be heard! Now is the time to meet with your student senators and explain to them exactly
why this bill is so hurtful to our community. Now is the time to have conversations with your
roommates, classmates, and friends. Now is the time for former students and community
members to step in and speak up by writing letters of support sent to .
Every single one of us has a story, and it is the sharing of these stories that is our best hope of
changing the hearts and minds of those who are in support of this discriminatory measure.
“An Aggie does not LIE about who they are, CHEAT someone out of a positive experience,
STEAL someone else’s dignity, or TOLERATE those who do.”
Sincerely,
The Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Aggies
Est. 1976

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Posted in support of GLBT Aggies