LGBTQIA+ Pride Month

JSTOR DAILY

Writer/civil rights activist James Baldwin in 1969 IMAGE/Wikimedia Commons

June is LGBTQ Pride Month, so JSTOR Daily gathered some of our favorite stories to celebrate. All with free and accessible scholarly research.

June is LGBTQIA+ Pride Month in the United States, so we’ve collected some of our most popular stories on a range of topics—from pronouns to politics—that highlight the history of the LGBTQIA+ community. As always, links to free JSTOR scholarship are included with each of these.

Livia Gershon April 6, 2025 Lesbian relationships among government workers were seen as a threat to national security in the 1950s. But what constituted a lesbian relationship was an open question.

Sara Ivry September 18, 2024 Portico helps preserve underrepresented community content and collections, including the wide-ranging materials of the Digital Transgender Archive.

Ray Levy Uyeda May 26, 2021 The first DSM, created in 1952, established a hierarchy of sexual deviancies, vaulting heterosexual behavior to an idealized place in American culture.

Livia Gershon February 18, 2023 In the late nineteenth century, historian John Addington Symonds fought back against his colleagues’ refusal to acknowledge historical same-sex relationships.

JSTOR Daily for more

“A cult of ignorance” by Isaac Asimov, 1980

by PHILIPPE THEOPHANIDIS

IMAGE/Famous Quotes 123/Duck Duck Go

It’s hard to quarrel with that ancient justification of the free press: “America’s right to know.” It seems almost cruel to ask, ingenuously, ”America’s right to know what, please? Science? Mathematics? Economics? Foreign languages?”
None of those things, of course. In fact, one might well suppose that the popular feeling is that Americans are a lot better off without any of that tripe.
There is a cult of ignorance in the United States, and there always has been. The strain of anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that “my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge.”

Isaac Asimov was a prolific author as well as a renowned scientist. He wrote many popular science books. I personally found out about him at a younger age through his highly regarded science-fiction novels. I grew up reading most of them.

The excerpt quoted above has been reproduced numerous time online. I thought I could produce a copy of the whole article which really is interesting in its entirety. The article is also listed in A Guide to Isaac Asimov’s Essays in the “Various Source” section. It appears with a mention signaling the fact that it was never republished in any collections.
Here’s another excerpt from the same article:

There are 200 million Americans who have inhabited schoolrooms at some time in their lives and who will admit that they know how to read (provided you promise not to use their names and shame them before their neighbors), but most decent periodicals believe they are doing amazingly well if they have circulations of half a million. It may be that only 1 per cent–or less?of American make a stab at exercising their right to know. And if they try to do anything on that basis they are quite likely to be accused of being elitists.
I contend that the slogan “America’s right to know” is a meaningless one when we have an ignorant population, and that the function of a free press is virtually zero when hardly anyone can read.

Read the whole article in PDF.

Aphelis for more

Why do working people die younger than the wealthy?

by BERNIE SANDERS

Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT) speaks to a capacity crowd during an event at UW-Parkside on March 7, in Kenosha, Wisconsin. IMAGE/ Scott Olson/Getty Images

Everyone wants to live a long, happy, and productive life. If you’re working class in America, that’s tough to do.

Last month, I asked Americans to share their stories about how financial stress is affecting their lives. The response was overwhelming, heartbreaking, and infuriating. Working people are dying years before they should. Stress kills.

Put simply: Being poor or working class in America is a death sentence.

Patrick from Missouri wrote: “Living paycheck to paycheck while supporting a family stresses me out. We are always just one financial emergency from being homeless.”

Taryn from Alabama shared that she pays $400 for her children’s asthma medication. On top of struggling to pay for groceries and basic utilities, she worries about astronomical medical bills every time her daughters go to the hospital.

I recently asked a crowd in rural Wisconsin: “What is it like living paycheck to paycheck?” Their responses? “You can’t keep the heat on.” “You have to figure out how to eat between paychecks.” “You have to choose between getting glasses for yourself or your kids.”

Sadly, these stories are not unique. This is what life looks like for millions of working-class Americans. They are struggling. They are exhausted. And they are dying far too young.

A recent report I released as ranking member of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee found that the bottom 50 percent of Americans can expect to live seven fewer years than those in the top 1 percent.

In some places, the gap is even wider. If you live in a rural, working-class county, you are likely to die 10 years earlier than someone in a wealthy suburb.

For example, if you live in McDowell County, West Virginia, where the median household income is just $27,682 a year, you can expect to live 69 years.

Meanwhile, just 350 miles away in Loudoun County, Virginia, where the median income is $142,299, life expectancy is 84 years—a 15-year gap.

Why? It’s simple. Day after day, the struggle just to survive takes a horrific toll on a person’s body and mind. Financial stress kills.

If your landlord raises your rent by 30 percent and you can’t afford it, what do you do? Where do you live? Will your kids be forced to sleep in a car?

If you get sick, and end up with a $20,000 hospital bill, will you go bankrupt? Or will bill collectors hound you every day?

Newsweek for more

“The masters of the universe are Jews,” former US Senator declares in Israel

by WYATT REED

Former U.S. Senator Norm Coleman: “The masters of the universe are Jews!” VIDEO/Youtube

Ex-GOP Senator and Republican Jewish Coalition chair Norm Coleman proclaimed with a straight face that Jews control the world during a Jerusalem conference featuring a speech by Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu. 

Former US Senator Norm Coleman has raised eyebrows by declaring that “the masters of the universe are Jews” at a major Zionist lobby event in Jerusalem. In an address to a summit hosted by the Adelson-funded Jewish News Syndicate on April 27, Coleman pointed to various major technology firms founded by Jews, suggesting the shared religion of the companies’ creators should translate into a greater zeal for censoring criticism of Israel.

“And when you think about it, the Masters of the Universe are Jews! We’ve got Altman at OpenAI, we’ve got [Facebook founder Mark] Zuckerberg, we’ve got [Google founder] Sergey Brin, we’ve got a group across the board. Jan Koum, y’know, founded WhatsApp. It’s us.”

“The masters of the universe are Jews!” former US Sen. Norm Coleman proclaims at the Jerusalem JNS policy summit, calling on Jewish tech industry CEO’s to counteract Gen Z’s growing support for Palestine

(Coleman was a warm-up act for Netanyahu) pic.twitter.com/JCRqWxpsXR

— Max Blumenthal (@MaxBlumenthal) April 28, 2025

The remarks came as Coleman lamented that pro-Israel propagandists are “losing the digital war” in battle for the hearts and minds of younger generations, and called for more stringent censorship of pro-Palestinian speech.

“A majority or Gen Z have an unfavorable impression of Israel. And, my friends, I think the reason for that is that we’re losing the digital war. They’re getting their information from TikTok, and… and we’re losing that war.”

As numerous polls show young Americans are increasingly skeptical of Israel – with a recent survey showing 71% of Democrats and 50% of Republicans under age 49 now hold an unfavorable view of Israel – establishment politicians have consistently blamed TikTok’s algorithm for the decline in enthusiasm for genocide. In February, the top Democrat on the Senate intelligence committee, Mark Warner, revealed that the bill forcing China’s ByteDance to sell TikTok was motivated by the visibility of pro-Palestine content on the app.

For Coleman, though, it appears this wasn’t enough. “We have to figure out a way to win the digital battle,” he told summit attendees. “We’ve got to get our digital sneakers on, so that the truth can prevail over the lies. And when we do that, the future of Israel will be stronger because a majority of all Americans will support Israel. We’ll make that happen, we have to make it happen. Thank you, Baruch hashem.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu took the stage directly after Coleman’s speech, highlighting Tel Aviv’s interest in the event, which was billed as the “Inaugural JNS Policy Summit to address Israel’s pressing strategic issues.”

An archetypal neoconservative, Coleman started off as an anti-war activist who once worked as a roadie for Jethro Tull, and was suspended from Hofstra University for leading a sit-in. “I went to Woodstock, and I inhaled!” he boasted at the JNS summit. After first taking office as a member of the Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party, Coleman wound up narrowly losing his Senate seat to Al Franken in 2008 as a Republican.

In addition to serving as the national chairman of the Republican Jewish Coalition and founder of the Congressional Leadership Fund super PAC, Coleman now works as a top lobbyist for the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

The Gray Zone for more

The people’s projector

by JINOY JOSE P,

Dear reader,

I believe cinema must be watched in a cinema. Not on a laptop, not on a phone, not on a TV—however smart or flat its panel may be. With each shrinking of the screen, something vital is lost. The medium’s emotional charge, its visual grandeur, its immersive power—all diminish when its canvas contracts. That may sound purist, even a little curmudgeonly, in this era of OTT abundance and algorithm-driven viewing. But I’ll say it anyway: when it comes to movies, the bigger the screen and the darker the hall, the more potent the magic.

Don’t believe me? Watch three films: To Each His Own Cinema, an exquisite anthology of 34 shorts by directors from 25 countries, all meditating on the act of watching; Cinema Paradiso, Giuseppe Tornatore’s love letter to the vanished small-town theatre; and Abbas Kiarostami’s Shirin, which flips the lens to film women watching a film, their faces lit only by flickers of light and feeling.

Each of these films captures the same elemental truth: there is a peculiar alchemy in the darkened theatre. Strangers, briefly released from the burdens of their own lives, become co-conspirators in collective dreaming. Walter Benjamin wrote that cinema doesn’t merely entertain, but it creates a shared space for experience. When the lights go down and the images begin their hypnotic dance, we see democracy in its most radical form. Not at the ballot box or on the streets, but in the quiet surrender to someone else’s vision of what it means to be human (or not; such a disclaimer is needed in this AI era).

I agree that this ritual has taken on new urgency in our age of digital fragmentation. Political tribes retreat into algorithmic echo chambers, cultural dialogue is filtered through outrage cycles, and shared references grow scarce. Yet, against the odds, humanity still gathers in darkened halls to lose themselves in story. For those luminous hours, we become porous to each other again. Vulnerable. Hopeful. Human. It is indeed not an exaggeration to say cinema is our last universal language. A visual Esperanto of the soul.

The impact is visible in the numbers. The global film and video industry generated more than $300 billion in revenue in 2024, surpassing the GDP of more than 170 countries (about 85-90 per cent of all recognised nations). But these figures only skim the surface. In the 1960s, James Bond films boosted tourism to featured destinations. Bollywood’s soft power runs so deep across West Asia and South-East Asia that Hindi filmi phrases have entered everyday speech in countries where few have ever met an Indian. But cinema’s influence is much more than merely commercial; it’s mythopoeic. It functions as a collective unconscious, showing not just how societies look at themselves, but how they wish to be seen.

Frontline for more

Gaza walks

by B. NIMRI AZIZ

Put Your Soul on Your Hand and Walk” is the title of a soon-to-be-released film featuring photojournalist Fatima Hassouna, the most recent of more than 208 assassinated Gazan journalists.

With no prior knowledge of that film’s content, I knew it emanated from Palestine. These eight words embodied reiterations of a portrait that for many months incessantly haunts me, a photo that had become too routine, and to most of the world, a fleeting image. Even the few who catch glimpses of those slowing moving tributaries of walkers with no destination turn silent.

The Gazans walk on, steadily, seemingly willingly. Away from everything they loved and what each of them is – a soul, a sentient being, a history. They walk on obediently, now perhaps less by fear than from habit and dissolution. They walk without a terminus.

Most refugees worldwide have some geographic objective, however murky, unrealistic and adaptable. Not Gaza’s Palestinians. They are simply vacating a place that they have been warned is unsafe. Their objective is simply to get out of the paths of cordons of ‘predators’ stalking them from all directions, including the sky. If not to save themselves, they are compelled to help their elders, their sick and their children.

The number of displaced people and refugees today is of a staggering magnitude never recorded in any era of world history. Most often war and military occupation is the motive for their uprooting. Or famine, or economic sanctions stemming from conflict. From all across Europe to the Americas; from Tibet to India; from Uganda to the U.K.; from Vietnam in all directions; from Africa northwards through destroyed Libya; from Afghanistan east into Pakistan or westwards anywhere; from Myanmar to Bangladesh; from Iraq and Syria to the Gulf States, Iran and Turkey; from Rwanda to Congo or Congo to Uganda and Tanzania; from Hong Kong and Taiwan to Australia; from Bhutan to Nepal; from Cuba and Venezuela, mostly forced into penury by U.S. sanctions.

They sleep on the road and huddle with strangers in camps. They thrash around capsized boats, hide in city or forest, then set off to reach a temporary safe haven where they might file papers to secure asylum somewhere along a route through several nations. Resourcefully, they gather fragments about the safest crossing point, the most trustworthy smugglers, where temporary succor might be found.

Barbara Nimri for more

How Elon Musk triggered a conservative wipeout | If you’re listening

Just a few months ago Elon Musk was heralded as a political kingmaker when he had a hand in helping Donald Trump win the US election.

Musk has since meddled in the politics of the UK, Germany, Spain and elsewhere but has struggled to convert his political prowess into victories for his chosen conservative parties.

In fact, being in any way similar to Trump or Musk has been a dead weight around the ankle of political campaigns over the last few months.

It was clear the DOGE dynamism had officially worn off when federal elections in Canada and Australia saw both conservative parties lose by a landslide.

Given that Musk and the other tech bro billionaires have so much influence over how we communicate, why are they seemingly struggling to actually influence our politics?

Youtube for more (Thanks to Razi Azmi)

Trump’s useful idiots

by CHRIS HEDGES

Trump’s Useful Idiots /IMAGE/Mr. Fish

A bankrupt liberal class, by signing on for the Zionist witch hunt against supposed antisemites and refusing to condemn Israel for its genocide, provided the bullets to its executioners.

The media, universities, the Democratic Party and liberals, by embracing the fiction of “rampant antisemitism,” laid the groundwork for their own demise. Columbia and Princeton, where I have taught, and Harvard, which I attended, are not incubators of hatred towards Jews. The New York Times, where I worked for fifteen years and which Trump calls “an enemy of the people,” is slavishly subservient to the Zionist narrative. What these institutions have in common is not antisemitism, but liberalism. And liberalism, with its creed of pluralism and inclusiveness, is slated by our authoritarian regime for obliteration. 

The conflation of outrage over the genocide with antisemitism is a sleazy tactic to silence protest and placate Zionist donors, the billionaire class and advertisers. These liberal institutions, weaponizing antisemitism, aggressively silenced and expelled critics, banned student groups such as Jewish Voice for Peace and Students for Justice in Palestine, allowed police to make hundreds of arrests of peaceful protests on campuses, purged professors and groveled before Congress. Use the words ‘apartheid’ and ‘genocide’ and you are fired or excoriated

Zionist Jews, in this fictional narrative, are the oppressed. Jews who protest the genocide are slandered as Hamas stooges and punished. Good Jews. Bad Jews. One group deserves protection. The other deserves to be thrown to the wolves. This odious bifurcation exposes the charade.

In April 2024, Columbia University President Minouche Shafik, along with two board members and a law professor, testified before the House of Representative education committee. They accepted the premise that antisemitism was a significant problem at Columbia and other higher education institutions.

When Co-Chair of the Board of Trustees of Columbia University David Greenwald and others told the committee that they believed  “from the river to the sea” and “long live the intifada” were antisemitic statements, Shafik agreed. She threw students and faculty under the bus, including long-time professor Joseph Massad.

The day after the hearings, Shafik suspended all the students at the Columbia protests and called in the New York City Police Department (NYPD), who arrested at least 108 students. 

“I have determined that the encampment and related disruptions pose a clear and present danger to the substantial functioning of the University,” Shafik wrote in her letter to the police. 

NYPD Chief John Chell, however, told the press, “the students that were arrested were peaceful, offered no resistance whatsoever, and were saying what they wanted to say in a peaceful manner.”

Chris Hedges for more

The origins of wealth inequality as reflected in the archaeological record

by PHILIP GUELPA

Tikal – An ancient Mayan city in Central America. Mayan society is thought to have collapsed from a combination of environmental stress and class conflict.

A newly published study (“Economic inequality is fueled by population scale, land-limited production, and settlement hierarchies across the archaeological record,” PNAS, April 14, 2025) provides insight into the initial rise of class societies across the world. Using data from 1,100 archaeological sites from Europe, Asia and the Americas, the researchers trace the beginnings of wealth inequality back to over 10,000 years ago, millennia before the first major civilizations (e.g., Egypt, Mesopotamia, the Maya). The study elucidates some of the primary factors in the transition from egalitarian hunter-gatherer social groups to early farming societies in which indications of wealth and status differentiation can be discerned. 

The initial processes that eventually led to the emergence of class societies (although the word “class” does not appear anywhere in the PNAS article) began to appear during the last stages of the Pleistocene and the beginning of the Holocene (the post-glacial period in which we have lived for approximately the last 10,000 years). Since there are no written records from those times, the researchers employ a proxy data set—dwelling sizes—specifically the in-ground footprint of structures which are the usual housing remnants, if any, found in archaeological sites. No standing buildings survive from the time period in question. The study gathered data from over 47,000 residential structure remains, documented at 1,100 archaeological sites from around the world. The large sample size alone gives a degree of confidence in the study’s results. 

The study identifies several commonalities in the initial emergence of economic inequality: 

Growth of wealth differences among households has been a long-term though not universal trend in the Holocene. Marked increases typically lagged plant domestication by 1,000 y[ears] or more and were tightly linked to development of hierarchies of settlement size and land-limited production. We infer that the social upscaling (growth of polities in population and area) that typically began one to two millennia after agriculture became locally common, and continued in some areas throughout the Holocene, interfered with traditional leveling mechanisms including enforcement of egalitarian norms.

In general, in egalitarian societies the dwelling sizes of constituent family groups tend to be similar at any given settlement, reflecting a general equality in economic and social status. As wealth and social stratification developed, the study found that differences in dwelling sizes begin to appear. As societies become more complex, the number of levels of dwelling sizes increases, reflecting the different levels of social stratification. 

WSWS for more

Trump’s new “Muslim Ban” wipes out hope for 250,000 Afghans seeking refuge in US

by ARASH AZIZZADA

Afghan refugees who had been removed by force from Pakistan arrive near the Afghanistan-Pakistan Torkham border in Nangarhar province on April 10, 2025.
IMAGE/AFP via Getty Images

The US owes Afghans a huge debt, but instead of starting to repair decades of harm, Trump is banning them from the US.

During Donald Trump’s first term, the Afghan American community dodged a bullet. This time, we weren’t so lucky. The new “Muslim ban 2.0,” the successor to Trump’s original Muslim ban, went into effect today, with 12 countries on its list, including Afghanistan.

When President Trump began his second term in office on January 20, he issued an executive order asking for a 60-day review of vetting requirements for certain nationalities. As of 12 a.m. ET on June 9, Afghans are now barred from entering the U.S. This news comes as most of our community celebrates Eid-al-Adha and many Muslims around the world finish the annual Hajj pilgrimage to Mecca.

While some of this policy is framed as legal language in the name of “national security,” it is clear that this masking was done in an attempt to help the order pass challenges in the courts. Despite its narrow exception for Special Immigrant Visa holders, this policy is clearly a sweeping expression of racism and anti-Muslim prejudice.

The U.S.’s Role in Creating This Crisis

Afghanistan isn’t merely a Muslim country that happens to be a target of this administration’s ire. The U.S.’s role goes back to the 1970s, when the CIA covertly supported and armed the Afghan mujahideen fighting back against the Soviet invasion, part of a Cold War era-proxy war. This was followed by USAID-funded school textbooks in Dari and Pashto produced by the University of Nebraska that taught young Afghan students violence in refugee camps across Afghanistan and Pakistan. Years later, the U.S. invaded Afghanistan in the fall of 2001 in the wake of the September 11 attacks and fought a war against elements of al-Qaeda and the Taliban. During this 20-year war, the U.S. funded endemic corruption, backed notorious human rights violators and helped build an aid-reliant government that was essentially a house of cards. The war killed almost 180,000 people and culminated in bringing back a regime in 2021 that has instilled what many now call “gender apartheid.” Afghanistan today is the only country on the planet where women and girls are barred from education past the 6th grade.

This 40-year history means that the U.S. owes Afghans and Afghan Americans a huge debt. Instead of repaying this debt and undoing the harm it has caused over four decades, Muslim ban 2.0 has been yet another deep betrayal and abandonment.

First the U.S. bombed Afghans, then it abandoned Afghans. Now it has barred Afghans.

The decision to ban Afghans will mean that they will be left to fend off a regime that has targeted anyone that has stood alongside the U.S. for 20 years. That is not even to talk about the continued deportations of Afghans by the Pakistani and Iranian governments or the fact that Afghanistan is enduring a humanitarian crisis in which millions of people do not have access to more than one meal a day, a situation caused and exacerbated by U.S. sanctions policy.

Truth Out for more