Episode Details
Back to EpisodesThe Gritty History of Stonewall Riots
Episode 5551
Published 3 weeks, 2 days ago
Description
In this episode, we explore the gritty history of stonewall riots. So picture this. It's 1 .20 AM on a really sweltering Friday night, June 1969. Right in the middle of a heat wave. Exactly. And the music abruptly stops. The lights flash on. You're trapped inside this windowless mafia run dive bar. There are no fire exits. The air is just thick with cigarette smoke. And well, the police just barricaded the front doors. It's a terrifying scenario. It really is. And, you know, when you picture the modern LGBTQ rights movement today, you probably picture like rainbow flags, massive corporate parade floats, you know, a whole month of officially sanctions celebration. Yeah, the very polished, acceptable version of it. Right. But today, our mission for this deep dive is to strip all of that neat, resolved history away. We are taking a really comprehensive look at a defining moment in modern civil rights, the Stonewall Riots. A very messy, protocol completely. What was different about it? Well first, there was no tip -off from the precinct. Second, the timing was totally disruptive. The police burst through the double doors at 1 .20 a .m. on a Friday night, the absolute peak of the weekend. So they trapped, what, around 200 people inside? About that, yeah. And when the lights flipped on and the music stopped, the standard police procedure was to line everyone up, check IDs, and have female officers take anyone presenting as a woman into the bathroom to physically verify their sex. If you were wearing drag or if your gender presentation didn't match your ID, you were arrested. Forcing someone into a bathroom for a physical sex verification is the ultimate exertion of state power. It's just pure humiliation. It was designed to demean them. But that night, the psychological dam finally broke. The patrons simply