All in Take Part

No Matter What the Supreme Court Decides, the Fight for LGBT Equality Isn’t Over

Tremendous strides have been made over the last decade when it comes to lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender rights. Same-sex couples can now marry in 37 states, a landmark federal case in California ordered the state to pay for a transgender inmate’s gender reassignment surgery, and President Obama issued an executive order barring companies that contract with the federal government from discriminating against LGBT workers.

Watch John Oliver Deliver a Powerful Argument Against the Confederate Flag

“The Confederate flag is one of those symbols that really should only be seen on T-shirts, belt buckles, and bumper stickers to help the rest of us identify the worst people in the world,” Oliver said. He went on to suggest the Confederate flag should not only be brought down to half-staff but that it should be removed completely and stored in a box labeled “bad flag.”

For Four Decades, This Same-Sex Couple Fought to Marry

Richard Adams and Tony Sullivan met in 1971 at a Los Angeles bar called The Closet. Sullivan, an Australian, had been traveling around the world on a tourist visa, and Adams was a Filipino American living in California. The couple fell in love and, on Apr. 21, 1975, married in Boulder County, Colorado. They became one of the first same-sex couples in the U.S. to be legally married.

New York’s Police Force Criminalized So Many Blacks, It Struggles for Diverse Hires

Earlier this week, William Bratton, commissioner of New York City’s police department, raised eyebrows by bemoaning the challenge of hiring black police officers. “We have a significant population gap among African-American males because so many of them have spent time in jail and, as such, we can’t hire them,” Bratton told The Guardian in an interview published on Tuesday.