-
Featured Video
ESPN announcers drool over quarterback's girlfriend, illustrate football's culture of entitlementSubscribe
Subscribe
Most Popular
Meet Us
Samhita Mukhopadhyay
Executive Editor
Chloe Angyal
Editor
Jos Truitt
Editor
Maya Dusenbery
Editor
Lori Adelman
Editor
Shark-Fu
Contributor
Zerlina Maxwell
Contributor
Anna Sterling
Contributor
Eesha Pandit
Contributor
Katie Halper
Contributor
Syreeta McFadden
Contributor
Alexandra Brodsky
Contributor
Sesali Bowen
Contributor
Take Action
- Tell Blue Coat to stop allowing DOD and other customers to block LGBT websites
- Say NO to violence against women worldwide
- How to get involved in the immigration reform fight
- Sign The Bill of Reproductive Rights!
- Congress: Stop gutting reproductive health care
- Sign the Petiton: A Personhood Amendment for Women and Other People With Uteri!
- Nobody is "Illegal": Pass It On
- Demand Justice: Repeal Hyde!


This Holiday Season: Don’t Give To The Salvation Army
November is the month of elections and the beginning of the holiday season. Now, with few exceptions, people who support LGBTIQ rights tend to go blue and those who oppose tend to go red. Blue and red happen to be the main colours of the two largest non-profit-thrift-stores-which-help-people-out, the relatively secular Goodwill and the religious conservative Salvation Army, respectively. This is why whenever you are out and about and you are a queer or an ally, and you see a red kettle, you should avoid it like the black plague and go blue, if not local:
The Huffington Post reports:
Now, I have to make a disclosure here. One of my first purchases of women’s clothing was at a Salvation Army thrift store in Pompton Lakes, NJ. When I was stuck in the closet at Ramapo College, my college had a Walk A Mile In Her Shoes event to bring awareness of domestic violence. I decided that this was an opportunity to be myself and most of all, support a good cause. So, I drove down to the SA, got this polka dotted dress, and I am glad I did get that dress, since none of the heels fit me, and I would not walk that anymore, seeing as I no longer identify as a male.
Since then, I had grown up, gotten to know more about this cruel world, and would NEVER, EVER shop at a Salvation Army ever again. If I ever wanted to find something good on the cheap, I would go to Goodwill, they have never given me a problem there and most of their stores have unisex dressing rooms (yippie!!!). But then again, I may also support a more localized organization.
The Bilerico Project further enumerates cases of discrimination:
Wow, the Salvation Army wants people to starve, all because New York City recognizes that if you want to use your religious beliefs to negatively impact someone’s life, you should get no solace from the city. And what is scary is, the Salvation Army provides homeless services. A search of my own zipcode indicates that there are several shelter locations in Philadelphia alone. One of these is the Red Shield Family residences, which is where the Appletree Center, an intake center for homeless women and families, refers the latter to as an after hours site for those who don’t get placed. Appletree is connected with the Philadelphia Office Of Supportive Housing, which has put out this statement affirming transgender people’s rights to access shelter services appropriate to their gender identity. If any agent of the city, in their duties of referring homeless individuals, refers the individual to a place like Red Shield, they better be damn certain that the shelter is in compliance with local laws.
Of course, the bigotry of the Salvation Army proved to be deadly towards a transgender woman in Austin, Texas just before Christmas in 2008.
Here was a human being who had many ideas and who just wanted shelter, yet the Salvation Army just let her die; she was never male, and to force her into a gender role she didn’t want, could have led to a fate even worse than death. Homelessness is a complicated issue, and nobody should have de facto or de jure authority to degender people, just because they have fallen on rough times.
So, I am putting out a call to arms. If you see one of them red kettles, the least you can do is ”just say no” (though if you hold up a sign and protest them, that would be awesome too).
But then again, what we need is more queer friendly civil society. It should not be up to theologically conservative religious sects to monopolize the charity market. Perhaps if you know of a church that is welcoming to LGBT people, maybe you could encourage them to set up charitable services, ranging from shelters to food banks to soup kitchens to even clothing drives.
RIP Jennifer Gale: I will make sure my “boy clothes” as well as my money, and hopefully the cities money, never goes to such an evil institution.
-Jordan Gwendolyn Davis