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Be gay do crimes meme

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Description: Be Same-sex attracted Do Crime Rainbow Feline Done in photoshop www.manfishinc.com

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Description: The goose says to do gay and be crime.

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Description: do it do it do it

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Description: Entertaining Kermit the frog. Colorful design for pride month.

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Description: Be gay do crime

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Description: Be gay do crime

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Description: Cute tuxedo cat wearing rainbow sunglasses. Cool design for LGBTQIA pride.

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Be Gay Do Crime

About

Be Gay Do Crime is a catchphrase and protest slogan used by activists, members and allies of the LGBTQIA+ collective, promoting freedom from discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation or creature non-cisgender.

Origin

While the phrase existed prior to its appearance online, the earliest established reference was posted by Instagram user @absentobject on September 15th, 2016. The post features the words "Be Gay. Do Crime." spraypainted onto a wall in Marseille, France (shown below).


Spread

Three days later, the Tumblr account queergraffiti featured the photograph, which received more than 58,000 notes in three years.

On January 13th, 2018, Twitter user @AliceAvizandum tweeted the image along with a piece of stencil graffiti quoting Mark Fisher. They captioned the image "two kinds of leftists." The tweet received more than 1,900 likes and 630 retweets in a year and a half (shown below, left).

Several months later, on June 2nd, Twitter user @ioascarium tweeted an adaptation of a Thomas Nast political cartoon, replacing the sign a skeleton is holding with the expression. The tweet received more than 13,000 likes and 6,400 retweets in about one year (sh

Be Gay Do Crime

Authors

  • Isobella Austin Swinburne University of Technology

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7146/imaginingtheimpossible.132131

Keywords:

queer theory, dystopia, hierarchy, community, queer time

Abstract

This essay deals with queer theory and how it applies to the videogame Cloudpunk and the comic series Motor Crush. Both of these texts use cyberpunk settings to tell stories about finding hope in group. Each text features protagonists trying to navigate worlds where legal success is highly competitive and practically impossible. They must therefore turn to community building, mutual aid, and criminal activity to find happiness. This analysis views the texts through the lens of queer time and queer space making practices as outlined by J Jack Halberstam and Jose Esteban Muñoz. Central to this article’s exploration of these texts is the characters inability and/or refusal to fit neatly into the worlds they inhabit, and how they must therefore find success outside of accepted channels. Victory i

The phrase “Be gay, act crime(s)” is a hairpin trigger for the conservative outrage machine, as a non-binary law professor establish out after using it in a TikTok video that unwittingly introduced the words to a disapproving new audience.

But in gay communities, the heavilymemed and relentlesslymerchandised slogan is both a rallying cry and a winking inside joke—or an eye-roll-inducing cliché, depending who you ask—with a short but rich history rooted in anarchism and the fight for lgbtq+ liberation. (Both the odd “Be gay, do crime,” and plural, “Be homosexual, do crimes,” are used, though the singular is in much more regular use.) 

Last fall, criminal commandment professor Florence Ashley made a short TikTok saying, “As a law professor who teaches criminal rule, I felt compelled to inform you to be gay, do crimes.” The video was derisively reposted by rage-farming social media outlet Libs of TikTok and culture warrior psychologist Jordan Peterson, and inspired a column in right-wing media outlet Western Standard titled “Is this any way for a statute professor to talk?” The columnist dug up a number of comments from Ashley’s website and social media accounts, heavily implying that the an

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