Fed Up Queers, or FUQ, was aqueeractivistdirect action group that began inNew York City. The group was made up mostly of lesbians such as Jennifer Flynn (who later co-founded the New York City AIDS Housing Network as well as Health GAP), though notable participants also included gay rights pioneer andStonewall riots veteranBob Kohler,[1] and writerMattilda Bernstein Sycamore. The activists who formed FUQ came together loosely for a few actions in 1998, but the first action attributed to Fed Up Queers was onWorld AIDS Day, December 1, 1998, when they visited New York State AssemblywomanNettie Mayersohn's house in Queens at midnight to protest her stance on names reporting.
The group grew out of theAIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (Act Up),Sex Panic!, and the October 19th Coalition.[2] As co-founder Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore wrote, after the success of the political funeral forMatthew Shepard,[3]
we tried to create a large-scale radical queer activist group, but we got stuck in endless process and the meetings got smaller and smaller, [so] some of us formed an affinity group called Fed Up Queers to do smaller, targeted actions. ... Originally the idea was that we would only meet when someone had an idea for an action, we wouldn't get bogged down in process, but then we mostly went from one action to the next, since someone always had an idea.

Fed Up Queers held political funerals for murderedtransgender and queer people, and fought restrictiveAIDS policies, but focused much of their work on then mayorRudy Giuliani and theNew York City Police Department (NYPD). Fed Up Queers gained notoriety in the media for three actions:
They were the first[4] of the more than 1,200 people arrested[5] protesting the murder ofAmadou Diallo by NYPD officers. As one participant wrote, there had already been "protests, but no one was getting arrested and we wanted to raise the stakes. We wanted to block the Brooklyn Bridge, but we only had eight people who could risk arrest, so we said okay, we'll block the bridge with eight people. That's how desperate and angry and empowered we felt."[6] Arrestees eventually includedAl Sharpton,Jesse Jackson, former mayorDavid Dinkins, and actorsSusan Sarandon,Ruby Dee,Ossie Davis, andDick Gregory.
Later, Fed Up Queers stormed Giuliani's keynote speech to theLog Cabin Republicans at theRoosevelt Hotel in Manhattan. This action made the news because security guards beat and bloodied several activists, and clips of both the beatings and Giuliani making a joke about "his activists" played on all city television stations.[7][8][9] The activists won a civil suit against the hotel, and were represented by well known radical lawyer Susan Tipograph.
Fed Up Queers, with the support of Act Up and Health GAP, disrupted kick-off events of Vice PresidentAl Gore's Presidential campaign in three cities, denouncing his role in the threat of trade sanctions against Nelson Mandela's South Africa if it did not repeal the Medicines Act. Ultimately, pressure from Jesse Jackson and activists resulted in the United States adjusting its trade policies to enable poor countries, such as South Africa, to gain access to essential medicines.[10][11]
The group lasted two and half years. Some claim the group disbanded due to tactical disagreements. Others claim the breakup was due to one activist pushing his agenda of cross-generational sex.[12] Various members of the group continued to stage actions using the name, or occasionally reuniting in response to particular events.[13]
A new group called Fed Up Queers formed in 2009, in Arkansas.[14]
Notable actions
edit- Stop the Parade, activists attempted to stopRudy Giuliani from marching in the GayPride Parade by chaining themselves acrossFifth Avenue in New York City, June 28, 1998[15]
- Queers Bash Back, march to bring attention to the knife attack of a lesbian in Brooklyn, and murders of gay men and trans people in the city, Brooklyn, NY, September 27, 1998[16]
- Matthew Shepard Political Funeral, New York City, October 19, 1998[17]
- Wake Up forWorld AIDS Day, midnight "wake up call" to New York State AssemblywomanNettie Mayersohn's house in Flushing, Queens, NY. December 1, 1998[18]
- Your Bullets are Racist, protesting the NYPD's murder ofAmadou Diallo, New York City, February 22, 1999[19]
- Political funeral forBilly Jack Gaither, March 15, 1999[20][21]
- Gore's Greed Kills, Carthage, TN; New York, NY; Manchester, NH, June–July 1999[22]
- ProtestingRudy Giuliani's keynote speech to theLog Cabin Republicans at theRoosevelt Hotel, August 28, 1999.[23]
- Activists chained themselves to the Christmas tree in Rockefeller Center before it was lit (and were promptly arrested), to protest lighting ceremonies being held on World AIDS Day. December 1, 1999[24]
- Political funeral forSakia Gunn, July 11, 2003[citation needed]
Publications
edit- Splayed, a spoof on the straight-owned gay newspaperThe Gay Blade, otherwise known asThe New York Blade, after it fired one of its employees for their "gay bias" in an article.
References
edit- ^Shepard, Hayduk, Benjamin, Ronald (2002).From ACT UP to the WTO: Urban Protest and Community Building in the Era of Globalization.Verso.ISBN 1-85984-356-5.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^"N+1:How to Survive a Footnote". 11 August 2015. Retrieved2015-09-15.
- ^"Nobody Passes: Is That Blood on Your Hands". Retrieved2012-02-06.
- ^"Two-Faced Justice...First Diallo Arrestees". Retrieved2009-06-09.
- ^"Revolutionary Worker Online: Protests Denounce Police Murder of Amadou Diallo". Retrieved2009-06-09.
- ^"Nobody Passes: Is That Blood on Your Hands". Retrieved2012-02-06.
- ^"Gay Today: Group Expresses Its Fury Over Log Cabin-GOP Alliance". Retrieved2015-09-15.
- ^Lueck, Thomas J. (29 August 1999)."New York Times: Giuliani Gets Warm Reception From Gay Republicans' Group".The New York Times. Retrieved2015-09-15.
- ^"Village Voice: Confronting the Pride Divide". 31 August 1999. Retrieved2015-09-15.
- ^"Harvard Law School: The South Africa AIDS Controversy, A Case Study in Patent Law and Policy"(PDF). Retrieved2015-09-15.
- ^"The Body: The Battle for Global Treatment Access". Retrieved2015-09-15.
- ^Bernstein Sycamore, Mattilda (2008).That's Revolting: Queer Strategies for Resisting Assimilation.Soft Skull Press.ISBN 978-1-59376-195-0.
- ^"Raging Pride: Exclusive Video - ACT UP's 25th Anniversary Commemoration". 4 May 2012. Retrieved2015-09-15.
- ^"We Are Fed Up Queers". Retrieved2009-06-09.
- ^Hu, Winnie (29 June 1998)."New York Times: Spirit and Spectacle In a Show of Pride".The New York Times. Retrieved2015-09-15.
- ^"Workers World October 8, 1998: Zero Tolerance for Gay-Trans Bashing". Archived fromthe original on May 2, 2008. Retrieved2015-09-15.
- ^"New York News: Back to the Streets". Archived fromthe original on September 19, 2012. Retrieved2009-06-10.
- ^"Wake Up for World AIDS Day: Queens Chronicle Article". 9 May 2008. Retrieved2009-06-10.
- ^Esquivel, Adolfo Perez (September 2008).Let Freedom Ring. PM Press.ISBN 9781604861495. Retrieved2009-06-15.
- ^"Workers World: Gay-bashing must end, marchers say". Archived fromthe original on 2016-04-09. Retrieved2015-09-15.
- ^"abovegroundpool: event flyer image". 7 March 2008. Retrieved2015-10-19.
- ^"CNN Live coverage on You Tube".YouTube. 26 August 2015.Archived from the original on 2021-12-20. Retrieved2015-09-15.
- ^"New York News:Confronting the Pride Divide". Archived fromthe original on 2010-07-03. Retrieved2009-06-15.
- ^"CNN.com: Rockefeller Center Christmas tree officially lighted".CNN. Retrieved2015-09-15.
External links
edit- Archive of NYC Fed Up Queers images, abovegroundpool on flickr