
As we enter into “Pride Month” here’s our annual reminder that corporate rainbow capitalism won’t save us, but queer space communism just might. To that end, here are 10 things that you can do to help foster rad queer communities into the future:
- Skip the rainbow tat from big box stores and chains and support indy queer artists and producers.
- Have lesbian potlucks on the regular, and invite non-lesbian queers too. But tell the TERFs and SWERFs to fuck right the fuck off, and give them no space at the table.
- Start edible garden collectives. Growing veggies and fruits can be intimidating, but, like visiting a bath house for the first time, if you do it with buddies it’s more fun.
- Create spaces and events without “allies” and straight folks. We don’t have to always invite or accommodate them, and we NEVER need their approval or to be “respectable.”
- Talk and write about queer sex. Be explicit. Discuss pleasure, and desire, and health. Especially with younger folks and older folks. Don’t make assumptions about who or how.
- Throw queer dance parties! Also throw queer dance parties with a variety of muisical genres and themes and at different times of day and night. Make space for the metalheads and disco divas and hip-hop homos and everyone else.
- Preserve our hestories through story telling, oral hestory recording, artifact collecting, and letter writing. Help commit our lives to physical objects so that there is a fossil record.
- Teach and learn both hard and soft skills. Host or attend workshops on bike repair, cooking, community first aid, budgeting and personal finance, sewing, arts/music/writing and so on.
- Make queer digital media and host or platform it yourselves. Become unchained from YouTube, Facebook, Blogger and iTunes. Work together to skillshare technical knowledge, including recording, editing, sound and visual production skills, but also how to build webservers and host different types of content on your own.
- Make and read queer zines.



We’re starting off 2018 with the release of the third issue of From The Punked Out Files of the Queer Zine Archive Project. This issue combines the research of two summers of zinester-scholar-artist-librarians-in-residence at QAZP. It’s 56 pages of writing, thinking and analysis about queer sex zines, queer diy comics, POC zines, zine events, solar eclipses, road trips and frozen custard.
Pamphlet stitch is an old technology, and is one of the simplest non-adhesive bindings. It doesn’t require special tools (though I’ll recommend some below), and can be done as a solo project or in a team, with each person taking a step to divide the labor. I see bookbinding as a deeply feminist praxis. In early America, binderies were one of the few places outside the home where it was “respectable” for single women to find work. These jobs were also pathways to literacy for these young women, enabling them to learn to read and do sums, as well as providing for themselves and often their families. Reviving and reclaiming the book arts, then, is a feminist act. Queering the book arts extends this logic, and provides a new space for expression with this old tech.


It’s easy to get discouraged. Easy, and understandable. At times like these, it can be helpful to look back and see how others handled times of crisis. YELL is unfortunately, at the moment, defunct. However, its achievements (as listed near the beginning of YELL #1) are nothing short of inspiring. From handing out condoms and safer sex literature to over 45,000 NYC students, to enacting change in NYC public education policy, to representing youth interests at the international conference on AIDS, it’s clear the body of this organization was just as energetic as its publication.
We’ve been struggling for the past couple of days to come up with something to say about the election. It’s super hard not to be swallowed by a feeling of absolute doom and horror for things to come. We’re threatened. ALL our communities are being threatened. We’re unsure what the next 6 months will bring for us all.