S*U*P*P*O*R*T Y*O*U*R I*R*I*S*H Q*U*E*E*R*S*! 
Irish queers have the same problem as queers in most immigrant communities -- 
while our community scrambles to assimilate into mainstream conservative U.S. 
culture, our insistence on being both Irish AND queer challenges the American 
Hetero Dream, which is very nervous-making to our immigrant communities. 
So the big local muckety-mucks do the usual thing: first they denounce us, then 
they try everything to pretend we don't exist. They put their normalness on 
public display in the form of parades featuring -- instead of the rich culture 
they came from -- military contingents, cop contingents, religious 
contingents... (The weirdest part is that in Ireland, queers are singled out for 
government *support*, and have never been excluded from a parade.) The erasure 
of queers, and the homogenizing of our national cultures, does violence to us. 
We protest! 
Join Irish Queers in protesting our exclusion from the (admittedly very dull) 
NYC St. Patrick's parade, this year with a big, fabulous performance which will 
show parade-goers the difference between lame moralistic, militaristic 
grandstanding and *actual* Irish culture! 
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dramatic reading by ~* MALACHY McCOURT! *~ 
music by ~* THE UNITED 32s! *~ 
art by ~* CONOR McGRADY *~ & ~* KEVIN NOBLE! *~ 
and lots more... 
Wednesday, March 17, 10:30am-1pm 
E.58th St./5th Ave. (at FAO Schwarz) 
call (917) 517-3627 if you have trouble finding us or getting in. 
Also see "10 things you can do"... 
www.irishqueers.org 
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Why do we care about the parade? 
The NYC parade is the biggest, most public celebration of Irishness in the U.S. 
It's broadcast on national television by NBC, gets more than $1m of City funds, 
and is a photo-op for many politicians who claim (out of the other side of their 
mouths) to be friends of queers. It has nothing to do with celebrating Irishness 
anymore -- the organizers now call it "a triumph of traditional Catholic values 
over homosexuality." The parade has excluded many different "undesirables" over 
its history, including women, people of color, people in wheelchairs and Irish 
independence activists. The parade is an icon of right-wing religious attempts 
to cleanse Irish identity of queerness, Irish republicanism, feminism and other 
diversities. It's our community's parade, and we belong in it.