The community came together Sunday to support two transgender women who say they were attacked near a light rail station in Minneapolis.

The incident happened Nov. 10 at Hennepin Avenue and Fifth Street in downtown Minneapolis. It’s where community members gathered for a rally Sunday afternoon, one week since the attack.

Amber Muhm, a community leader with Trans Movement for Liberation, said the two trans women were attacked by a group of men at the light rail station after one of the men used transphobic slurs.

“No one came to help them. In fact, they said people were cheering the attackers on while they were getting beaten,” Muhm said.

  • treefrog@lemm.ee
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    4 days ago

    Thanks I stand corrected on that.

    The song is still an expression of solidarity for gay people though. And Cindy has a long history of expressing that solidarity, because her sister is a lesbian.

    • die444die@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      I do agree with you on that, it’s a very meaningful song for me, and I do believe that Cyndi very well may have had her sister in mind when she recorded it.

      • treefrog@lemm.ee
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        3 days ago

        It looks like she had a friend in mind that was a victim of the AIDS epidemic.

        And now I’m crying.

        Cyndi helped me crack my egg. I loved her as a child, and even more deeply now as an adult.

        So her music means a lot to me too