An activist is one who is actively involved in creating community, whether that is locally in their neighborhood or internationally. It is an admirable quality.
Anything that is non-violent is OK with me.
As the middle begins to feel safe enough to accept some of the so-called radical thinking, ideas move to the middle and a new edge is created.
Bigotry and judgment are the height of insecurity.
I am going to sing lesbian love songs and support gay rights no matter what. The rest is public relations.
I am very sad for men and women trapped in any relationship where there is cruelty, dominance, inequity. I long for the liberation of all people.
I believe people who practice their beliefs in daily life are activists.
I don't much care who is gay or straight or married or not. I mostly notice if they are brave enough to confront bigotry.
I have often felt bad that I am not great at any one thing. Like just a super super singer. Or the Gregory Hines of something.
I meet so many people, but I don't know anybody.
I want word of mouth to be our biggest voice.
If black people mistrust white people, they are mistrusting racism, and that is appropriate.
If one is desperate for love, I suggest looking at one's friends and family and see if love is all around. If not, get a new set of friends, a new family.
It is a full time job being honest one moment at a time, remembering to love, to honor, to respect. It is a practice, a discipline, worthy of every moment.
It seems to me the most important issue in the LGBT community is the right to be queer-the right to be free of the heterosexual assumption.
Life is way better than TV. I recommend it to anyone who has forgotten they have one.
One disco, one soft ball game, one lost love, one gay pride rally at a time.
People in power need to control others in order to maintain power. One of the ways to do that is to take that which is threatening and demonize it.
That made me feel good, not to go to a resort where outside the door is extreme poverty.
The building of friendship, family, community and love is complicated. We are so isolated in this country, no longer supported by tribes and villages.
The kitchen may not get cleaned, and I have to accept that. I do the important things.
The more confident one becomes, the less one needs all people to be the same.
The state and the church seldom approve of anything I do. I don't need their approval. I don't aspire to the heterosexual nuclear family model.
There are brilliant out lesbians and gay men and bisexuals and transgendered people and heterosexuals keeping the fire of change alive. Not a day goes by when I don't feel grateful to them for their work.
There is no sexuality that is greater or lesser than another.
We are a complex species to observe.
We gave up having a TV last year. I am out of the loop. Life is way better than TV. I recommend it to anyone who has forgotten they have one.
You tend to be afraid when someone seems foreign to you. But if you aren't careful, that can lead to bigotry.
Young people discovering their sexuality must know they walk with a strong tradition and that they are not alone. They have a right to information without being pressured.
Named daughter Imani after the name was used on "A Different World" (1987) as the daughter of the Taylors (played by Dawnn Lewis and Glynn Turman).
Daughter, Imani, born 28 March 1999.
Her father is the Reverend William Guy, pastor of the historic Friendship Baptist Church in Atlanta, Georgia. Her mother is Jaye Rudolph.
Although born in Boston, Massachusetts, Guy was raised in Atlanta, Georgia.
Her sister, Monica Guy, was often her stand-in on the set of "A Different World" (1987).
Teaches dance to underprivileged children.
Was good friends with slain hip-hop MC Tupac Shakur and remains close friends with his mother, Afeni Shakur.
Became a member of the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater in 1981, at the age of seventeen.
Enjoyed chart and radio play in the 1990s for her R&B single "Try Me."
Wrote a book called "Evolution of a Revolutionary," which is the biography of Afeni Shakur, mother of late actor/hip-hop MC Tupac Shakur.
Has an African American father and a white mother.