Humanity
Alive
The shocking true story of Uruguayan Air Force Flight 571 and the moral horror that saved sixteen lives The crash of Uruguayan Air Force Flight 571 into the Andes Mountains on October 13, 1972, and the subsequent seventy-two-day survival ordeal of the passengers would become one of the most controversial and morally complex survival stories ever recorded, forcing sixteen young men to make the unthinkable decision to consume the flesh of their dead friends and teammates in order to stay alive in one of the most hostile environments on Earth, and the psychological and ethical dimensions of their choice continue to provoke debate and reflection more than fifty years after their rescue shocked the world. The flight was carrying forty-five people including nineteen members of the Old Christians Club rugby team from Montevideo, Uruguay, along with their friends and family members, traveling to Chile for a tournament, and the passengers were young, healthy, optimistic people with their whole lives ahead of them, many of them students from wealthy families who had never experienced real hardship and who could not have imagined that their routine flight would turn into a nightmare of freezing temperatures, starvation, and impossible moral choices that would haunt them forever.
By The Curious Writerabout 14 hours ago in Pride
Breaking Down Lyrics: Diamonds (leave with you)
Sam Smith — “Diamonds” *** “Have it all, take our memories off the wall. All the special things I bought…. They mean nothin’ to me anymore! But to you, they were everything we were — they meant more than every word. Now I know just what you loved me for.” ***
By Gabriel Shames13 days ago in Pride
Bigender VS Genderfluid
In the rich and varied landscape of gender identity, language serves as a vital tool for self-understanding and expression. Among the many terms that have emerged to describe experiences beyond the binary, bigender and genderfluid represent two distinct yet sometimes confused identities. While both fall under the non-binary umbrella, they describe different ways of experiencing gender.
By David Femboyabout a month ago in Pride
Do Transgender Men Have Periods
The relationship between transgender men and menstruation is a topic that touches on biology, identity, and personal experience in deeply meaningful ways. For many, the answer isn't as simple as a yes or no it's a nuanced reality that varies from person to person based on individual circumstances, medical transitions, and personal choices.
By David Femboyabout a month ago in Pride
No H8 Campaign
The NOH8 campaign is an a photography campaign for gay right and marriage equality created decades ago by photographer Adam Bouza to stand against prop 8. I contributed a picture to the cause. It is really simple what you must do in order to be a part of this movement wear a piece of tape over your mouth and put the NOH8 logo on your face or anywhere else on your body. Celebrities and non celebrities have come together to participate in the cause and myself included. Even though it began years ago it is still going strong.
By Revista Miko:XCI about a month ago in Pride
The Pride Flag and the Diversion. Top Story - February 2026.
For nearly a decade, the LGBTQIA Pride Flag rippled in the wind at Christopher Park, a kaleidoscope of color staked into the soil of America’s first national monument to LGBTQIA+ liberation. That flag came down this week. Federal officials, citing new guidance from the Trump Administration, silently lowered the rainbow flag from its pole across the street from the Stonewall Inn. The birthplace of the modern gay rights movement now flies only the United States flag.
By Tim Carmichaelabout a month ago in Pride
Is Pedro Pascal Gay
The question “Is Pedro Pascal gay?” is a persistent fixture in online searches and fan discussions. It’s a query that, on its surface, seeks a simple label for a complex individual. Yet, the reality of the answer and the cultural forces that fuel the question reveals far more about our relationship with celebrity, sexuality, and the right to privacy in the digital age than it does about Pascal himself.
By David Femboyabout a month ago in Pride









