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Stonewall LEGO set gains traction as potential official toy

An amateur LEGO artist has created a detailed tribute to the Stonewall National Monument and is now under review for potential official production

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In honor of the upcoming 10th anniversary of the Stonewall National Monument, an amateur LEGO artist has unveiled a striking minifigure-scale tribute to this iconic site of LGBTQ history in New York City.

The model, made up of approximately 3,750 pieces, features historic LGBTQ landmarks in the Christopher Street and Stonewall area, including the Stonewall Inn—the bar that became the site of the 1969 Stonewall Riots, a turning point in the modern LGBTQ rights movement in the U.S.; Christopher Street—a vibrant thoroughfare now recognized internationally as a symbol of gay Pride; and Christopher Park, complete with the Gay Liberation sculpture by artist George Segal.

The proposed set also includes 13 custom minifigures representing diverse LGBTQ identities. Highlights include a non-binary drag queen, both a lesbian and a gay couple, a transgender minifigure, and LEGO image renditions of LGBTQ rights icons Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera.

The set is currently featured on the LEGO Ideas website, where fans can vote for creations to be considered for official production. It has already garnered over 10,000 supporters and is now in the official “review” stage, during which a LEGO Review Board of designers, product managers, and other team members evaluates the submission to determine if it has what it takes to become a real LEGO set.

According to his website, the creator—who goes by Feacebricks online—considers himself an “amateur artist” who uses LEGO bricks to craft mostly minifigure-scale artworks set in an imaginative world of peace, love, respect, and LGBTQIA+ representation. His previous notable project includes the LEGO Ideas set “Charlie’s Room,” inspired by the LGBTQ graphic novel and Netflix series “Heartstopper.”

If the set is green-lit, the project moves into the development phase — where LEGO model designers “refine the product, develop packaging and instructions, create marketing materials, and prepare for production.” As of now, it is unclear when the LEGO team will decide on the Stonewall set. For more information on the set, visit beta.ideas.lego.com.

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North Dakota lawmakers okay regulation banning Conversion Therapy

This rule change will stop the vast majority of mental health providers in North Dakota from subjecting LGBTQ youth to conversion therapy

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Capitol Building of North Dakota in Bismarck (Photo Credit: State of North Dakota)

BISMARCK, ND. – The North Dakota House Administrative Rules Committee voted 8-7 on Tuesday, June 8, to authorize the rule proposed by the North Dakota Board of Social Work Examiners, implementing new regulations prohibiting licensed social workers from subjecting LGBTQ youth to the widely discredited practice of conversion therapy.

The North Dakota Board of Social Work Examiners, which oversees licensing for social workers in the state, created the new rule which states that “it is an ethical violation for a social worker licensed by the board to engage in any practices or treatments that attempt to change or repair the sexual orientation or gender identity of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and questioning individuals.”

The West Hollywood based Trevor Project, the world’s largest suicide prevention and crisis intervention organization for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer & questioning (LGBTQ) young people, had worked with Democratic House Minority Leader Rep. Josh Boschee, the National Association of Social Workers ND Chapter, the North Dakota Human Rights Coalition, and local advocates like Elizabeth Loos to advance these critical protections for LGBTQ youth.

 “This rule change will stop the vast majority of mental health providers in North Dakota from subjecting LGBTQ youth to the dangerous and discredited practice of conversion therapy. This practice is not therapy at all— it’s abusive and fraudulent,” said Troy Stevenson, Senior Advocacy Campaign Manager for The Trevor Project. “There is still more work to be done in North Dakota, but this bold action will help save young lives. The Trevor Project is committed to an every state strategy to protect LGBTQ youth from conversion therapy and North Dakota has proven that progress is possible anywhere.”

“Thank you to the North Dakota Board of Social Work Examiners for restricting licensed social workers in North Dakota from being able to practice conversion therapy! LGBT North Dakotans, especially youth, are safer now as you hold licensees responsible to the NASW Code of Ethics,” said Minority Leader Boschee. 

The proposed ban on therapist-administered conversion therapy in North Dakota was met with opposition by several of the committee’s most socially conservative members, the Grand Forks Herald reported.

Rep. Dan Ruby, R-Minot, told the paper that he worries the new prohibition is limiting because it would prevent people seeking “some kind of treatment” from getting help. Bell said the rule is written so clients who are LGBT or questioning their sexual orientation or gender identity are not inhibited from seeking care.

Rep. Bernie Satrom, R-Jamestown, said he’s concerned the rule would interfere with religious counseling, adding “there are some cases where people want to change.”

“There are licensed counselors that are also Christians, and basically my concern in all of this is that we’re telling the Christian counselors ‘you can be a licensed counselor, but you can’t practice your Christianity,'” Satrom said.

Satrom and West Fargo Republican Rep. Kim Koppelman said approving the social workers’ ban on conversion therapy is outside of the committee’s scope and ought to be scrutinized by the full Legislature.

Boschee, the North Dakota Legislature’s only openly gay member, told the Grand Forks Herald that he was disappointed in some of his colleagues for standing behind the “harmful” practice of conversion therapy and trying to muddy the conversation over what is a simple self-imposed rule for social workers. The Fargo Democrat said he was ultimately pleased that seven lawmakers joined him in upholding the proposed ban.

Research: 

  • According to The Trevor Project’s 2021 National Survey on LGBTQ Youth Mental Health, 13% of LGBTQ youth reported being subjected to conversion therapy, with 83% reporting it occurred when they were under age 18. LGBTQ youth who were subjected to conversion therapy reported more than twice the rate of attempting suicide in the past year compared to those who were not.
  • According to a peer-reviewed study by The Trevor Project published in the American Journal of Public Health, LGBTQ youth who underwent conversion therapy were more than twice as likely to report having attempted suicide and more than 2.5 times as likely to report multiple suicide attempts in the past year.
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