A Quote by Marsha P. Johnson

I'm still stuck in the Stonewall in 1968. I never left the Stonewall. — © Marsha P. Johnson
I'm still stuck in the Stonewall in 1968. I never left the Stonewall.
I got lost in the music in 1963 at Stonewall... No! No, it was Stonewall - it was 1967 that I got lost. In 19 - oh my dear, Stonewall, I got lost at Stonewall. Heard it through the grapevine. 1969! I got lost in the music and I couldn't get out.
A totally honest organization would never hide or disguise actions or stonewall.
Save the stonewall to build the levees.
You say you want to talk, But you don't . You stonewall me.
I didn't know of any homophile movements pre-Stonewall.
I didnt know of any homophile movements pre-Stonewall.
I'd been going to jail for like, 10 years before the Stonewall.
It's the state of Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson. That is our heritage. It is what makes us Virginia.
I was a radical, a revolutionist. I am still a revolutionist…I am glad I was in the Stonewall riot. I remember when someone threw a Molotov cocktail, I thought, “My god, the revolution is here. The revolution is finally here!
The American people should not be footing the bill for federal employees who stonewall Congress or rewarding government officials' bad behavior.
I think that we've made a lot of progress in the years since the Stonewall uprising, and as far as equality for marriage and things like that go.
We, the people, declare today that the most evident of truths - that all of us are created equal - is the star that guides us still; just as it guided our forebears through Seneca Falls, and Selma, and Stonewall; just as it guided all those men and women, sung and unsung, who left footprints along this great Mall, to hear a preacher say that we cannot walk alone; to hear a King proclaim that our individual freedom is inextricably bound to the freedom of every soul on Earth.
When you hear in the tape recordings Nixon's own voice saying, We have to stonewall, We have to lie to the Grand Jury, We have to pay burglars a million dollars, it's all too clear the horror of what went on.
During a mock battle attended by President Warren Harding in 1921, Marine Corps General Smedley D. Butler exhumed the arm [of Stonewall Jackson; he didn't believe it was buried there] and reburied it in a metal box.
The Stonewall uprising was a day when brave individuals took to the streets to fight back against harassment and hate, and by doing so, helped to push the long history of LGBTQ activism into a nationwide movement.
Over my dead body when I'm governor of Virginia are we ever going to take down the statue of Robert E. Lee or Stonewall Jackson or any hero of the Commonwealth of Virginia.
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