Brazilian Shemale Tube Hot Site It is impossible to write the history of modern LGBTQ culture without centering the figures of the transgender community. The common narrative that the 1969 Stonewall Riots were a "gay" uprising is revisionist history. In reality, the uprising was led by trans women of color, specifically icons like Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera. Johnson, a self-identified drag queen and trans activist, and Rivera, a Venezuelan-American trans woman, were at the frontlines of the violent反抗 against police brutality. At the time, mainstream gay rights groups were assimilationist, often excluding trans people and drag queens for being "too visible" or "damaging to the cause." Yet, when the bricks were thrown and the bottles flew, it was the trans community that held the line. This tension—between the "respectable" homosexual and the "unruly" trans person—has defined LGBTQ culture for decades. The transgender community forced the movement to move beyond the narrow goal of marriage equality (the right to be like straight people) toward a liberationist model (the right to be different). Without trans leadership, Pride would not be a riotous celebration; it would be a quiet picnic. The relationship between the transgender community and the broader LGBTQ culture is both foundational and, at times, fraught. Historically, trans individuals (though not always using that label) were present at key uprising moments—most notably, Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera at the Stonewall Riots of 1969. However, for decades, mainstream LGBTQ+ organizing often centered on gay and lesbian rights, sometimes sidelining trans issues in favor of "respectability politics." Verdict: The transgender community is not a recent addition to LGBTQ culture—it is a cornerstone. However, recognition of that fact has been uneven, leading to cycles of inclusion and erasure. brazilian shemale tube hot To write a honest article, one must address the fracture. A small but loud minority of gay men and lesbians have aligned themselves with the "LGB Without the T" movement (often supported by right-wing funding sources). Their arguments usually hinge on "lesbian erasure" (e.g., the claim that trans women are invading female-only spaces) or a desire for "assimilation" (the belief that fighting for trans recognition makes gay people look radical and hurts their chances of being accepted by conservative society). This perspective is historically illiterate. The "LGB Drop The T" movement echoes the trans-exclusionary radical feminist (TERF) ideology of the 1970s, which argued that trans women were infiltrators. What these modern critics fail to realize is that the legal framework they rely on—the idea that you can fire someone for being gay but not for being a woman—was built by trans activists like Sylvia Rivera. Sylvia Rivera, a transgender woman of color, was at Stonewall. Later, she was literally booed off a stage at a gay liberation rally in 1973 for demanding that the mainstream movement include drag queens and trans sex workers. She threw herself back into activism because the "respectable" gays and lesbians wanted to leave the most vulnerable behind. The tension is not new, but the resilience of the trans community has always overcome it. According to the Human Rights Campaign, the majority of fatal anti-LGBTQ violence is directed at trans women of color. These are not random acts; they are femicides rooted in transmisogyny. The transgender community has introduced the concept of "visibility versus safety" into LGBTQ discourse. While Pride parades celebrate visibility, trans marches often demand survival. The annual Transgender Day of Remembrance (November 20) is a solemn ritual that reminds the broader culture that for every glitter-strewn parade, there is a grave. It is impossible to write the history of In recent years, a misguided rhetorical question has surfaced in some corners of the internet: "Why is the T included with the LGB?" The implication is that sexual orientation (who you go to bed with) is fundamentally different from gender identity (who you go to bed as). Technically, this is true. But culturally and politically, the separation is a fallacy. Transgender people have always existed within the same social spaces as gay, lesbian, and bisexual people for three critical reasons: For members of the broader LGBTQ culture who want to be genuine allies to the transgender community, visibility is not enough. Action is required. Here are four tangible steps: The last decade has seen an unprecedented explosion of transgender visibility in media and politics. From the cover of Time magazine (Laverne Cox, 2014) to the success of shows like Pose and Euphoria, the mainstream has finally begun to see trans people as protagonists, not punchlines. Celebrities like Elliot Page, Hunter Schafer, and Michaela Jaé Rodriguez have become household names. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera However, visibility is a double-edged sword. As the transgender community has stepped into the light, it has also become the primary target of a coordinated political backlash. In the 2020s, conservative political groups, realizing that overt homophobia had become socially toxic, pivoted to attacking trans rights as the new "culture war" frontier. Consequently, the "T" has become the shield wall for the entire LGBTQ community. The fight to ban gender-affirming healthcare for youth, to restrict bathroom access, and to remove trans athletes from sports has forced the broader LGBTQ culture to define its values. Are we a coalition of convenience, or a family of principle? The answer, for the majority of the LGBTQ community, has been a resounding defense of the "T." Major organizations like the Human Rights Campaign and GLAAD have refocused their legal efforts on trans rights, recognizing that if the government can deny healthcare to a trans child, it can eventually deny marriage rights to a lesbian couple. | Issue | Trans Perspective | Broader LGBTQ Response | |-------|-------------------|------------------------| | Lesbian/Gender-Critical Feminism | Some trans-exclusionary radical feminists (TERFs) reject trans women as women, causing deep rifts. | Many LGBTQ orgs have formally denounced TERF ideology, but social fractures persist (e.g., certain lesbian events banning trans women). | | Bisexual & Pansexual Inclusion | Trans people often feel welcomed in bi/pan spaces (which don't assume binary gender). | Bi/pan communities have been strong allies, but stereotypes about trans bodies persist. | | Gay Men's Spaces | Trans men report being overlooked or fetishized; trans women may be excluded from "men-only" gay spaces. | Increasingly inclusive, but bearish/leather scenes vary widely. | | Non-Binary Visibility | Non-binary people can feel erased by both cis-LGBT and binary trans norms. | Growing awareness, but pronoun practices and gender-neutral facilities lag. | Verdict: LGBTQ culture is not a monolith. The transgender community experiences both solidarity and significant discrimination from within the larger umbrella. Younger LGBTQ cohorts are far more trans-inclusive than older ones.
This is awesome! Appreciate your efforts ~ this guide motivates me to actually put some time and do some questing.
Hi, thanks for your guide! I just did these 3 quests. Only the third gives me xp, total of 500k (with the multiplier). So you have to finish all and give 30 worms to the timer egg before getting any xp. Didn't receive fame.
I actually never completed the last part because I didn't care about fame, so I went back and completed it just now and it looks like you're correct. It's weird though, because when you talk to the NPC it says the reward is 11 fame, but then you just get 500k exp. I guess the quest might be bugged, so I'll submit a bug report and update the guide to reflect this. Thanks for finding this! Here's proof of the quest reward according to the NPC and what you actually receive.
This thread is seriously underrated! Thank you for putting it together! I want to add a few quests to that list from lv 35-50 range: Rowen and the Cursed Doll (Requires Mr. Wetbottom's playboy book preq, tedious but a lot of EXP!) https://bbb.hidden-street.net/quest/victoria-island/rowen-the-fairy-and-the-cursed-dolls The Antidote (Rowen Quest 2.0 also decent EXP!) https://bbb.hidden-street.net/quest/ludus-lake/the-antidote The Revolutionary Plan for Constructing a Wall (Time-limited <30 minutes) https://bbb.hidden-street.net/quest...tionary-plan-for-constructing-defensive-walls
Shumi's coin quest at lv 20 gives 6000 base (before royals 3.2x exp), instead of 1600 EXP. *Note, pic is taken during 30% exp event Welcome to new leaf city is now lv 20 quest
Thanks for finding this! I just tested the New Leaf City Quiz, and while it says Over Level 20, I was able to accept it on a level 17 character. As for Shumi's Coin, I'll update that right now.
Do you know when it was nerfed? Because that quest is from the original quests worth doing guide which was written in 2017.
Sure lemme dig it up, it was late 2020. I'll edit it to this post when I find it. EDIT: Hmm I couldn't find it in late 2020, memory served me wrong. Though I do remember even asking Gert why is was nerfed :S (maybe it was Gert telling me the level is 20 to get the quest). I could only find the nerf from late 2017 during new source, but can't find if it was changed again. https://royals.ms/forum/threads/new-source-update-48-24-12-2017.111769/#post-623070
Interesting... I guess for now I'm just going to leave it as level requirement: 15 because for all intents and purposes, you can get it by then. If it ever gets fixed, then I can update the guide.
minor nitpick, but is it possible to update the list with the region the quest is in? e.g. DANGER! <1-G. Mushroom> (Sleepywood)
Avoiding talk to "A Familiar Lady" after you killed Nine-Tailed Fox, else you will be rewarding 10 fame instead of 15 fame... not to mention she will steal away your old fox's tail as well... and will need to redo the quest... btw, Nice guide for newbie =D have fun guys
10/10 guide! Just a side note: In order to activate Muirhat(myboi!) quest line , you have to click on the Rubbish Bin near to Muirhat and complete some prequest so only you could start the stone golem and other Muirhat’s quest!
Fyi, pretty sure I've completed the entire magatia questline up to For Phyllia/For Zemunist/For Alcadno. It works and is one of the best questlines in the game!
Thanks for the guide! Some additional quests that are worth doing A Healthy Snack for the Huskies Level requirement: 40 Quest objective: Turn in 50 Seal Meat from Freezer/Sparker (collect in advance). (Do this together with Her Secret Craving for Seal Meat) Exp reward: 10,000 exp Lost in the Ocean Level requirement: 35 Quest objective: Get 1 SOS Letter and 1 Pure Water and travel to Omega Sector and back and talk to NPCs (Best to do when you have a Ludibrium warp capsule so you can finish the quest quickly). Exp reward: 5,000 exp + 10,000 EXP + 10,000 EXP Toon Fixing the Roof Level requirement: 10 Quest objective: Turn in 10 Screws. Just get screws beforehand and talk to him. Exp reward: 5,000 exp