The Meaning of "Pride"

Here is a story for Pride Month.

After my college graduation, I worked for five years at Holder-Kennedy, a public relations-advertising agency in Nashville, Tennessee. During 1976, my second year at the company, there were three gay employees: Bob Wiggins and I were account executives, and Allen Miller was a student intern from the University of Tennessee.

We were only out to each other and a handful of close friends. Being out had its risks then, for employment, family relations, safety and more. And Nashville in the 1970s was not the liberal bastion it is now; in fact, it was very much the "Buckle of the Bible Belt."

One morning, Bob and Allen and I were having coffee and chatting in the break room. An assistant, Melinda Wilson, walked in. She said:

"Oh! I watched a special on Liberace last night. What a fag! I can spot them a mile off!"

After she poured her coffee and departed, we had a vigorous laugh. Maybe she could spot a gay man at that distance, but apparently not three gay men within two feet of her.

This is a somewhat humorous memory. But it contains a sadness that is familiar to those of us in the LGBTQ community.

My Facebook friend, Jonathan McGinley, posted this observation recently:

"Gay people don't grow up as ourselves. We grow up playing a version of ourselves that sacrifices authenticity to minimize humiliation and prejudice. The massive task of our adult lives is to unpick which parts of ourselves are truly us and which parts we have created to protect us."

Gay life in 2021, especially in diverse and enlightened locales and where basic rights have been won, is light years better than in 1976 Nashville. Yet, in some parts of this nation, and in many countries of the world, it is far worse.

And, regardless of sexuality, if all of us more fully embraced our true selves -- by this I mean our humanity -- what a happier world it would be!

I think this is the real meaning of Pride.

Urban America Rocks!

Joe Biden and Kamala Harris won 91 of the country's 100 most populous counties. In 54 counties, their vote exceeded 60%; in 27 counties, it exceeded 70%; in 10 counties, it exceeded 80%!

I compiled this list in order of population.

Do you live in one of these counties?


County (County Seat) – Percentage for Biden/Harris


Los Angeles (Los Angeles, CA) – 71%


Cook (Chicago, IL) – 74.4%


Harris (Houston, TX) – 56%


Maricopa (Phoenix, AZ) – 50.3%


San Diego (San Diego, CA) – 60.2%


Orange (Santa Ana, CA) – 53.5%


Miami-Dade (Miami, FL) – 53.4%


Dallas (Dallas, TX) – 64.9%


Kings (Brooklyn, NYC) – 77%


Riverside (Riverside, CA) – 53%


Queens (Queens, NYC) – 72.2%


King (Seattle, WA) – 75.4%


Clark (Las Vegas, NV) – 53.7%


San Bernardino (San Bernardino, CA) – 54.2%


Tarrant (Ft. Worth, TX) – 49.3%


Bexar (San Antonio, TX) – 58.3%


Broward (Ft. Lauderdale, FL) – 64.6%


Santa Clara (San Jose, CA) – 72.7%


Wayne (Detroit, MI) – 68.4%


Alameda (Oakland, CA) – 80.2%


New York (Manhattan, NYC) – 86.8%


Middlesex (Lowell and Cambridge, MA) – 71.8%


Philadelphia (Philadelphia, PA) – 81.4%


Sacramento (Sacramento, CA) – 61.4%


Palm Beach (West Palm Beach, FL) – 56.1%


Suffolk (Riverhead, NY) – 43.2% LOST


Hillsborough (Tampa, FL) – 52.9%


Bronx (Bronx, NYC) – 83.5%


Nassau (Mineola, NY) – 54.1%


Orange (Orlando, FL) – 61%


Franklin (Columbus, OH) – 64.9%


Hennepin (Minneapolis, MN) – 70.5%


Oakland (Pontiac, MI) – 56.4%


Travis (Austin, TX) – 71.4%


Cuyahoga (Cleveland, OH) – 66.5%


Allegheny (Pittsburgh, PA) – 59.4%


Salt Lake (Salt Lake City, UT) – 53.6%


Fairfax (Fairfax, VA) – 69.9%


Contra Costa (Martinez, CA) – 71.6%


Mecklenburg (Charlotte, NC) – 66.7%


Wake (Raleigh, NC) – 62.3%


Montgomery (Rockville, MD) – 79.2%


Fulton (Atlanta, GA) – 72.6%


Pima (Tucson, AZ) – 58.6%


Collin (McKinney, TX) – 46.9% LOST


St. Louis (Clayton, MO) – 61.2%


Fresno (Fresno, CA) – 52.9%


Honolulu (Honolulu, HI) – 62.5%


Pinellas (Clearwater, FL) – 49.6%


Westchester (White Plains, NY) – 63%


Marion (Indianapolis, IN) – 63.6%


Duval (Jacksonville, FL) – 51.2%


Milwaukee (Milwaukee, WI) – 69.1%


Fairfield (Bridgeport, CT) – 62.9%


Bergen (Hackensack, NJ) – 57.5%


Shelby (Memphis, TN) – 64.2%


DuPage (Wheaton, IL) – 58%


Gwinnett (Lawrenceville, GA) – 58.4%


Erie (Buffalo, NY) – 56.5%


Prince George’s (Upper Marlboro, MD) – 89.7%


Kern (Bakersfield, CA) – 43.7% LOST


Hartford (Hartford, CT) – 63.1%


Pierce (Tacoma, WA) – 54.2%


San Francisco (San Francisco, CA) – 85.3%


Macomb (Mt. Clemens, MI) – 45.3% LOST


Hidalgo (Edinburg, TX) – 58%


Denton (Denton, TX) – 45.1% LOST


New Haven (New Haven, CT) – 58.1%


Ventura (Ventura, CA) – 59.5%


El Paso (El Paso, TX) – 66.7%


Worcester (Worcester, MA) – 57.8%


Middlesex (New Brunswick, NJ) – 60.2%


Montgomery (Norristown, PA) – 62.6%


Baltimore (Towson, MD) – 87.8%


Hamilton (Cincinnati, OH) – 57.1%


Snohomish (Everett, WA) – 58.9%


Multnomah (Portland, OR) – 79.2%


Suffolk (Boston, MA) – 81%


Essex (Newark, NJ) – 77.3%


Oklahoma (Oklahoma City, OK) – 48.1% LOST


Essex (Salem and Lawrence, MA) – 63.7%


Fort Bend (Richmond, TX) – 54.7%


Jefferson (Louisville, KY) – 59.1%


San Mateo (Redwood City, CA) – 77.9%


Cobb (Marietta, GA) – 56.3%


DeKalb (Decatur, GA) – 83.1%


Lee (Fort Myers, FL) – 40% LOST


San Joaquin (Stockton, CA) – 55.8%


Monroe (Rochester, NY) – 59.3%


Denver (Denver, CO) – 79.6%


El Paso (Colorado Springs, CO) – 42.7% LOST


Polk (Bartow, FL) – 42.3% LOST


Norfolk (Dedham, MA) – 67.4%


District of Columbia – 92.1%


Lake (Waukegan, IL) – 61.1%


Jackson (Independence and Kansas City, MO) – 59.8%


Davidson (Nashville, TN) – 64.2%


Will (Joliet, IL) – 53.1%


Bernalillo (Albuquerque, NM) – 61%


Hudson (Jersey City, NJ) – 72.4%