US These 8 U.S. cities failed an LGBTQ equality evaluation - Bend the knee, sweaty.

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Eight cities in the United States scored a zero out of 100 on the 10th annual Municipal Equality Index, which evaluates cities and towns based on the level of LGBTQ inclusion found in their local laws, policies and services.

LGBTQ advocacy groups Human Rights Campaign and Equality Federation evaluated 506 municipalities — including the country’s 50 state capitals and 200 largest cities — on 49 criteria for the index. The criteria included nondiscrimination protections, policies for municipal employees and city leadership.

This year’s zero-point earners span from South Carolina to Wyoming, and they all came in at zero on last year’s index, too. But on the flip side, 22 percent of cities earned a perfect score, up from 8 percent in 2012, the report’s inaugural year.

“If you’re scoring a zero, it’s because you’re making that choice. There are definitely some low-hanging fruit ways to get off of that zero place,” said Cathryn Oakley, the founding author of the index and the state legislative director for the Human Rights Campaign. “That is a statement on their end about how they’re willing to engage in these issues.”

Here are the eight cities that scored a failing grade on this year’s Municipal Equality Index:

Florence, Alabama
Located in the northwest corner of Alabama, Florence sits on the Tennessee River, has a population of about 40,000 and is home to the University of North Alabama. The city made headlines in 2017, when several members of white nationalist groups, some dressed in Ku Klux Klan robes, staged a protest during northwest Alabama’s first Pride parade.

Jonesboro, Arkansas
Jonesboro, with a population of nearly 80,000, is Arkansas’ fifth largest city. It sits in the northeastern part of the state and is home to Arkansas State University. Earlier this year, a Pride Month book display — which included the children’s book “The GayBCs” — ignited a backlash at a public library in the city, The Jonesboro Sun reported.

Southaven, Mississippi
Southaven sits on the border of Mississippi and its northern neighbor, Tennessee, and is just 13 miles from Memphis. The city, which has about 55,000 residents, made news in 2019 after a same-sex couple said they were kicked out of a local Baptist church because the women wouldn’t end their “forbidden” marriage and “repent.”

Broken Arrow, Oklahoma
Located just outside Tulsa in the northeastern part of the state, Broken Arrow is the fourth largest city in Oklahoma, with a population of about 113,000. Oklahoma is the only state to have two cities earn zero points on this year’s Municipal Equality Index.
Moore, Oklahoma

Veterans Memorial Park in Moore, Okla.
Moore, a city of about 63,000 residents, is part of the Oklahoma City metropolitan area, which sits in the middle of the state. Moore made national news back in 2017 after Ralph Shortey, a “family values” Republican who had served in the Oklahoma Senate, was found with a 17-year-old male in a local motel (Shortey was eventually sentenced to 15 years in prison on child sex-trafficking charges).

Clemson, South Carolina
Home to Clemson University, this small South Carolina city, with a population of 17,700, sits in the northwest part of the state near the borders of both Georgia and North Carolina. While the city of Clemson scored a zero out of 100 on this year’s Municipal Equality Index, the university scored a 3 out of 5 on the LGBTQ nonprofit Campus Pride’s annual index. The university also opened Lavender Place, an LGBTQ “living-learning community,” in August.

Pierre, South Dakota
With a population of roughly 14,100, Pierre is the second-least populous state capital in the country, following Montpelier, Vermont. Home to the state’s legislature, the city hosts many of the state’s protests concerning LGBTQ issues. In January, Pierre made national headlines when a group of LGBTQ advocates protested against a proposed law that would ban people from changing the sex designation on their birth certificates. A South Dakota House committee later rejected the bill in February.
Rocks Springs, Wyoming

Rock Springs, Wyo.
Rock Springs is a city in Sweetwater County, Wyoming, with a population of about 23,500. Despite scoring a zero out of 100 on this and last year’s Municipal Equality Index, a Rock Springs church made history after hosting what it called the state’s first LGBTQ pride worship service in 2019, the Casper Star-Tribune reported.

 
Don't threaten me with a good time. This is just a convenient list of great cities to live in.
 
If you’re scoring a zero, it’s because you’re making that choice. There are definitely some low-hanging fruit ways to get off of that zero place,” said Cathryn Oakley, the founding author of the index and the state legislative director for the Human Rights Campaign. “That is a statement on their end about how they’re willing to engage in these issues.”

So take the hint.
 
I actually live in one of those cities and I just want to say that whoever made this list is high. And I say this as a faggot. There is absolutely no way my city scored a zero when the place is fairly liberal to begin with.
 
As someone on the ground here in Arkansas, I can definitively say that it isn't just that the Gayby GayBC's was homosexual, it was that it is sexually themed content aimed at toddlers. Nobody here seems to be all that concerned about the gays beyond the weirdos that end up just hermiting away in some covenant in the middle of the countryside. I'm honestly surprised it wasn't Harrison on this list considering they have billboards that still advertise the KKK iirc.

Fun Fact: Jonesboro, Arkansas is about an hour away from Memphis Tennessee and Southhaven Mississippi. Also very comfy up in that area of Arkansas, always liked Crowley's Ridge and the delta region.
 
I could totally move to Rock Springs, proceed to burn the church down thus giving Rock Springs less than zero on the queer meter..
 
Go fuck an iceberg Human Rights Campaign.
 
Chicago 2018 violent crime rate: 1,006.1 per 100,000 people

Municipal Equality Index ranks Chicago first, Naperville last​

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Going first to last in the above list.
I am sure the gay people in those cities like their safe neighborhoods more over looking their shoulders. Although I am not sure liberal lunacy is something out of this world nowadays.
  • 515.97 per 100,000 population, a 9.36% increase from 2017.
  • 550.99 per 100,000 population
  • The Southaven MS crime rate for 2018 was 124.15 per 100,000 population,
  • The Broken Arrow OK crime rate for 2018 was 142.25 per 100,000 population, a 14.67% increase from 2017.
  • Veterans Memorial Park in Moore, Okla. The 2019 crime rate in Moore, OK is 174 (City-Data.com crime index), which is 1.6 times lower than the U.S. average.
  • The Clemson SC crime rate for 2017 was 48.66 per 100,000 population, a 70.49% decline from 2016.
  • The crime incident rate per 100,000 people of Pierre, SD was 363 for aggravated assault in 2018.
  • 183.72 per 100,000 population
 
Yeah, I have a hard time believing that since A) the media is known to lie, and B) the T has taken over the LGBT+ community and are known to be miserable hussies.
 
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