Queer Nation
Queer Nation was a militant LGBTQ activist organization founded in March 1990 in New York City by AIDS activists who had split from ACT UP, motivated by escalating street violence against homosexuals and dissatisfaction with the group's narrowing focus on health issues.[1][2]
The group reclaimed the slur "queer" to encompass a broad spectrum of non-normative sexualities and genders, rejecting assimilation into heterosexual society in favor of direct-action tactics like "kiss-ins" in public spaces, "queer nights out" to disrupt straight-dominated venues, and street patrols under the motto "queers bash back" to confront bashers physically.[3][4]
Its signature chant, "We're here, we're queer, get used to it," amplified demands for visibility and normalization on societal terms, influencing subsequent queer theory and activism while sparking chapters in cities like San Francisco and Portland.[5][6]
Queer Nation achieved notoriety for challenging media portrayals of homosexuality and corporate exploitation of gay consumers, but it faced internal fractures over racial and gender dynamics, with non-white members reporting exclusionary environments, leading to its effective dissolution by the mid-1990s as radicals dispersed into splinter groups or burned out.[7][8]