Queer Nation was a gay group founded in March 1990 in New York City, USA by activists from ACT-UP. The founders were four victims of anti-gay violence. Queer Nation's slogan was "We're here. We're queer. Get used to it". It was most effective and powerful in the early 1990s in the USA, and used direct action to fight for gay rights. Even though they never officially disbanded, most sources agree that Queer Nation no longer exists. However, another (presumably unrelated by all but name and connection with GLBT) television program of the same name with a focus on current events related to GLBT is regularly aired in New Zealand.
Queer Nation is credited with starting the process of reclaiming the word queer, which, previously, was only used in a pejorative sense and Queer Nation's use of it in their name and slogan was at first considered shocking. Ten years later, queer is almost an ordinary word, used casually in the name of gay-supportive and relatively mainstream television programs such as Queer Eye for the Straight Guy and Queer as Folk.
Queer Nation is also linked to several controversial incidents in which closeted public figures were outed as gay or lesbian. Queer Nation's reasoning was that ending this 'hypocrisy' benefitted gays as a group because it let them know there actually were gay people in influential places and promoted gay rights by forcing the outed and the organizations they belonged to to take a stance on issues concerning gays. Many in the gay community did not agree with Queer Nation's radical tactics and favored a more assimilationist course of action.
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Queer Nation also refers to: