University of Illinois IPM NewsBy Sam RinkDecember 4, 2025Aaron Slayton lives and works at Five-Acre Farm Daylilies a few miles outside of Tolono, with their husband, Jim Wuersch.They first came to Illinois in January to visit and help him deal with the grief of his late husband’s death. After helping around the house and farm for a few months, Wuersch asked Slayton to move in permanently.“I technically never went back home after coming down,” they said.[...]In Tennessee, many laws restrict LGBTQ+ identity and gender expression. It was ranked among the lowest-rated states on the Human Rights Campaign Foundation’s annual State Equality Index report, which reviews legislation impacting the LGBTQ+ community.But in addition to anti-trans legislation, the broader debate around transgender identity has become more hostile, creating a widespread sense of fear among many trans people.Slayton said they weren’t welcomed at gendered support groups for victims of sexual violence, they were turned away from food pantries operated by Christian churches and they were often harassed in stores or restaurants they frequented in Nashville.“There were a lot of times that I just didn’t feel safe,” they said. “So I kind of quit going.”
But this isn't unique to Tennessee...
LGBTQ+ residents are fleeing red states, taking their talent and tax dollars with themMissouri highlights the real-world effects of a hostile political environment.LGBTQ+ NationGreg OwenNovember 7, 2025Up to an estimated $879 million in LGBTQ+ household and business income has left Missouri in recent years, as queer residents flee a hostile political environment, according to a recent analysis by the Movement Advancement Project (MAP).The state lawmakers responsible for creating this financial drain were warned, the Missouri Independent reports.For years, business organizations, advocacy groups, and individuals cautioned officials pushing discriminatory laws that the economic fallout would be one deleterious result.Local officials and chambers of commerce raised red flags about impacts on workforce recruitment, employee retention, and the ability to lure businesses to the state.[...]“When people feel unwelcome or uncertain about their future in a community, they often take their skills and their families elsewhere,” Tracey DeMarea, executive director of the Mid-America LGBT Chamber of Commerce, told The Independent. “That loss affects our workforce, our businesses, and our shared sense of community.”
Think beyond the bigotry against the LGBTQ+, think what it says about a state who doesn't care about all the people in the state. Think beyond to the fact that the state is actually creating animosity toward its citizens.
Time writes that,
by Solcyré BurgaOctober 23, 2025Lizette Trujillo climbs into a taxi two months after she and her family moved abroad with two items in her purse: her U.S. passport and a bottle of Mexican hot sauce.The latter, a relic of her heritage as the daughter of immigrants, is scarce at the local restaurants in her new home more than 5,000 miles away from the one-story Tucson, Ariz., home she purchased in 2023, not knowing her family would be fleeing the U.S. out of fear for the health and safety of her trans son less than two years later.Trujillo and her family are not the only Americans who have left the U.S. amid mounting restrictions on transgender rights. Rainbow Railroad, a global nonprofit that helps LGBTQ+ people escape state-sponsored violence, has received a record-high number of requests for help from U.S. citizens since Trump’s reelection, according to Latoya Nugent, head of engagement at the organization. “That trend has continued,” she says. “The U.S. continues to be the number one country where people are requesting help from,” as of Oct. 6. Around two-thirds of the requests the group has received are from people who are transgender.
Like some third world country people are flee their homes because of oppression.
Many trans people are moving within the country rather than seeking to leave the U.S. altogether. Nearly half of the transgender adults in the U.S. have relocated or are planning to relocate to another state that they believe to be more affirming to gender-diverse individuals, according to a May report by the Williams Institute at UCLA School of Law.As bans and restrictions have increased, states such as Oregon, Vermont, Connecticut, and Maryland have enacted shield laws to protect patients who cross state lines seeking gender-affirming care—and the health care professionals that provide it—from prosecution in other states. Local leaders are taking protective measures as well. Boston and California’s Long Beach and West Hollywood have all enacted resolutions or ordinances declaring themselves sanctuary cities for transgender people or the broader LGBTQ+ community.
Fleeing to safe havens!
The University of Illinois student newspaper ends with...
“What will make a difference and what will impact people is knowing that they have a community that actually cares about them,” Slayton said.
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