PART TWO: The Stonewall Riots—The Bloody Beginning of a Rainbow Revolution

What really happened the night the LGBT movement was born? 

This is Part 2 of a 7-part series introducing Stolen Rainbow: The Great Unmasking — a powerful new film exposing how the LGBT movement hijacked God’s covenant symbol and turned it into a political weapon. See Part 1.

The film premieres September 25 at the Republican Capitol Hill Club in Washington, D.C., and includes a FREE lunch buffet.
To attend, visit christianaction.org/stolen-rainbow-rsvp-film-premiere/

Ask any Pride activist where it all began, and you’ll hear the same story:

“Stonewall.”

They’ll tell you it was a brave, beautiful uprising — a spontaneous pushback against police brutality and bigotry, led by innocent victims who had finally had enough.

What they won’t tell you is the truth.

That it was a riot.

That it was violent.

That it involved mafia-controlled liquor, public sex, drag queens, firebombs, and hatred of police.

And most importantly: that it had nothing to do with equal rights, tolerance, or love.

In fact, it looked more like a scene out of Sodom than the start of a civil rights movement.

Let’s unmask what really happened on the night the LGBT revolution was born.

A Mafia Bar for Drag Queens and Minors

The year was 1969. The place: the Stonewall Inn, a shady little bar in New York City’s Greenwich Village.

It was illegal. Unlicensed. Run by the mafia.

They served watered-down liquor at high prices to a clientele that included underage kidstransvestites, and men looking for public sex.

Police raids were common, and usually, the cross-dressers and drag queens scattered like pigeons when the lights came on.

But on the night of June 28, 1969, that changed.

Pennies, Firebombs, and Sexual Assault

That night, police raided the bar just like they had before — looking for illegal alcohol and cash, not people.

In fact, the commanding officer, Deputy Inspector Seymour Pine, later said:

“The raid’s only purpose was confiscating illegal alcohol and the cash made from those contraband sales.”

But this time, the drag queens and bar patrons didn’t flee. They fought back.

They shouted insults. Called the cops pigs. Threw pennies at their heads.
Some groped officers, while others tried to flip over police cars.

And then it got worse.

The crowd grew from dozens to hundreds. People stood on trash canssmashed windows, and then someone lit a fire.

Firebombs were thrown into the bar — with six police officers still trapped inside.

Some protesters even ripped a parking meter from the pavement and used it as a battering ram.

Deputy Inspector Pine said:

“It was terrifying. It was as bad as any situation I had met during my entire time in the Army.”

The Lie That Birthed a Legend

This was not a peaceful protest. It was a riot — one that left officers hospitalized and the city in chaos.

And yet today, the LGBT movement celebrates it.

They call it the beginning of liberation.

They built an entire mythology on that night — the story that Stonewall was the moment gay people finally stood up to injustice.

But that’s not what really happened.

What really happened was a mob-driven explosion of sexual rage and anti-authority violence, fueled by sin and protected by lies.

From Flames to Parades

One year later, in 1970, the first-ever “Gay Pride” parade was held to commemorate the riot.

That’s right: they weren’t celebrating peace.

They weren’t honoring tolerance.

They were glorifying a violent, drag-fueled mob attack on police.

This wasn’t America’s version of a civil rights movement.

This was the sexual revolution with a crowbar in one hand and a Molotov cocktail in the other.

And to this day, that violent origin story is still considered sacred to the LGBT cause.

A Movement Built on Rebellion, Not Righteousness

The Bible warns us that when people “throw off restraint,” destruction follows (Proverbs 29:18).

That night in 1969, restraint was shattered.

Stonewall wasn’t about civil rights. It was about sexual anarchy.
It was about the hatred of moral authority, of police, of truth — and ultimately, of God.

That’s why the rainbow was such a perfect symbol for what came next.

Because it wasn’t just stolen. It was defiled.

Why This History Matters Today

The Stonewall Riots have been whitewashed and repackaged into bedtime stories for children.

Public schools now hold Pride parades in honor of a riot.
Libraries promote picture books about “Stonewall heroes.”
Politicians speak reverently of it as if it were the new Gettysburg.

But once you know the truth, you can’t unsee it.

And that truth is this:

The movement built on Stonewall is not interested in equality. It wants dominance. It wants obedience. It wants to erase Christian morality and replace it with drag queens and dogma.

And it all started with a fire, a lie, and a rainbow that never belonged to them.

Coming September 25: The Full Truth Unmasked

In our new film, Stolen Rainbow: The Great Unmasking, we expose not just the lie of Stonewall — but the entire structure of deception the LGBT movement built on top of it.

The rainbow was always God’s.
The rainbow is still God’s.
And the Church must rise up to reclaim it.

Join us September 25 at the Republican Capitol Hill Club in Washington, D.C. for the premiere and a free lunch buffet.

To attend and reserve your spot, RSVP NOW.

AUTHOR

Martin Mawyer

EDITORS NOTE: This Majority Report column is republished with permission. ©All rights reserved.

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