President Barack Obama has been affectionately referred to as the “first gay president,” due to historical LGBT rights achievements during his tenure in the White House, and a new OUT magazine cover story seeks to solidify his image as a champion of equality.
Obama, who is the first sitting president to be photographed for the cover of an LGBT publication, appears on the special OUT 100 issue with the caption: “Our president: Ally. Hero. Icon.”
This happened. For the first time a sitting US President was photographed for a cover of a gay magazine. pic.twitter.com/Jiih3YNwz4
— Aaron Hicklin (@Aaronhicklin) November 10, 2015
In addition to gracing the magazine’s cover, Obama participates in a Q&A with OUT, during which he describes what may have been his first encounter with an openly gay person and how his daughters Sasha and Malia represent a new generation that has no tolerance for intolerance.
“To Malia and Sasha and their friends, discrimination in any form against anyone doesn’t make sense. It doesn’t dawn on them that friends who are gay or friends’ parents who are same-sex couples should be treated differently than anyone else. That’s powerful,” Obama said.
In the interview, Obama also speaks of how he witnessed the impact of HIV/AIDS on the gay community while working as a community organizer in Chicago in the 1980s and why he made a point of linking the birth of the modern gay rights movement at Stonewall to other historic American progressive protest movements.
Obama said he wasn’t surprised by the Supreme Court’s decision to make marriage equality the law of the land earlier this year, one of the seminal moments of his presidency. “There had been a remarkable attitude shift — in hearts and minds — across America. The ruling reflected that. It reflected our values as a nation founded on the principle that we are all created equal,” he told OUT.
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