After the landmark Supreme Court rulings on Wednesday that struck down the Defense of Marriage Act, celebrations burst out throughout the country, including crowds outside The Stonewall Inn in New York City’s West Village and outside San Francisco’s City Hall.
Dustin Lance Black, the Oscar-winning screenwriter of “Milk,” and Harvey Milk’s nephew Stuart Milk joined msnbc’s The Last Word Wednesday evening to discuss the movement’s current momentum.
“It has been a long march and so many people have continued carrying my uncle’s banner,” said Stuart Milk. “San Francisco is just alive tonight with celebration and the message that we as a community are so much better when including everyone. This has been a turning point for not only the rights of LGBT people but it’s a green light to every community that’s marginalized and diminished that justice can move forward.”
Gay rights activist and community leader Harvey Milk made history after becoming, in 1977, one of the first openly gay officials elected to public office. Within a year of being elected to San Francisco’s Board of Supervisors, Milk was shot and killed.









