Rainbow Theory Clothing Company

Rainbow Theory Clothing Company Comfortable. Q***r. Clothing. Representation matters, wear it proudly!

04/11/2026

"RAINBOWS Don't Wash Away" 🌈- Dallas Pride 2026 Theme - 🏳️‍🌈. The selection of this year’s theme serves as a direct response to a rising tide of challenges facing the LGBTQ+ community both in Texas and across the United States. From the physical removal of rainbow-painted sidewalks in local municipalities to broader legislative efforts to restrict transgender rights and omit LGBTQ+ narratives from history books, the message from Dallas Pride is clear: Our existence is not temporary, and our history is not erasable.

🔸Dallas Pride Festival of Rainbows and Sunset Parade on Main
🔹Saturday, June 6, 2026 - Downtown Dallas
🔸Festival parks open at 11am
🔹Sunset Parade on Main Street - 7-9 pm

https://dallaspride.org

02/11/2026

Taking down a flag does not erase our history. But it does remind us why we cannot rely solely on governments to tell it.

The Stonewall Inn is privately owned and independently operated. We are not affiliated with the federal government and we will never lower our flag or stop protecting our history.

The Stonewall National Monument was established to honor the origins of the modern LGBTQ+ rights movement. When symbols directly tied to that history are removed, it raises serious concerns about how our story is being stewarded.

LGBTQ+ history has too often been minimized, sanitized, or erased from official narratives. That is why the Stonewall Inn continues to stand as living history, protected and carried forward by the community itself.

The Pride flag at The Stonewall monument is not partisan. It is historical. We believe it should be restored.

That is why our history will never be erased-and at the Stonewall Inn, all flags representing our community will always continue to fly.





12/12/2025
12/01/2025

Today, on what would have been his 49th birthday, we pause to celebrate the memory and life of Matthew Wayne Shepard.

Twenty-seven years ago, the world lost Matthew, a gentle 21-year-old university student whose life was cut short in an act of unimaginable hatred on a cold Wyoming night. In the darkness of that tragedy, Matthew’s spirit ignited a flame of hope, compassion, and unbreakable resolve that still burns brighter with every passing year.

Those who knew him remember a young man with an infectious smile, a quick wit, and a profound empathy—an old soul. He believed fiercely in equality and human rights long before it was common or safe to do so.

On October 6, 1998, simply for being gay, Matthew was lured from a campus bar, driven to a remote prairie outside Laramie, tied to a split-rail fence, tortured, pistol-whipped, and left alone in the freezing night. He clung to life for six more days. When a cyclist found him, Matthew was barely recognizable, yet even then his face—covered in blood except where streaks had been washed clean by his own tears—seemed to carry a quiet dignity that pierced the soul of a nation.

His death could have been just another statistic. Instead, because of Matthew’s inherent goodness and the fierce love of his parents, Dennis and Judy Shepard, it became a turning point. Vigils sprang up across America and around the world. Strangers wept in the streets. Churches, synagogues, mosques, and town halls opened their doors for candlelight gatherings. People who had never marched for anything suddenly found themselves holding signs that read “Hate is not a Laramie value” and “Love conquers hate.”

Because of Matthew, lawmakers who once turned away could no longer ignore the cost of silence. Eleven years after his death, his name was written into history when President Barack Obama signed the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act—the first federal law to explicitly protect LGBTQ+ Americans.

Today, we do not mourn Matthew only as a victim. We celebrate him as a teacher whose brief life taught millions how to be braver, kinder, and more human.

From the moment AIDS emerged in 1981, the country faced not only a deadly virus but a wall of political neglect and mora...
12/01/2025

From the moment AIDS emerged in 1981, the country faced not only a deadly virus but a wall of political neglect and moral judgment. Federal silence in the early years allowed the epidemic to accelerate unchecked. By the time President Reagan finally uttered the word AIDS in 1985, thousands were already gone, and advocates had long warned that the government’s inaction was costing lives. That refusal to confront reality deepened stigma and obstructed early research, treatment development, and prevention efforts.

History has shown, repeatedly, that when leaders look away from public health crises, communities pay the price. Resources shrink, public understanding erodes, and the people who most need testing, care, and support will face higher and higher barriers. The lesson is simple: indifference is not neutral. It’s lethal.

That is why the decision by the current administration to abandon even the basic act of recognizing World AIDS Day is so alarming. Commemoration may not cure disease, but it signals commitment, visibility, and responsibility. Refusing to acknowledge the day revives a cruel pattern, one in which the government distances itself from the people most affected and leaves the burden of care and advocacy to marginalized communities who have already carried more than their share.

We live in a moment when evidence is dismissed as nuisance, and when the hard-won progress against AIDS is too easily taken for granted. Forgetting history, forgetting the people who died waiting for our government to take them seriously is not an option. Every year, advocates, caregivers, and people living with HIV/AIDS continue the work that indifference once stalled. Public leadership should amplify that work, not retreat from it.

Silence has killed before. It always will.

Silence = Death

Transgender Day of Remembrance (TDOR), observed each year on November 20, is a solemn day dedicated to honoring the live...
11/20/2025

Transgender Day of Remembrance (TDOR), observed each year on November 20, is a solemn day dedicated to honoring the lives of transgender and gender-diverse people who have been lost to anti-trans violence. It serves as both a memorial and a call to action, reminding us of the urgent need to confront transphobia, support trans communities, and work toward a world where all people can live openly and safely.

Trans Awareness Week, held annually from November 13 to 19, was established to raise awareness about the experiences, re...
11/13/2025

Trans Awareness Week, held annually from November 13 to 19, was established to raise awareness about the experiences, resilience, and rights of transgender and gender-diverse individuals.

What began as community-driven efforts to increase visibility and understanding has grown into a global movement centered on education, allyship, and advocacy.

The week builds momentum toward Transgender Day of Remembrance on November 20, a day dedicated to honoring the lives lost to anti-trans violence. Together, they remind us that visibility is powerful, awareness saves lives, and inclusion must be an ongoing commitment, not just a conversation.

SCOTUS declines to revisit gay marriage decision.
11/10/2025

SCOTUS declines to revisit gay marriage decision.

Have you seen our new Holiday Collection? Check it out and let’s spread rainbows around like glitter! Happy HoliGays!!
11/06/2025

Have you seen our new Holiday Collection? Check it out and let’s spread rainbows around like glitter! Happy HoliGays!!

Halloween, Christmas, Graduation, St. Patrick's Day

10/07/2025

Reflect. Remember. Erase Hate.

09/26/2025
09/26/2025

We are human. 🩷🩵🤍

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225 Bonnie Bell Lane
Springtown, TX
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