Its originator said he created the term because he was tired of being called transphobic. Supporters stated that "super straight" was a new sexuality describing heterosexuals who would never have a sexual relationship with transgender people. In 2021, a social media trend called "super straight" emerged on TikTok on 21 February and later spread to other websites like 4chan, Reddit and Twitter.
This flag was rectangular and divided from its upper hoist to its lower fly, with pink at the fly and blue at the hoist, and superimposed with interlocked male and female gender symbols in yellow bordered with black. The organization featured a straight pride flag in its official website. Described as "a response to the 'identity politics' of the left", the event attracted several hundred participants and thousands of counter-protesters, who vastly outnumbered participants of the parade. In 2019, the American organization Super Happy Fun America led a straight pride parade in Boston, in the United States, in August of the same year. Man holding a poster with the straight pride flag used by Super Happy Fun America in advance of the 2019 Boston Straight Pride Parade However, Alexey Lisovenko, the then deputy head of United Russia in Moscow, stated that the design of the flag had been done with the approval of creators of La Manif pour tous ' flag. The French organization against same-sex marriage La Manif pour tous accused the party of plagiarism, as the flag it used was highly similar to the one used by United Russia, with the only differences being that the French organization's flag has two children and not three. One portrays the family and text in red in a white background while other two display the symbols in white on a red or blue field. It has three variants, each representing one of the three colors of the flag of Russia. It was created as a response to the legalization of same-sex marriage in the United States earlier on the same year. It consists of a woman, a man and their three children with a hashtag saying #НастоящаяCемья ("#RealFamily") below. In 2015, the Russian political party United Russia, of which the then President of Russia Vladimir Putin was then part of, introduced a straight pride flag to be displayed on the Peter and Fevronia Day (also known as the Day of Family, Love and Faithfulness). It originated in the late 2000s, but its exact origin is unknown. The rainbow portion of the flag sometimes takes the form of an "A", representing the word "allies", or an inverted "V". It combines the black and white straight flag with the rainbow LGBT flag. There is a variation known as the straight ally flag, which represents heterosexual people who support the LGBT community. Another variation with the male and female gender symbols imposed over its field also exists. One uses white, grey and black colors, also mimicking the rainbow flag and originating in the early 2000s.
Viewing this story in the app? Click here to view online and see the photos below.A flag composed of alternating black and white strips, with a design similar to the rainbow LGBT pride flag, was created to represent straight pride. It’s important to remember that individuals may have and are certainly entitled to a different interpretation of what the flag and colors represent for them. Here are some of the flags you’re likely to see this month and a general idea behind the color choices and what they represent. While most queer individuals would also identify with the all-encompassing rainbow flag, many want to have their own individual flag.” “In fact, there are now over 50 flags recognized among the LGBTQ+ community, each used to symbolize different gender identities and sexual orientations within. “When we are talking about the different LGBTQ Flags and their meanings, there is far more than just this one flag,” their website states. According to Queer in the World, the Rainbow or Gay Pride flag most often seen is known as the overarching umbrella flag to represent the gay community as a whole, but some may wish to display a more specific flag to represent their identity.