Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

St. Louis Couple Who Pointed Guns At Protesters Reportedly Sued To Keep Gays Out Of Their Neighborhood

St. Louis Couple Who Pointed Guns At Protesters Reportedly Sued To Keep Gays Out Of Their Neighborhood
xshularx/Twitter

Mark and Patricia McCloskey, the St. Louis lawyer couple who went viral for pointing a pistol and an assault weapon at peaceful Black Lives Matter protestors from the front lawn of their home, are once again in the news as more details emerge about their past.

Specifically, a history of virulent homophobia: In 1992, they sued their neighborhood trustees for allowing gay couples to live in their neighborhood.


The lawsuit was ostensibly filed against the trustees for not enforcing one of the written rules of their gated community, which required that the neighborhood be home only to "single-family residences," which the rules defined as residences inhabited by married couples.

As same-sex marriage was not yet legal in Missouri in 1992, this rule would exclude gay couples. But the McCloskeys insisted it wasn't a homophobic rule, because straight unwed couples would be excluded too.

Mark McCloskey then accused the neighborhood of trying to politicize the issue. As he put it at the time:

“Certain people on Portland Place, for political reasons, wanted to make it a gay issue."

The McCloskeys went so far as to appeal their case all the way to the Missouri state Supreme Court, an effort that failed. Patricia McCloskey was subsequently impeached as a neighborhood trustee over what her fellow trustees saw as an overt attempt to codify homophobia into the neighborhood.

The incident is just one of a litany of lawsuits filed by the McCloskeys recently uncovered in a recent exposé in local newspaper The St. Louis Post-Dispatch. As the report details, the McCloskeys have a long history of using the court system to fight and intimidate--including suing Mark McCloskey's own father and sister.

As the Post-Dispatchput it:

"... public records and interviews reveal... the McCloskeys are almost always in conflict with others."

On Twitter, most people were disgusted by the McCloskeys' homophobia, but certainly not surprised.










Their litigious nature is just the latest chapter in the McCloskeys' infamy since their gun-toting Black Lives Matter encounter: in the wake of the incident, the compared BLM to "the storming of the Bastille" during the French Revolution, and they have been the subject of countless mocking memes.

More from Trending

Ted Cruz; Kelvin Sampson
Alex Wroblewski/AFP via Getty Images; Alex Slitz/Getty Images

Houston Fans Livid After Ted Cruz 'Curse' Strikes Again At NCAA Basketball Championship

In 2013, 2016 and 2021, Texas Republican Senator Ted Cruz was labeled the most hated man in Congress—by members of his own party. In 2023, Florida Republican Representative Matt Gaetz replaced him as the "most hated."

In a 2016 CNN interview, South Carolina Republican Senator Lindsey Graham said:

Keep ReadingShow less
Harriet Tubman
Library of Congress/Getty Images

National Parks Website Restores Harriet Tubman Photo To 'Underground Railroad' Page After Backlash

Following significant backlash, the National Park Service restored a previously-erased photo of Harriet Tubman from a webpage dedicated to the history of the Underground Railroad, in which she led 13 missions to rescue enslaved people.

A spokesperson said the changes were not authorized by the agency's leadership.

Keep ReadingShow less
screenshot from Fox News of Jackie DeAngelis and Tommy Tuberville
Fox News

Tuberville Now Claims 'Entire Men's Teams' Are 'Turning Trans' To Play Against Women

Alabama Republican Senator Tommy "Coach" Tuberville appeared on Fox News Sunday to again spread unhinged misinformation about transgender athletes.

Speaking with guest host Jackie DeAngelis, Tuberville stated:

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot from Last Week Tonight With John Oliver
Last Week Tonight With John Oliver/YouTube

John Oliver Epically Calls Out Awkward Truth Behind Former NCAA Swimmer's Anti-Trans Tirades

On Sunday's episode of Last Week Tonight With John Oliver, the outspoken host devoted the entire program to the attack on trans girls and women who play sports by the GOP.

Oliver began the program saying:

Keep ReadingShow less
man in front of computer code
Chris Yang on Unsplash

Conspiracy Theories That Seem Believable The More You Look Into Them

We tend to think of conspiracy theories as a phenomenon of the digital age. But the internet and mobile devices only allow them to be created and spread faster.

Conspiracy theories have likely been around as long as human civilization has. They are, at their root, just another form of rumors and gossip.

Keep ReadingShow less