{"id":1119740,"date":"2023-11-30T20:35:53","date_gmt":"2023-12-01T01:35:53","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/uncategorized\/seeding-a-gay-community-in-la-the-gay-liberation-revolution-los-angeles-blade\/"},"modified":"2023-11-30T20:35:53","modified_gmt":"2023-12-01T01:35:53","slug":"seeding-a-gay-community-in-la-the-gay-liberation-revolution-los-angeles-blade","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/zeitgeist-movement\/seeding-a-gay-community-in-la-the-gay-liberation-revolution-los-angeles-blade\/","title":{"rendered":"Seeding a gay community in LA, the gay liberation revolution &#8211; Los Angeles Blade"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>    By Don Kilhefner | LOS ANGELES  There is a big difference in    magnitude between a liberation movement and a civil rights    movement. Often, the terms Gay Liberation and Gay    Civil Rights are used synonymously. Those terms,    however, are very different in meaning.  <\/p>\n<p>    A liberation movement involves an oppressed group seizing power    by its own militant efforts and includes a change in    consciousness by an oppressed people about its alleged    inferiority, restructures economic and educational systems, and    claims or reclaims the groups history and culture. The    central organizing principle of a civil rights movement is    lobbying the dominant power structure over time to grant new    lawslike voting rightswhich gives more equal rights to a    minority or majority historically discriminated against without    any fundamental changes or threats to the power, economic, or    educational systems in place.  <\/p>\n<p>    Power structures try to destroy liberation movements, as in    South Africa in 1961 when Nelson Mandela and others created the    paramilitary Spear of the Nation, turning the African National    Congress from a civil rights movement into a liberation    movement. On the other hand, civil rights movements are    easily pacified by political posturing and pretending and    assimilated by elite capture without posing much of a threat to    the basic power structures of society. Liberation    movements are also susceptible to elite    capture.  <\/p>\n<p>    Authors Note You are advised to    remember as you read the following article that all of the Gay    Liberation organizing being described was done within a context    of 1,000 years or more of hetero supremacy in the West in which    all religions declared lesbians and particularly gay men to be    subhuman and an abomination in the eyes of God; all national    and local laws declared them to be illegal and a crime against    nature, with police and vigilante groups hunting them down and    killing such deviants, often burning them alive at the stake;    and in the 20th century the new science of psychology declared    them a severe psychopathology and a threat to society.    Gay men and lesbians internalized that hetero supremacist,    genocidal ideology, turning it into self-hate, and turning that    debasement into fear of being found out, some in fear for their    very lives. And so, in 1969, still being officially    labeled sick, sinful, and against the law and against the laws    of nature, a new, revolutionary narrative unfolded in Los    Angeles.  <\/p>\n<p>    Central to the development of a radical, militant Gay    Liberation revolution in Los Angeles was the L.A. Gay    Liberation Front, which was called into being in August 1969 by    Morris Kight, an anti-Vietnam War activist. GLFs were    also organized in other major U.S. cities in the aftermath of    the 1969 Stonewall Rebellion, a single spark that caused a    prairie fire.  A gay revolution ensueda revolution    defined as sudden, radical, complete change.  <\/p>\n<p>    For months, GLF meetings were held every Sunday afternoon in    random, obscure locations, until, on January 1, 1970, I secured    a GLF office at 577  North Vermont Ave. in East Hollywood,    formerly occupied by the Hollywood contingent of the Peace and    Freedom Party. Using basic organizing skills learned as a    volunteer at the Peace and Freedom Party office in Venice while    a UCLA doctoral student in history, I became GLFs    around-the-clock, sleep-in office manager, creating a GLF    infrastructure for the first time, including a telephone    number, mailing address, bank account, and a stable meeting and    organizing space.  <\/p>\n<p>    The office was located on the second floor of a graceful    dowager of a fourplex next to the Hollywood    Freeway. Soon after GLF left the space, the building was    demolished and replaced by a series of gas stations (southwest    corner of Vermont and Clinton). [If anyone out there has    a photo of the building, please contact me.]  <\/p>\n<p>    The GLF office became a beehive of gay political organizing    that propelled the Gay Liberation movement in Southern    California forward rapidly (more about all that activity in the    future). In a recent event at USC-ONE Archives, Dr. Craig    Loftin, Lecturer in gay history at California State University    (Fullerton), described that year as follows, 1970 was an    incredible year of achievement for GLF in Los Angeles.    They staged marches, protests, zaps, interventions, and a    broad range of other militant, highly visible actions.    They fought back. They led the march out of the    shadows, out of the closets.  <\/p>\n<p>    On 9\/18\/1970, GLF staged a Touch-In in a popular WeHo bar,    The Farm; at 10 p.m. gay men reached out and hugged each other;    L.A. Sheriffs arrived and were warned by GLF: if you arrest one    of us, youll have to arrest all of us; men continued to show    affection for each other; chanting began: Ho-Ho, Ho Chi Minh,    GLF is going to win; Sheriffs retreated; the beginning of the    end of police raids of gay bars in L.A. was upon us.  <\/p>\n<p>    While Kight and I played a leadership role in those    developments, let me make this clear: a handful, then scores,    then hundreds of gay and lesbian peopleall voluntarily engaged    activistscollectively and constructively made it happen, a    record of accomplishment probably unmatched by any other GLF in    the country.  <\/p>\n<p>    In this essay, I will focus on one of those 1970 activities,    the GLF Gay Survival Committee and the subsequent Hoover Street    Commune because there is a clear path, through thick and thin,    from that Committee to the Commune to the October 1971 opening    of the Gay Community Services Center in Los Angeles (now called    the L.A. LGBT Center), the first and, then as now, the largest    in the world. GCSC also seeded what grew into a world    class gay community in Los Angeles.  <\/p>\n<p>    The Gay Survival Committee, the name tells you where gay people    were at that time, was created in the Spring of 1970 when I    proposed the idea to GLF which approved it unanimously.    The Committees primary purpose was to begin exploring the    possibility of offeringout of the GLF office and by    referralservices specifically designed for gay and lesbian    people suffering from oppression sickness (peer counseling,    consciousness raising groups, Vietnam War draft and military    resistance counseling, and medical and legal referrals).    A     Los Angeles Free Press article in August 1970 caught    the zeitgeist of that GLF effort.  <\/p>\n<p>    By the end of 1970, L.A. GLF was beset by a mostly friendly,    fundamental debate as to which direction to go in 1971, either    in an evolving liberation direction or a more social direction    by opening a Gay Coffee House with entertainment. After    much internal discussion and to resolve the tension, I made a    proposal in December 1970 that the GLF office be closed and    that GLF financial resources, totaling about $900, be turned    over to the Gay Coffee House project. GLF members    agreed.  <\/p>\n<p>    Early in 1971, a Gay Coffee House was opened by GLF stalwarts    John Platania, Jim Kepner, and others in a storefront on    Melrose Ave., a site where the Continental Baths subsequently    stood (western corner of Melrose and Kenmore). After    several months it devolved into a crash pad, could not pay its    rent, and closed.  <\/p>\n<p>    During 1970, my thinking had also evolved considerably from the    Gay Survival Committees idea of providing limited services out    of the GLF office to contemplating a more substantial,    comprehensive, freestanding operation providing direct services    and infused with the radical spirit and methodology of Gay    Liberation. Also, during that year, I grew by leaps and    bounds, transforming from a somewhat quiet, introverted    academic type into an articulate, assertive community organizer    because of GLFs one-after-the-other successes.  <\/p>\n<p>    The more I read, dialogued with others, and self-reflected, it    was gradually becoming clearer to me that if we were going to    succeed as a liberation movement, it was critical that we    enlarge our GLF agenda from merely a reactive strategy    of fighting back against hetero supremacy into an enlarged,    transforming proactive strategy of building a    visible, organized, self-accepting, and    defiant gay community where none had ever    existed.  <\/p>\n<p>    This new way of thinking began a first level of envisioning    that a gay center might be the vehicle around which such a gay    community could coalesce. I did not know exactly how GLF    could make that happen. As it turned out, I became the    vision carrier for such a project, although at that time I did    not know that term nor understand what it meant. I just    did what I did from a deep well of caring and intense gay    liberation motivation. I did know, however, from my many    learning experiences as I matured during my 20s, that the path    forward reveals itself as we walk the path not as we think    about it or discuss it. And it worked.  <\/p>\n<p>    [I want to acknowledge the important work done by Rev. Troy    Perry, whom I admire, in founding in 1968 in Los Angeles the    Metropolitan Community Church  <\/p>\n<p>    which became an important part of the gay community in L.A. and    elsewhere. The roots of MCC were in evangelical    Christianity and the Society for Individual Rights, a    conservative homophile organization started in 1964 in San    Francisco. The roots of the Gay Liberation movement,    however, were in the 1969 Stonewall Rebellion.]  <\/p>\n<p>    On January 1, 1971, a year after opening the GLF office on    North Vermont Ave., a contingent from GLF consisting of Randy    Schrader, Steve Beckwith, Stan Williams, Rod Gibson and me,    members of GLFs Gay Survival Committee, moved into the newly    created Hoover Street Commune which became the relocated    activist center for Gay Liberation militancy in L.A.    Morris Kight and others became an essential part of the    organizing activities taking place there.  <\/p>\n<p>    Thus, began the second phase of the pioneering work of the L.A.    Gay Liberation Front.  <\/p>\n<p>    One of the important gay historical sites in Los Angeles is    located at 1500 North Hoover Street (at Sunset Dr.), right    behind the then KCET public television studios (now the    Scientology Media Production Studios) on Sunset Blvd. in    Silverlake. It was the home of the Hoover Street Commune, which    existed from 1971 until 1973the place from which the building    of the gay community center and, by extension, a gay community    in Los Angeles emerged.  <\/p>\n<p>    [Community organizers today have many exquisite organizing    tools that we did not have in the 1960s and 1970s; however,    missing today is the communal living that focused and magnified    our effectiveness. When I dialogue with young activists    today, the absence of such an essential tool in their    organizing efforts is glaring.]  <\/p>\n<p>    The house, built as a duplex, had been turned into one large    house with five bedrooms, two bathrooms, a small kitchen, a    dining room, and a living room. The original communards    included very creative Stan Williams, a former Sonja Henie and    Ice Capades skater; Steve Beckwith, a suit-and-tie businessman;    Randy Schrader, a recent UCLA Law School graduate studying for    the California Bar exam; Rod Gibson, a young GLFer; and    me. Occupancy was a bit fluid at first, but then    stabilized. Gibson soon moved out and was replaced by Ray    Powers, a Hollywood actors agent, and Beckwith and his lover,    Van Brown, a student at UC Santa Barbara, needed more privacy    and moved elsewhere, replaced by John Platania.  <\/p>\n<p>    GLF members Llee Heflin, Dexter Price, and Bruce Cristoff lived    right next door at 1502 N. Hoover St. In and out on    a regular basis were Morris Kight, Tony DeRosa, June Herrle,    Howard Fox, David Backstrom, John Coffland, Justin Dangerfield,    John Murphy, my beloved Luke Johnson, and many more. The    door was always open.  <\/p>\n<p>    For me, living there was like being in an always-in-session    Graduate School for Advanced Gay Studies, intellectually and    spiritually stimulating like nothing I had known before. I was    being introduced to gay-centered films, books, art and artists,    poetry, ideas, music, personages, spiritual lineages, inventive    gay Kama Sutra positions, and much more that were all    new to me.  <\/p>\n<p>    Williams had created a large, low dining table and we sat on    the floor to eat; once a week each member prepared supper.    Virtually every evening there would be eight to ten people    sitting around our large communal table for suppervisiting gay    liberationists, soon-to-be-famous filmmakers, writers, and    poets, grifters, lovers du jour, the Marlboro Man,    mystics, future judgesa gay Noahs Arkengaged in animated and    liberating discussions.  <\/p>\n<p>    Sometimes Lucy would come down from the sky with her diamonds    to visit. Williams and Platania would put their long hippie    hair up into elegant beehive hairdos to go shopping at the    local Safeway grocery store, an aspect of Gay Liberations    political fight against rigid hetero gender norms. GLF called    it Gender Fuck, a militant precursor of Gender Fluid.    Williams created a High Tea which was poured many afternoons at    4 p.m. with rolled joints on a silver platter. Spirited    political discussions would go into the night. And so it    went.  <\/p>\n<p>    In this exhilarating and creative gay-centered vortex at the    Commune, sight was never lost as to why I was    theretransforming the work of GLFs Gay Survival Committee into    a gay community center. At both the GLF office and the    Commune, the Committees composition was fluid with people    coming and going. However, a more or less stable core    group formed over time consisting of Beckwith, Kight, Platania,    Williams, Schrader, Herrle, and Howard Fox among others.    My role as the Committees founding chairman was to provide the    leadership and glue to hold things together and guarantee there    was forward movement by calling and chairing meetings every two    weeks, preparing agendas, facilitating discussion, and ensuring    continuity and follow through between meetings.  <\/p>\n<p>    A revolutionary opening of historic proportions was being    created by GLF in L.A. and we collectively leapt through that    opening with the most serious intentions and joyful exuberance.    Among the critically important developments that grew out of    the Hoover Street Commune during those years were the    following:  <\/p>\n<p>    After each meeting, Platania and I would meet for an extra hour    writing down what we had heard and agreed to in the    meeting. Platania had worked as a grant writer for the    City of Los Angeles Community Development Department and    TELACU (The East Los Angeles Community Union). I typed up    our writings, and by May 1971, an impressive looking,    forty-page, bound proposal emerged from the Committees    collective work that delineated the reasons for such a gay    center, described the comprehensive human services to be    provided in a community-based context, and laid out a timetable    for implementing each component.  <\/p>\n<p>    That document became an invaluable organizing tool because it    clearly described what we planned to do and how we planned to    do it. The proposal clearly sent a powerful message that    these gay liberationists were very serious about their    intentions, with a blueprint and hammer and nails in their    hands, and ready to go to work. The name: Gay Community    Services Center. Words never seen before anywhere.  <\/p>\n<p>    Gay because we were totally in your face    about who we were, not hiding behind camouflage words as was    done prior to Gay Liberation. Community    because of the core values implied in that word: (1) a    community is a unified body whose members assumes    responsibility for each other, meaning everyone, and (2) a    community was what we were trying to call into being.    Services because we were planning to deliver    services specifically designed to meet the needs of gay,    lesbian, and trans people, mending the deep woundings caused by    hetero supremacy and invoking the new possibilities of gay    empowerment. Center because of our    intention that it be a center around which a gay community    would coalesce.  <\/p>\n<p>    My position was that we were attempting to create a gay    community center and a gay community, both ideas revolutionary    developments for our people at that time. GLF was    building something that would hopefully outlive all of us and a    community called for solid community institutions serving the    people.  <\/p>\n<p>    Moreover, one of the successful tactics of the Gay Liberation    movement was keeping the hetero supremacists off balance.    They never could conceive of gay and lesbian people developing    self-respect after the centuries of violent intimidation and    instilling of fear. They never expected the audacity of    gay liberationists in L.A. creating a community center and    envisioning an actual gay community that was real, substantial,    and angry, that fought back and thumbed its nose at their    supremacist proclivities and actions.  <\/p>\n<p>    Beginning in April 1971, attorney Allen Gross and I began the    grunt work of incorporating the proposed community center in    California. Gross, an important hetero ally and lifelong    friend, had founded the Legal Aid program in Oregon and served    as legal counsel for L.A. GLF. He would serve for 25    years as legal counsel to the Center. We prepared    Articles of Incorporation and By-Laws to submit to the State of    California and could not read how the documents would be dealt    with by the newly elected California Secretary of State, a    young fellow named Jerry Brown. The documents were    returned approved in two weeks and Brown became a dependable    ally of gay people in California.  <\/p>\n<p>    The same could not be said for the federal IRS tax exemption    process, which routinely should have taken a few months, but in    our case took five years. Gross prepared the IRS    application with great care and attention to all possible traps    that could be used to deny us. Decades later, I was    informed privately that the Nixon White House had instructed    the Secretary of the Treasury to put our application in his    desk drawer and not act on it.  <\/p>\n<p>    In 1972, I was summoned to Washington, D.C., for a special    interrogation by Frank Cerny, head of the exempt branch of IRS,    in a bizarre scene that unfolded in a majestic hall that was    truly a surreal experience. With Gross on one side of me and    attorney Ed Dilkes of L.A. Legal Aid on the other side,    and me resembling a hippie Hasidic rabbi, I recited calmly over    and over again what Gross had skillfully written in our    applicationwe would serve anyone who asked for our    philanthropic services and we would turn no one away, which    were the exclusivity grounds on which IRS planned to trap and    deny us tax-exemption. In 1976, our relentless    perseverance and political pressure finally forced the White    House and IRS to approve our tax-exemption application. GCSC    was the first openly gay organization to secure IRS non-profit,    tax-exempt approvala singular achievement then.  <\/p>\n<p>    The Edgemont    Liberation House provided free housing primarily to young    gay men, often runaways who were homeless. From 9 a.m.    until 4 p.m. residents were out of the house looking for    employment, getting back into school, or whatever. When    the residents returned to the house at 4 p.m., under Schaefers    supervision, they collectively made supper for the house.  <\/p>\n<p>    The key words for living in a Liberation House, as in    organizing the Center  <\/p>\n<p>    itself, were mutuality and cooperation. Evening activities    at the Edgemont house included a group discussion led by    Schaefer or another GLF member that amounted to a gay    consciousness-raising group, something the residents had never    experienced beforegay and lesbian people viewed in a positive,    constructive light. The residents blossomed. After breakfast in    the morning, residents headed out to lean into their goals for    the day.  <\/p>\n<p>    In September 1971, Platania found a possible site for the    Center in an old Queen Anne style home at 1614 Wilshire Blvd.    at Union Ave., just east of MacArthur Park. Committee    members looked at the house and all agreedyes, lets do    it. I was the full-time+ founding executive director and    Kight, Herrle, and Platania became members of the first Board    of Directors.  <\/p>\n<p>    After a bit of cosmetic fix-up, the installation of telephones,    and a big sign in front emblazoned with the words Gay    Community Services Center, the year and a half of relentless    organizing work by GLF members led to fruition. The story of    that Center and the gay community it facilitated in Los    Angeles, including the role of the Highland Park Collective,    will be told later, but this was how GLF got that far.  <\/p>\n<p>    To give you an idea how revolutionary this community organizing    was in the lives of gay people, after the sign was hung on    Wilshire Blvd., a call was received at the Center from an    important gay figure telling us, You must take that sign down    immediately! You people are going to get all of us    arrested! Then, most gay people rightfully lived in    fear.  <\/p>\n<p>    Amazingly, all the organizing and sustaining of the Center was    accomplished with little money or no money at all. The    organizers were fueled by something much larger than money.    What little funds the early Center did operate on came from    three primary sources: (1) Friday night Gay Funky Dances in    Hollywood, open to all ages, which were started in 1970 by GLF,    went on hiatus when the GLF office closed, and were started up    again in August 1971 sponsored by the Center. After    expenses, the dances generated about $150 a week; (2) donations    at the Center raised about $150 weekly; and (3) after expenses,    the Gaywill Funky Shoppe brought in about $200 weekly.  <\/p>\n<p>    Central to the Shoppe was Commune member Stan Williams assisted    by young GLF members Dexter Price and Bruce Cristoff.    Using a gift possessed by many gay men of being able to    transform ordinary junk into objets dart, the thrift    shoppe thrived. It was located at 1531 Griffith Park Blvd.,    where that street meets Sunset Blvd. in Silverlake, occupied    today by the Pine and Crane Restaurant. When Williams    left for San Francisco, Ralph Schaefer took over as    manager.  <\/p>\n<p>    One day early in 1973, after not hearing from Schaefer for    several days and hearing that the Shoppe seemed closed, Kight    and I went to check it out. We found Schaefer dead in the    bathroom with a bullet hole in the back of his head. He    had been executed. Robbery was not a motive since a    visible cash box was untouched. The murder of gay men    occurred often then with assailants rarely looked for or    apprehended by the LAPD. One less fag was a blessing for    hetero supremacists.  <\/p>\n<p>    The LAPD Rampart Division called Kight and me in for    questioning and tried to pin the murder on us, demanding that    we take polygraph tests.  <\/p>\n<p>    We gave the LAPD the middle finger, telling the investigators    to arrest us if they wanted to, but we refused to play their    disrespectful game regarding someone we valued so dearly, and    walked out. The LAPD was not heard from again regarding    Schaefers murder, even after numerous requests for    information.  <\/p>\n<p>    The Gaywill Funky Shoppe was permanently closed immediately as    a show of respect for Schaefer.  <\/p>\n<p>    At the beginning of this article, you were advised to remember    that all this GLF organizing was being done under the most    difficult community organizing conditions imaginable. Even    under those horrendous conditions, however, you can clearly see    that something historically significant had occurred in Los    Angeles that took place nowhere else in the same way in the    lives of gay and lesbian people, facilitated by a vanguard of    young gay liberationists.  <\/p>\n<p>    By October 1971, with the opening of the Gay Community Services    Center, with much more revolutionary struggle ahead, a whole    new realm of possibilities and ways forward began opening up    for gay and lesbian people in Los Angeles. The GLF Gay Survival    Committee and Hoover Street Commune had done their early    community organizing work impeccably.  <\/p>\n<p>    A unique revolution in consciousness and liberation unfolded in    Los Angeles, radically changing the quality of gay peoples    lives and welfare, instilling a new, life enhancing identity    and birthing an exciting, emerging community where we learned    to value and take care of each other. The ripples of that    Gay Liberation revolution wash over us still today.  <\/p>\n<p>    ******************************************************************************************  <\/p>\n<p>    Don Kilhefner, Ph.D., played a pioneering role in the creation    of the Gay Liberation movement and is co-founder of the L.A.    LGBT Center, Van Ness Recovery House, Radical Faeries, and has    been a gay community organizer for 55 years in Los Angeles and    nationally.     [emailprotected]  <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>View original post here: <\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" href=\"https:\/\/www.losangelesblade.com\/2023\/11\/29\/seeding-a-gay-community-in-la-the-gay-liberation-revolution\" title=\"Seeding a gay community in LA, the gay liberation revolution - Los Angeles Blade\">Seeding a gay community in LA, the gay liberation revolution - Los Angeles Blade<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> By Don Kilhefner | LOS ANGELES There is a big difference in magnitude between a liberation movement and a civil rights movement. Often, the terms Gay Liberation and Gay Civil Rights are used synonymously. Those terms, however, are very different in meaning <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/zeitgeist-movement\/seeding-a-gay-community-in-la-the-gay-liberation-revolution-los-angeles-blade\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[187735],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1119740","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-zeitgeist-movement"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1119740"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1119740"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1119740\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1119740"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1119740"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1119740"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}