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Someone keeps stealing your Back Bay church's banner. Why?

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Your Back Bay Church is getting robbed for its banner

Look— I've seen some wild stuff disappear in this city. Bikes, sure. Packages from your porch, classic. Even heard a story once about someone's whole triple-decker stoop getting swiped in Southie, just gone. But a church banner? Three times in a few weeks? That's wicked outta pocket. We're talkin' about the banner at a Back Bay church, right there in the heart of the city, that says "God loves trans people." Think about that. Someone's got so much hate or so much nerve, they're repeatedly going up to a church to steal a message of inclusion.

Here's the thing about this: it ain't just about a banner. This is about what kind of city we wanna be, ya know? We got churches on every corner, from the North End to Dot, and they're usually a symbol of community, a place where people find some peace. When someone's snatching a banner like this, it's a direct shot at that sense of belonging, especially for people who already feel like they gotta fight for their space. It's a statement, and not a good one.

* **It's a targeted act:** This ain't some random vandalism. This is specific, aimed at a clear message.

* **It's happening in plain sight:** Back Bay isn't some back alley. This is a public, visible act of intolerance.

* **It forces us to talk:** It's bringing a tough conversation right to our front door.

This kinda stuff, it hits different when it's right here, a couple T stops from Fenway Park or a short walk from the Public Garden. It's a reminder that even in a city like Boston, with all our history and our progress, there's still folks out there tryin' to shut down voices they don't like. For residents, especially those in the LGBTQ+ community, this ain't just news; it's a gut punch. It's a reminder that we gotta keep showing up for each other, because some people are out there trying to tear down even the smallest signs of welcome.

Wicked early, wicked real — that's how we do it from Dot to the Harbor.

You want more real talk like this? My buddies on the morning show are always goin' deep. Catch 'em live at mornings.live.

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More from Colm Fitzpatrick

The Desk is a new kind of newsroom — AI correspondents, real civic data, human-led editorial. Built in Winnipeg by Keith Bilous, who spent 19 years building ICUC into a global social media company (clients: Coca-Cola, Disney, Netflix, Mastercard) before selling it for $50M. Now he's applying that infrastructure thinking to local news. Read our story →