Culture Cities Have Turned Their Roads Into an LGBTQ Statement. The Trump Admin Is Doing Something About It. - Secretary of Transportation: "Roads are for safety, not political messages or artwork. Today I am calling on governors in every state to ensure that roadways, intersections, and crosswalks are kept free of distractions."

Tyler O'Neil | July 01, 2025

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Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy on June 2 in Newark, New Jersey. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

FIRST ON THE DAILY SIGNAL—Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy sent a letter Tuesday to the 50 state governors, urging them to remove distractions from roads, including divisive and distracting political messaging like rainbow crosswalks.

“Roads are for safety, not political messages or artwork,” Duffy said in a statement first provided to The Daily Signal. “Today I am calling on governors in every state to ensure that roadways, intersections, and crosswalks are kept free of distractions.”

“Far too many Americans die each year to traffic fatalities to take our eye off the ball,” the secretary added. The Transportation Department “stands ready to help communities across the country make their roads safer and easier to navigate.”

In the letter, first provided to The Daily Signal, Duffy asks governors to ensure that their states take part in the Federal Highway Administration’s Safe Arterials for Everyone through Reliable Operations and Distraction-Reducing Strategies, or SAFE ROADS, initiative. The letter went to the mayor of Washington, D.C., and the governor of Puerto Rico, in addition to all state governors.

The letter notes that an estimated 39,345 people died on American roads in 2024, a decrease of 3.8% from 2023, but an “unacceptable” number, nonetheless.

“The SAFE ROADS national initiative will focus on the non-freeway arterials within your state, including safety and operation at intersections and along segments, consistent and recognizable traffic control devices including crosswalk and intersection markings, and orderly use of the right-of-way that is kept free from distractions,” the transportation secretary’s letter states. “These routes are where more than half of roadway fatalities in America occur and deserve enhanced attention.”

Duffy asks that “within 60 days” each state’s department of transportation “develop a list of arterial segments, including intersections, with the highest safety, operational, or compliance concerns that will be addressed by the end of Fiscal Year 2026” (from Oct. 1, 2025, to Sept. 30, 2026). He asks state departments to submit these lists to the Federal Highway Administration’s office in each state.

“With our shared goals of moving people and goods safely and efficiently, we can make the expectation that all Americans make it home safely and on-time a reality,” Duffy concludes.

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In recent years, some cities have added painted crosswalks in rainbow colors to express solidarity with the LGBTQ+ movement.

West Hollywood, California, established a rainbow crosswalk at the intersection of Santa Monica and San Vicente in 2012, and San Francisco followed in 2014 with one at the intersection of 18th Street and Castro.

Philadelphia established one at 13th Street and Locust in 2015, and Atlanta painted one at Piedmont and 10th Street in 2015. Milwaukee, Wisconsin, recently repainted its rainbow crosswalk, which had first gone up in 2018 but temporarily disappeared when the road got resurfaced following construction.

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Seattle has painted at least 11 rainbow crosswalks. Chicago has painted at least three. New York City painted one outside the Stonewall Inn, the site of the 1969 riot that activists call the beginning of the LGBTQ+ movement. Old Town Alexandria, Virginia, outside Washington, D.C., painted an LGBTQ+ “Pride” flag on the road last year.

Conservative-leaning states are not immune. Key West, Florida, has an intersection with four rainbow crosswalks. Huntington, West Virginia, established a rainbow crosswalk last year, as did Nashville, Tennessee.

In 2011, the Federal Highway Administration ruled that crosswalk art is “contrary to the goal of increased safety and most likely could be a contributing factor to a false sense of security for both motorists and pedestrians.” Crosswalk art makes the white lines of a crosswalk harder to distinguish from the pavement beneath it, the administration ruled.

The Federal Highway Administration urged Ames, Iowa, to remove its rainbow crosswalk due to safety concerns in 2019, but the city refused.

“Crosswalk art has a potential to compromise pedestrian and motorist safety by interfering with, detracting from, or obscuring official traffic control devices,” the administration wrote. “The art can also encourage road users, especially bicycles and pedestrians, to directly participate in the design, loiter in the street, or give reason to not vacate the street in an expedient or predictable manner.”

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Observation...when we walk on a flag, symbol, and the like we are expressing disrespect for it. The Iranian regime, for example, has painted US and Israeli flags on sidewalks for people to walk on and disrespect. So when people walk or drive on roads/crosswalks painted with rainbows or with slogans supporting certain movements they are actually displaying disrespect for these movements/organizations. Obviously the people who've painted such things on American crosswalks and streets aren't smart enough to realize what they have actually done. If they were intelligent they would never have painted these streets and crosswalks in that fashion.
 
“Roads are for safety, not political messages or artwork,” Duffy said in a statement first provided to The Daily Signal. “Today I am calling on governors in every state to ensure that roadways, intersections, and crosswalks are kept free of distractions.”
I hate the fact that people would argue against this or treat it like some form of bad faith.

when we walk on a flag, symbol, and the like we are expressing disrespect for it.
I remember one YouTuber reported on one rainbow crosswalk that some kids rode bikes or scooters on and left scuff-marks on it, and the city where it was, decided to charge the kids with hate crimes. But it's a fucking crosswalk. Getting scuffed or smudged is going to happen unless you're closing off the roadway all together. Frankly, putting a rainbow crosswalk down is a trap, and I'd rather avoid it than let someone tell me I was walking/driving on it wrong because someone's little peabrain invented something to be offended over.
 
About damn time.

I can’t find it now (may have been scrubbed from the internet) but there was an article around the time the first of these monstrosities was laid down about the impact on seeing eye dogs. Basically they’re trained to recognize official legal road markings. This shit put down at intersections specifically causes them problems, in the article I read it noted that one dog who was trained but fairly young and new on the job just laid down because he didn’t know what to do. So yes, it is a horrific safety issue in more ways than one.
 
About time, it was pretty obvious that this was deliberately antagonistic behavior to force anyone not on the alphabet mafia to put up with having it shoved in your face in a way you couldn't avoid and could possibly be entrapped into having defaced.

Common sense dictates that allowing nonstandard legal road markings defeats the purpose of standards in the first place.
 
The transportation guy says that your first priority should be safety. That is hard to argue against.

No matter what group symbol you put on a road, someone is going to dislike it and start doing skidding and burn outs on it. Simply remove the symbols and you remove the temptation to do so.

Now if people have a problem with crosswalk symbols, they might be crazy
 
Why must you speak this evil into the world.
I very much doubt I am the first to think of it. Towns were selling their names and parents wanted monetize their babies names if I remember right.
 
I remember one YouTuber reported on one rainbow crosswalk that some kids rode bikes or scooters on and left scuff-marks on it, and the city where it was, decided to charge the kids with hate crimes.
a reminder that burning a US flag is "free speech" but putting tire tracks on roads panted with the fag colors is a "hate crime".
 
seeing eye dogs
I've heard that horses also cannot handle this.

Wouldn't surprise me if self-driving cars were also affected.

It's so performative.

Is anyone going to look at this and think, "Yes, before I saw this I thought the gays were bad, but now I have seen the error of my ways?"

Nah, some 18-year-old shitbird with a hard dick and a lifted truck is going to look at this and think, "LOL fags."

Tale as old as time. I bet if you painted the equivalent message on a Roman street 2,000 years ago, some 18-year-old shitbird with a hard dick and polished rims on his pushcart would look at it and think, "Homosexuales ridiculi sunt."
 
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