I just had to include this for a couple pictures that really boil down how this sexual perversion is really opposed to God, His order, and the Bible. And we’ve been to Casper a couple times, and it has over 60,000 residents being a similar size to Cheyenne, so this is a very small group and I wouldn’t be surprised if people traveled into Casper. And you’re free to live this lifestyle, but why must you try and force the rest of us to accept you and this deviant lifestyle? We don’t, and as Romans 1 lays out, this is a judgement by God who turns you over to do what should not be done, exchanging natural relations for the unnatural, receiving in yourselves the due penalty of your error, as well as part of a further morality slide into wickedness, a seared conscience, and eternal destruction. Confirming them in their delusions is what is truly hateful.
https://oilcity.news/community/2025/06/15/casper-shows-its-pride-at-annual-march/
By Tommy Culkin

CASPER, Wyo. — Hundreds of people took to the streets of downtown Casper on Sunday morning to close out Casper Pride Week 2025 with the annual Pride March.
Participants filled the air with chants for justice, acceptance and pride, waving a variety of Pride flags as they made their way through the downtown district.
“Pride Week was overwhelmingly positive this year,” Casper Pride Executive Director Mallory Pollock said. “We definitely saw an increase in turnout at a lot of our core events.”
The biggest event of the week was Saturday’s Pride Fest, and Pollock said the festival drew approximately 1,500 people — up by several hundred from years past.
Other Pride-filled events throughout the week included an evening performance by musician Inda Eaton at Casper College; a Pride-themed Lego night at local bookstore Bookin’ It; a night of karaoke, trivia, music and more at Frontier Brewing Company; Pride Teen Night at Casper’s Artisan Alley; a pair of drag shows and more.

This year marks Casper Pride’s 10th year, and Pollock said the organization has worked tirelessly over the past decade to become an integral part of the community. That growth ties into the theme of this year’s Pride Week: “brick by brick.” Pollock said the theme references how Casper Pride has worked to become ingrained in the local community.
“We’ve really transformed ourselves to be a year-round resource for the community,” she said. “We do gatherings and workshops, we’ve got more visibility, we’re doing work to combat discriminatory bills in the legislature, we’re doing work with mental health.”

The “brick by brick” theme also tied into a larger, ongoing effort to chronicle and archive the local community’s LGBTQ+ history with a project organizers have dubbed “Save Casper’s Queer History.” The project will take the form of a digital archive of personal items, letters, photos, flyers and much more.
In recent months, Casper Pride has hosted archiving days, where people have submitted pieces of memorabilia, personal items, historical documents and more that are related to Pride in the Casper area and LGBTQ+ life more broadly.
Prior to Sunday morning’s march, Casper City Councilor and LGBTQ Advisory Committee member Amber Pollock praised the initiative and urged local members of the LGBTQ+ community to take part in it.
“This project is a labor of love and a love letter to our community,” Amber Pollock said. “It is about making space for memories that haven’t always been saved — photographs tucked in drawers, stories that have lived quietly, moments that matter but are at risk of being lost.”