From my point of view, the trend of downplaying the homophobia of this attack is evident beyond the Sky News debacle. U.K. newspapers, The Times and The Sun, omitted references to the fact the club was gay in their headlines this morning. Mention of the atrocity is notably absent from the Daily Mail’s front page today, which instead focuses on the queen's birthday, and the "Fury Over Plot To Let 1.5 Mil Turks Into Britain." And where is Facebook’s rainbow-flag filter for the biggest massacre of LGBT people in recent history? Perhaps this is part of the reason that, tonight at 7 p.m., there will be a London vigil for those who died in the Orlando shooting on Old Compton Street in Soho. It’s not a coincidence that this is home to some of London’s longest-standing gay clubs; just as it isn't a coincidence to Jones, to me, and to a lot of my gay friends that the Orlando shooting was targeted at gay people, in a gay club. The vigil — which will likely be attended by gay and straight people — is aboutshowing the likes of Mark Longhurst and Julia Hartley-Brewer, and anyone else who might show indifference to the fact that this was a homophobic attack that, actually, a great number of people see it as one. We see it as connected to the stabbing of six people at Jerusalem Gay Pride last August; the murder of 10 trans people in America in the first five months of this year, according to The Advocate ; and the 5,597 homophobic hate crimes recorded in Britain between 2014 and 2015, according to The Independent . Clearly, homophobia is still rampant, and in the face of such a specific type of atrocity, like the attack in Orlando, it is comforting to see politicized LGBT people mobilizing to make noise about this problem. If any good can come of the evil that took place in Orlando, it’s that it will serve as a brutal reminder that the fight for tolerance of all people — gay, straight, Latino, Muslim — is a battle far from won. In the days that follow, there is one thing I’d like to see on social media, though. And it’s more discussion of the fact that gay lives matter.