A spike in anti-LGBTQ rhetoric and threats has taken a heavy toll on pride celebrations in the US this year, organizers said — especially in states where politicians want to curtail rights.
This month’s celebrations in Houston, the largest pride event in conservative Texas, have been scaled back due to rising insurance and security costs, as well as concerns over soaring temperatures and capacity.
“We made the decision to cancel the festival this year,” Pride Houston 365 president Kendra Walker said, adding that plans were downgraded to a parade.
Photo: AFP
The change was first announced in January as Texas lawmakers prepared bills restricting gender-affirming healthcare and drag performances.
Now, pride planners across the US and Canada say they are facing higher bills because of anti-LGBTQ disinformation and hatred.
“It only takes a few [people] that can’t decipher reality from fantasy, and that’s when the danger comes in,” Walker said, calling it “a formidable threat” and pointing to white supremacists who planned to riot at a pride event in Idaho last year.
Florida has become a hotspot, with state Governor Ron DeSantis, a Republican running for president, signing bills this spring banning minors from drag shows and restricting how they learn about the LGBTQ community.
“I didn’t realize there was going to be that much of a real shake-up,” said Carrie West, president of Tampa Pride, which in May canceled an outdoor festival after some sponsors said they were worried about running afoul of the new laws.
The legislation, replicated in several other US states, also comes amid a torrent of anti-LGBTQ disinformation online.
False claims linking the community to pedophilia and Satanism have amassed across social media platforms, boosted in part by conservative commentators and advocacy groups. Similar allegations and misinformation went viral late last month about Target’s Pride apparel collection.
“We don’t live in a time where we can just kind of separate what happens online from what happens in the real world,” said Ari Drennen, LGBTQ program director at Media Matters for America, a liberal media watchdog.
Not all pride celebrations have been affected. Long-running events retain a certain resilience against the hatred that has targeted the community for decades, even as equality laws have improved rights over the past few years.
“There are broad threats, and it’s definitely coming from the anti-woke crowd and their encouragement of their followers to disrupt events,” said David Clarke, spokesperson for NYC Pride, the largest such group in North America.
However, “we have very robust security plans and we have for years. So it’s kind of business as usual, I think,” Clarke said.
However, in Republican-controlled states where laws limiting LGBTQ rights have already been passed, small-town advocates are contending with hate speech.
In April, the advocacy group Equality Florida issued an advisory warning for LGBTQ people traveling to the state. Pride organizers in St Cloud, Florida, later canceled this year’s event due to a “climate of fear.”
Kristina Bozanich, a photographer who spearheads the celebration, said that the drag performers “didn’t feel safe” after DeSantis signed the Protection of Children Act, which prohibits admitting children into “adult live performances.”
Soon after the pride event in St Cloud was canceled, a “Kill all gays” sign was put up in the nearby city of Lake Nona, Bozanich said.
“It was really shocking that what is known as a more progressive area had a hate sign like that,” she said.
After news of the cancelation got out, the intimidation got worse.
“We received a lot of hate comments. I received hate mail,” Bozanich said.
Further south in Port St Lucie, where an annual pride parade was canceled in April over legal concerns, there has been blowback for others who promote events.
“I did post on one of the Port St Lucie regular pages on Facebook about our pride party, and people just started making remarks about grooming kids,” said P.J. Ashley, president of the nonprofit Sanctuary of the Treasure Coast.
Pedophilia conspiracy theories have “a long history of being used against many marginalized groups to justify discrimination and violence,” Southern Poverty Law Center senior research analyst R.G. Cravens said.
Polls show acceptance has grown since the dawn of the LGBTQ rights movement, but Ashley said that some older members within the community “feel like time just went back to that.”
“They feel like they’re afraid to come out now and say anything. So it’s really like you’re going back to the 1960s,” Ashley said. “Everything that they fought for is kind of like what we’re losing.”
The death of a former head of China’s one-child policy has been met not by tributes, but by castigation of the abandoned policy on social media this week. State media praised Peng Peiyun (彭珮雲), former head of China’s National Family Planning Commission from 1988 to 1998, as “an outstanding leader” in her work related to women and children. The reaction on Chinese social media to Peng’s death in Beijing on Sunday, just shy of her 96th birthday, was less positive. “Those children who were lost, naked, are waiting for you over there” in the afterlife, one person posted on China’s Sina Weibo platform. China’s
‘POLITICAL LOYALTY’: The move breaks with decades of precedent among US administrations, which have tended to leave career ambassadors in their posts US President Donald Trump’s administration has ordered dozens of US ambassadors to step down, people familiar with the matter said, a precedent-breaking recall that would leave embassies abroad without US Senate-confirmed leadership. The envoys, career diplomats who were almost all named to their jobs under former US president Joe Biden, were told over the phone in the past few days they needed to depart in the next few weeks, the people said. They would not be fired, but finding new roles would be a challenge given that many are far along in their careers and opportunities for senior diplomats can
RUSHED: The US pushed for the October deal to be ready for a ceremony with Trump, but sometimes it takes time to create an agreement that can hold, a Thai official said Defense officials from Thailand and Cambodia are to meet tomorrow to discuss the possibility of resuming a ceasefire between the two countries, Thailand’s top diplomat said yesterday, as border fighting entered a third week. A ceasefire agreement in October was rushed to ensure it could be witnessed by US President Donald Trump and lacked sufficient details to ensure the deal to end the armed conflict would hold, Thai Minister of Foreign Affairs Sihasak Phuangketkeow said after an ASEAN foreign ministers’ meeting in Kuala Lumpur. The two countries agreed to hold talks using their General Border Committee, an established bilateral mechanism, with Thailand
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese yesterday announced plans for a national bravery award to recognize civilians and first responders who confronted “the worst of evil” during an anti-Semitic terror attack that left 15 dead and has cast a heavy shadow over the nation’s holiday season. Albanese said he plans to establish a special honors system for those who placed themselves in harm’s way to help during the attack on a beachside Hanukkah celebration, like Ahmed al-Ahmed, a Syrian-Australian Muslim who disarmed one of the assailants before being wounded himself. Sajid Akram, who was killed by police during the Dec. 14 attack, and