The BDN Opinion section operates independently and does not set newsroom policies or contribute to reporting or editing articles elsewhere in the newspaper or on bangordailynews.com.
Robin Abcarian is an opinion columnist at the Los Angeles Times.
Confederate flags offend me. They represent the violence of slavery and nostalgia for a white supremacist past.
Assault weapons offend me. They represent death and destruction and the moral bankruptcy of politicians willing to sacrifice American children on the altar of the 2nd Amendment.
But rainbow colored T-shirts, dresses and baby rompers? Greeting cards that say “I’m happy that you’re queer”? Who could possibly be offended by items that celebrate and affirm the rights of gay and trans people to simply live in peace?
Yeah, I know: a bunch of people.
As we have seen recently, in boycotts against slightly enlightened corporations such as Anheuser-Busch InBev and Target, there is a concerted effort, led mainly by conservative Christians, to punish businesses that embrace the LGBTQ community. Anheuser-Busch found itself in the crosshairs when transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney promoted Bud Light on their social media feeds during March Madness.
Target ticked off the forces of intolerance with its annual Pride Month display of merchandise, although it’s been putting up rainbows at the end of May for more than a decade.
Bud Light sales have plummeted; the company didn’t apologize but backtracked, saying it never “intended to be part of a discussion that divides people.”
Target said the backlash has endangered its employees and removed some items from shelves. In some stores, the retailer said, Pride displays were relocated from the front to the back. Its stock has taken a hit.
Even in our own generally liberal community, some parents in North Hollywood made waves last week when they urged families to “keep your children home and innocent” rather than subject them to a Gay Pride and Rainbow Day Assembly.
The Dodgers invited, disinvited, then reinvited the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, a drag/charity group that calls attention to religious intolerance, to be honored at the team’s June 16 Pride Night game.
Why are we stuck in the middle of a moral panic about sexuality and gender identity? Why now?
According to the Associated Press, nearly 500 anti-LGBTQ bills have been introduced in state legislatures this year. At least 17 states have passed laws that restrict or ban gender-affirming care for transgender minors.
It’s happening because ginning up fear about the “corruption” of children is a tried and true technique for rallying the far right.
Because same-sex marriage is legal and transgender people have made extraordinary strides.
Because the Christian right needed a new bogeyman after the Supreme Court overturned Roe vs. Wade, neutralizing an issue that has animated the Republican base and turned out votes for decades.
Because Americans have grown relaxed about the LGBTQ community. A 2020 survey conducted by GLAAD, an LGBTQ advocacy group, and Procter & Gamble found that 75 percent of people who do not identify as gay or trans or queer — that is, a supermajority — were comfortable with seeing non-straight folks in marketing campaigns.
And, last but hardly least, it’s happening because the number of Americans who do identify as LGBTQ has exploded. A February Gallup poll based on the aggregated data of 10,000 people found that nearly 20 percent of Generation Z, those born between 1997 and 2004, identified as LGBTQ. By comparison, only 2.7 percent of Baby Boomers identified that way.
This change is astonishing and proof that the stigma so long attached to gay, nonbinary and transgender people may finally be starting to fade away. Cue the backlash.
The idea that being frank with kids about the range of human sexuality and gender, or that discussions about families that have two moms or two dads is somehow stealing the innocence of children, is ludicrous.
As the guardian of a middle-schooler, I can tell you that her peers have been discussing their sexuality and gender since third grade, maybe earlier. They are much more comfortable and open than previous generations about these matters. And although they can talk easily about being “bi” or gender fluid, they don’t equate those issues with actual sexual behavior, which is still too yucky to contemplate for elementary school kids and preteens.
In any case, it’s a mystery to marketing experts why the backlash against Bud Light and Target has become so intense. After all, in some ways, Pride Month — June — has long been co-opted by corporations looking for marketing opportunities. Walmart has a Pride line of merchandise. As do Bloomingdale’s, Kohl’s, Hot Topic, Old Navy and even Michaels, the craft store. Campaigns for Levi’s have featured gay and trans people. J. Crew has displayed pride flags in its windows. On June 25, Coors Light is sponsoring a Pride Parade in Denver, something it has done for two decades.
It wasn’t very long ago that companies were being pilloried by groups like GLAAD for showing their pro-LGBTQ colors only one month a year — “pink washing” — or for donating money to fervently anti-LGBTQ politicians.
At this moment, when the bigots are on the march, those are starting to feel like the good old days.