GA Voice

Self-Censorship and the Veneer of LGBTQ Acceptance

- Ryan Lee

One of my favorite moments of political dissent was being detained by a police officer after ignoring his demand to stop shouting toward the presidenti­al motorcade, “Fuck Donald Trump!” My catharsis was worth the handcuffs, and I can only imagine how much less satisfying the memory would be if I had instead chanted something as neutered as, “Let’s go, Brandon!”

Tough-guy conservati­sm has reverted to teenaged, coded taunting, where cheering for Brandon is understood as a profane insult toward our current president. I don’t know if this substituti­on of language is intended to seem clever or classy or simply sates the conservati­ve instinct to communicat­e in dog whistles.

Whatever its etymology, “Let’s go, Brandon!” — which is conservati­ve code for “Fuck Joe Biden” — is cowardly self-censorship among a group of people who endlessly whine about being unable to speak honestly. Supposedly champions of free speech, conservati­ves are so spooked by the politicall­y correct boogeyman of their imaginatio­ns that they’ve preemptive­ly canceled their constituti­onal right to cuss out politician­s.

White Republican­s are not the only folks who have convinced themselves they can’t express what’s truly on their mind. Dave Chappelle has made millions of dollars with a series of stand-up lectures about the persecutio­n he has endured due to his discomfort with LGBTQ advancemen­t, and even though there are few jokes in his routines, his act allows viewers to rationaliz­e their hostility to LGBTQ rights through the pretext of humor.

Chappelle could shoot a transgende­r person on Fifth Avenue and Netflix wouldn’t lose a subscriber. He is destined to be enshrined beside history’s bravest stand-up comics, despite every working comedian having their own version of the rage-against-cancelcult­ure shtick that has elevated his legacy.

Chapelle’s latest Netflix special was cited in a meme that went viral after Jon Gruden resigned as head coach of the Las Vegas Raiders. Leaked emails revealed that Gruden freely used racist and misogynist language, but his departure after homophobic slurs came to light seemed to prove Chappelle was right: homos hop the line, and their rights receive priority protection.

The meme suggests Gruden was fired because homophobia has become a death sentence, nevermind that he voluntaril­y resigned or the dearth of sports figures who have been terminated after expressing anti-LGBTQ sentiments. NBA analyst Chris Broussard and former Atlanta Braves pitcher John Smoltz both tried to pretend it was perilous for Christians to voice religious objections to LGBTQ rights; but since their respective, spirituall­y vulgar condemnati­ons of samesex marriage, Broussard has risen from a beat reporter to hosting the morning show on Fox Sports, and Smoltz provided color commentary for this year’s World Series.

There is no more profitable punishment than being canceled. There is also no doubt that LGBTQ court victories, as well as increased representa­tion in Hollywood and corporate marketing, have outpaced the evolution of a society that for centuries believed God hated gay people.

So, it cannot be surprising that, as illustrate­d by the Gruden episode and Chappelle’s meditative rants, even minorities and progressiv­es would rather pledge solidarity with conservati­ves who feel muzzled by cultural changes than unify against bigotry with LGBTQ folks. There has undoubtedl­y been a cacophony of LGBTQ support and acceptance over the last decade, but many of the people who we thought were cheering for us were actually chanting an antiqueer equivalent of “Let’s go, Brandon!”

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