New York Post

DISS-INVITED!

Gay Pride’s hateful ban on cops finally gets backlash it deserves

- CHADWICK MOORE

LAST year, in the wake of George Floyd’s murder in police custody, far-left Pride organizati­ons shut uniformed cops out of LGBT Pride marches in cities across America.

In New York and San Francisco, LGBT officers were permitted to participat­e in the city’s Pride parades, but banned from wearing their uniforms. The same was true in Aurora, Ill., where the openly gay police chief was famous for marching proudly in his city’s annual parade. Seattle’s PrideFest, meanwhile, told police to stay completely off its festival grounds.

Excluding police from Pride is rooted in the idea that cop-phobia is intrinsic to same-sex attraction — and that the police do not have the LGBT community’s best interests at heart. But that’s hardly the case. For one thing, anti-gay hate crimes in places like New York are rare — there were just 57 reported antiLGBT hate crimes in 2020, down from 107 in 2016, according to the New York State Division of Criminal Justice. And when they do occur, victims often report highly positive interactio­ns with police.

Take New York City’s Cinco de Mayo Dallas BBQ hate crime of 2015. The incident occurred when a young gay man knocked over a fellow patron’s drink on his way out of the Dallas BBQ restaurant in Manhattan. A confrontat­ion ensued, with the other patron uttering an anti-gay slur before cracking a wooden chair over the victim’s head. Bronx resident Bayna-Lekheim El-Amin was later arrested and turned out to be gay himself.

The hate crime investigat­ion was dropped. But after El-Amin’s arrest, the victim, named Jonathan Snipes, wrote on Facebook, “We live in the finest city in the world and have the VERY BEST police officers to match! I am humbled and immensely thankful for their help. Even in the midst of turmoil we feel so blessed to have been shown such compassion.”

Pride began in June 1969 after a routine raid on an illegal gay bar in Greenwich Village resulted in clashes between officers and patrons. The Stonewall uprising, named for the Stonewall Inn where the incident occurred, lasted nearly a week and is widely seen as the starting point of the modern gay rights movement.

Over 50 years later, many on the left now find a convenient parallel between Black Lives Matter and the gay community. They’re trying to make Stonewall all about cop-hatred — if not revising the entire gay movement to insist it has always been “anti-cop.”

But as crime soars nationwide, the tide is turning, and even Democratic mayors are blasting Pride organizati­ons for their stance.

In May, San Francisco Mayor London Breed announced that she would not attend the first in-person Pride parade in two years unless they changed their position. “It’s one of my favorite events of the year,” Breed said. “However, if the Pride Board does not reverse its decision, I will join our city public safety department­s that are not participat­ing in the Pride Parade.”

That same month, New York Mayor Adams condemned the exclusion of uniformed police officers from his city’s parade this Sunday. “Banning officers from wearing their uniforms at Pride is disappoint­ing and contradict­s our freedom of expression,” his spokesman told The Post. Meanwhile, Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin revoked his city’s parade permit because of the police ban, before eventually allowing the event to take place on June 12 after organizers threatened to sue.

This pushback from Democrats suggests the party is finally easing up on the anti-cop rhetoric. Perhaps it’s because their rich donors are fed up with skyrocketi­ng crime in big cities. Or because even President Biden is among party bosses calling the anti-cop “defund the police” crusade a bad move.

Nonetheles­s, many far-left truebeliev­ers aren’t letting go and that’s exacerbati­ng tensions between the slightly more grounded Democratic leadership and its batty rank-andfile. Which is why Pride has now become an annual bullhorn moment for the most vocal, and irritating, base of the far-left progressiv­e movement.

Cops are just the latest target. Their presence at Pride humanizes police officers and the far left can’t have that. Perhaps the vilest aspect of the cop ban is this: In each city that forbids officers from marching, police forces are still required to provide security for the events. For cops, the message is clear: Stick to the sidelines and do your job. Be ashamed — while the rest of us celebrate our pride.

Chadwick Moore is editor-in-chief of Outspoken and contributi­ng editor at The Spectator. His book, “So You've Been Sent to Diversity Training: Smiling Through the DEI Apocalypse,” is out Sept. 27.

 ?? ?? As more Pride parades have banned cops from marching in their uniforms, even some Democrats are pushing back against the anti-cop behavior.
As more Pride parades have banned cops from marching in their uniforms, even some Democrats are pushing back against the anti-cop behavior.
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