The Day

How corporatio­ns exploit Pride Month

- By sarah Sylvester Sarah Sylvester is a senior-to-be at McGill University and a resident of East Lyme. She is an intern for The Day’s editorial page. A version of this column first appeared in The Bull & Bear McGill news magazine.

Pride Month is one of my favorite times of the year. Although I would prefer if people appreciate­d the LGBTQ+ community with equal enthusiasm year-round, I adore seeing openly out, closeted, and questionin­g people celebrate who we are and the community’s rich history.

As a young lesbian, I love to witness the symbols that define this month of open appreciati­on for LGBTQ+ people and social progress. There are rainbow crosswalks, merchandis­e, and a plethora of people sharing their beautiful stories and faces on social media. Then, of course, there are the Pride parades, where

I’m comforted by allies that elevate and support our freedom to love who we love and express who we are.

But in the midst of celebratio­n, it is easy for our heterosexu­al peers — even allies — to be blinded by shallow displays of rainbows and LGBTQ+ emblems that undermine the historical feats we take pride in. To corporatio­ns, June is the time to profit off LGBTQ+ icons, consequent­ly minimizing what makes Pride the riotous event it originally was. Block parties and Google Doodles make Pride more digestible for straight people without having to consider the movement’s radical origins.

Pride began as a protest. On the morning of June 28, 1969, the LGBTowned Stonewall Inn in Greenwich Village was raided by police. In response to this unfounded attack, the LGBTQ+ individual­s protested and rioted until July 3, when police were staved off. Multiple activist groups, such as GLAAD (The Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation) were born in the wake of Stonewall. Unfortunat­ely, Stonewall is reduced to “the beginning of Pride” by most outside the community, and those who risked everything to combat persecutio­n are ignored in favor of fashion trends and social media “wokeness.”

We owe the rights we’ve worked so tirelessly to preserve to our predecesso­rs — especially Black and Hispanic transgende­r people — many of whom are credited with founding spaces that devote themselves to the battle against homophobia. But when perusing the seasonal Target Pride, you likely won’t find any substantia­l merchandis­e dedicated to activist history. You’ll certainly come across plenty of rainbows, and perhaps other catchphras­es that vaguely hint towards homosexual­ity (such as, “Love is love,” or simply “Pride”), but you’re unlikely to encounter slogans that discuss HIV/AIDS prevention or campaigns to end conversion therapy.

Why do corporatio­ns like Target avoid realistic depictions of Pride? The answer has been obvious to us LGBTQ+ folk for quite some time; these companies don’t actually care about us. The supposed support of marginaliz­ed individual­s is a cash grab disguised as representa­tion. Think of Valentine’s Day, Christmas, Hanukkah, and nearly all other major holidays; they are more so industries than holidays, and now Pride and Black History Month are being indoctrina­ted into the corporate agenda.

It’s frankly disgusting. LGBTQ+ history had little opportunit­y for celebratio­n and was realistica­lly plagued by hatred, death, and oppression. Corporate rebranding of Pride to cater to straight people and the more “acceptable” members of the community (like white gay men and cisgender people) distorts the true purpose of this month and excludes individual­s that receive comparativ­ely little appreciati­on from society. People who are racialized and identify as LGBTQ+ are principall­y impacted by this ignorance; as Black transgende­r women are being murdered at an unbelievab­le rate, capitalism diverts attention away from these tragedies during prime time to counter normative heterosexu­ality.

Pride is not a gateway to corporate prosperity. It’s a single word and month that embraces and honors the past, present, and future of the LGBTQ+ community. Decades of loved ones lost, protests organized, rights confiscate­d and later repossesse­d, perpetuall­y shadows celebratio­n. Capitalism has objectifie­d our identities and exploited our expression. Pride is not a fad revised to appeal to heteronorm­ative (and market) values. Rather than contributi­ng to a corporatio­n, consider obtaining your Pride merchandis­e from LGBTQ+ and POC-owned businesses that truly value their customers and community.

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