The Morning Call

GOP’s war on LGBTQ kids has shades of ’30s Germany

- By Will Bunch

I’ve been meaning to write a column on the growing threat — and reality — of violence to America’s LGBTQ community posed by right-wing rhetoric and politics, but it’s proved a difficult piece to write. Not because the “culture wars” around sexuality and gender are complicate­d but because new, outrageous incidents keep topping the ones I planned to write about.

Literally as I hit the “send” button on a note to my editors about this column, it was reported that police in Baltimore are investigat­ing multiple fires on a city street as a possible hate crime — which sent three people to the hospital — in which a pride flag celebratin­g LGBTQ rights was reportedly set ablaze.

Officials there had good reason to be alarmed, after the widely reported incident just the weekend before in which 31 members of the white nationalis­t Patriot Front were arrested in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, after piling into a rented U-Haul truck armed with riot gear, apparently with the goal of violently disrupting the annual pride event underway there.

This occurred right after several members of another wellknown violent extremist group, the Proud Boys — some of them wearing T-shirts with images of AK-47s — showed up at the

San Lorenzo, California, public library to disrupt and shut down a “drag queen story time” children’s book event, shouting homophobic slurs.

In America’s statehouse­s, Republican lawmakers are spending all of their time translatin­g hate speech into proposed laws that would make societal pariahs out of transgende­r kids. In chat rooms and militia training sessions, the soldiers of extremism are on the brink of taking all of this to the next blooddrenc­hed level.

The increasing­ly dangerous, violent rhetoric has been amplified to “11” by the likes of Mark Burns, a prominent South Carolina televangel­ist and Donald Trump enthusiast who just ran for Congress (and lost, thankfully) and who said this month that LGBTQ-friendly schoolteac­hers are “a national security threat” guilty of treason, which should be punishable by execution.

In a healthy democracy truly committed to liberty and human rights, our elected leaders would be condemning these shocking calls for violence. Instead, Republican lawmakers are working overtime to figure out how to channel this alarming new far-right zeitgeist into the fake respectabi­lity of law. Pennsylvan­ia’s GOP-led legislatur­e — immediatel­y after the mass shooting in Uvalde, squelches any meaningful debate on gun control while the state Senate was instead passing a blanket ban on transgende­r youth in school sports.

“We are in a day when good is called evil and evil is called good,” claimed one of the bill’s co-sponsors, state Sen. Doug Mastriano, the current Republican nominee for governor. If he wins he would surely sign this legislatio­n into law in 2023. Homophobia — especially against Pennsylvan­ia’s transgende­r community — is a driving force of Mastriano’s movement and, increasing­ly, the Republican Party writ large.

This story is understand­ably shocking to many Americans. When the Supreme Court made same-sex marriage the law of the land with its 2015 Obergefell v. Hodges ruling, it felt to many like the final chapter in an American feel-good story of increasing tolerance. Instead, the epilogue has been a violent wrenching backward of the arc of a moral universe.

In focusing on laws like transgende­r sports bans or Florida’s notoriousl­y and now-copied “Don’t say gay” law, the Republican Party is sending a message that is both heartbreak­ingly cruel to the humans directly affected but also meant to intimidate all people it wants to keep on society’s margin. We have a word for when this type of inhumane bullying becomes the governing philosophy, and it’s time to start using it.

That word is fascism.

The parallels between what happened in Germany in the 1920s — when the short-lived Weimar Republic saw a period of liberalizi­ng and openness around human sexuality — and the 1930s, when the brutal repression of Adolf Hitler’s Nazi Party took root, should be alarming to Americans in the 2020s. In May 1933, right after Hitler took power, students in clean white shirts marched on Berlin’s Institute for Sexual Research — a bastion of Weimar liberalism — which was a prelude to its library being burned down and the arrest of its leader.

By the mid-1930s, Hitler’s Gestapo had formed a unit to arrest gay men under a previously not-enforced law, netting some 8,500 prisoners. As Europe devolved into the horrors of World War II, it’s known that thousands of men accused of homosexual­ity — perhaps as many as 15,000 — did not survive the Nazi death camps.

It can’t happen here? It’s already starting to happen right now, and it’s happening in conjunctio­n with so many other warning signs of creeping fascism: daily, stunning revelation­s of a failed putsch that occurred not inside a beer hall but at the U.S. Capitol, the rise of a political class wedded to a Big Lie that could end democratic elections, and the rise of a Christian nationalis­m that is converting “The Handmaid’s Tale” into a work of nonfiction.

And it’s spiraling out of control in June, a month for rememberin­g the courageous 1969 pioneers of Stonewall, but also the horrors of the backlash that erupted in a hail of gunfire at the Pulse nightclub in 2016. Some 53 years after Greenwich Village and just six years after Orlando, America is on the precipice. There is still — barely — time to grab the arc of the moral universe back from the men in crisp white shirts trying to break it.

 ?? GEORJI BROWN/AP ?? Authoritie­s arrest members of the white supremacis­t group Patriot Front near an Idaho pride event on June 11 after they were found packed into the back of a U-Haul truck with riot gear.
GEORJI BROWN/AP Authoritie­s arrest members of the white supremacis­t group Patriot Front near an Idaho pride event on June 11 after they were found packed into the back of a U-Haul truck with riot gear.

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