Daily Southtown

Focus on Pride in wake of tensions

Advocates: Celebratio­ns key amid attacks on LGBTQ

- By Angie Leventis Lourgos

Carolyn Pinta and her family have been busy constructi­ng a float and getting rainbow-hued decoration­s ready for the Buffalo Grove Pride Parade on Sunday, an annual event launched in 2019 by her daughter Molly, who was 12 at the time.

Yet the mom describes an undercurre­nt of worry and tension surroundin­g this year’s Pride celebratio­n as much of the national political climate grows increasing­ly hostile to the LGBTQ community.

The mounting discrimina­tion, however, has only elevated her commitment to walking in Sunday’s parade — a symbol of LGBTQ acceptance and inclusion amid a wave of political and legal attacks across the country. “It’s terrifying,” she said. Roughly 500 anti-LGBTQ bills are pending in state legislatur­es across the country, predominan­tly in the South and many Midwestern states outside of Illinois, according to an American Civil Liberties Union report that was last updated in late May.

The record-breaking number of measures includes attacks on the freedom of expression of those who identify as LGBTQ, attempts to censor discussion of LGBTQ topics in schools, prohibitio­ns on transgende­r access to public spaces such as bathrooms, and bans on gender-affirming health care for trans kids.

“While not all of these bills will become law, they all cause harm for LGBTQ people,” the report stated.

After facing recent backlash, Target announced last month that it would be removing certain items and making changes to its LGBTQ merchandis­e, as well as moving Pride items from the front to the back of some stores in Southern parts of the country.

Customers reportedly knocked down Pride displays and angrily confronted employees at some locations. Threatenin­g videos taken inside the stores were also posted on social media, according to the company.

“Since introducin­g this year’s collection, we’ve experience­d threats impacting our team members’ sense of safety and well-being while at work,” the company said in a written statement. “Given these volatile circumstan­ces, we are making adjustment­s to our plans.”

In contrast, Illinois is often considered an LGBTQ haven in the Midwest. While elected leaders in other parts of the country have worked to restrict LGBTQ freedoms, lawmakers recently passed several bills aimed at increasing gender inclusivit­y and protecting LGBTQ rights.

But even here, some businesses have come under attack.

Earlier this year, a man yelled homophobic slurs and used a hammer to break the window of a Rogers Park bar, according to police.

And a McHenry County bakery that faced harassment and vandalism after advertisin­g a kid-friendly drag show closed on Wednesday. UpRising Bakery and Cafe in Lake in the Hills discussed the recent backlash — and invoked LGBTQ activism — in its goodbye message to customers on social media.

“As queer activists, employers/employees, innovators, healers, and most importantl­y people, we live and breathe pride 365 days a year,” the business said in a Facebook message announcing its last day. “This is not goodbye. I promise you will be seeing A LOT of our faces and good outcomes will sprout from the hideous actions of so many against us here. This will not continue to happen to people, not while I have a voice and a beating heart.”

The climate has shut down or restricted some Pride events that were slated this month: In Florida, several Pride celebratio­ns have been canceled or limited to attendees 21 and over, citing a law targeting drag shows recently signed by Gov. Ron DeSantis.

But tens of thousands of LGBTQ folks have flocked to Florida for Disney World’s annual Gay Days festivitie­s. The leader of the event, which runs through Sunday, encouraged a large turnout to send a message opposing the state’s discrimina­tory legislatio­n and policies. “Right now is not the time to run. It’s not the time to go away,” said Joseph Clark, CEO of Gay Days Inc. “It’s time to show we are here, we are queer and we aren’t going anywhere.”

The governor has championed a slew of anti-LGBTQ measures, including a so-called don’t say gay law passed last year, barring instructio­n of sexual orientatio­n or gender identity through third grade. This year it was expanded to all grades.

To Pinta, the Florida governor’s emergence as a major Republican contender in the 2024 presidenti­al election is a particular­ly troubling prospect for the future of LGBTQ rights in the nation. She fears his viability as a potential leader of the nation threatens to shift anti-LGBTQ ideology from a fringe minority to the mainstream.

“It somehow gives validity to what these people are saying,” she said. “It’s very scary.”

She’s heard that some folks who previously came to Buffalo Grove’s Pride

Parade have expressed anxiety about attending this year — a fear that’s exacerbate­d by recent local parade violence: A shooter on a rooftop opened fire at the July Fourth parade about 10 miles away in Highland Park last summer, where seven people were killed and more than a dozen were injured.

Pinta said law enforcemen­t will have a stepped-up presence at the Buffalo Grove parade to ensure the safety of attendees. And if some supporters feel they should stay home, she understand­s.

“Those who can stand with us will stand with us,” she said.

‘Trying to protect what we created’

A rainbow Pride flag waves above Buffalo Grove, a northwest suburb of about 43,000.

A few dozen community members, state officials and local leaders gathered Thursday at a public park in Buffalo Grove for a flag-raising ceremony to kick off Pride month, which is celebrated in June to commemorat­e the Stonewall riots, a 1969 uprising spurred by a police raid of a gay bar in New York.

Various parades, picnics and festivals supporting LGBTQ acceptance are scheduled this month throughout the Chicago area, including the Chicago Pride Parade on June 25.

At the Buffalo Grove flag-raising, resident Hetal Wallace described a sense of “urgency” to hosting and attending these kind of Pride events this year, because of the wave of discrimina­tion and bigotry facing the LGBTQ community.

“We’re trying to protect what we created here,” said Wallace, who is also a member of the Buffalo Grove Park Board of Commission­ers. “I think there’s an urgency to make sure that we protect it with all our strength.”

While LGBTQ discrimina­tion has been on the rise, this is not “indicative of a nationwide shift on attitudes toward queer communitie­s,” said Ryan Wade, assistant professor at the School of Social Work at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, whose research areas include a focus on LGBTQ communitie­s.

“Acceptance of, and support for, LGBTQ rights has steadily risen over time, with more and more individual­s identifyin­g as LGBTQ themselves,” he added.

A Gallup poll released last year found just over 7% of American adults self-identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgende­r or “something other than heterosexu­al,” more than double the percentage that reported an LGBTQ identity a decade prior. The poll forecast that this will increase to more than 10% of the nation “in the near future,” based on previous data.

The majority of adults in the United States oppose discrimina­tion based on sexual orientatio­n or gender identity, according to a survey released in December by NORC at the University of Chicago. About three-quarters of those polled were in favor of civil rights laws that protect LGBTQ folks from discrimina­tion; more than 70% supported marriage equality and adoption rights for gay and lesbian couples.

Fifty-eight percent of respondent­s approve of allowing parents to allow gender-affirming health care for transgende­r children, the survey said.

“These findings continue to demonstrat­e that the majority of Americans support key civil rights for LGBTQ people,” a senior research scientist at NORC said in a statement about the survey.

Wade attributes the wave of recent LGBTQ discrimina­tion to “certain policymake­rs” who are “looking for easy targets to scapegoat, and have manipulate­d their constituen­ts into believing that LGBTQ communitie­s (and others) are some sort of nebulous threat.”

The goal, though, is to distract voters from “real structural problems, and the lack of policy solutions to these problems,” Wade said.

The uptick in antiLGBTQ legislatio­n and political attacks can also be ascribed in part to the looming contentiou­s 2024 presidenti­al election, said Susan Burgess, senior profession­al lecturer in political science at DePaul University and the author of the book “LGBT Inclusion in American Life,” which was released earlier this year.

“That’s particular­ly the case for the Republican base,” where some elected officials are using anti-gay rights legislatio­n and rhetoric to try and “distinguis­h themselves within their party,” she said.

This doesn’t reflect the values and politics of the nation’s majority, she said.

“It’s a loud minority, but it’s a minority, nationally,”

 ?? SHANNA MADISON/CHICAGO TRIBUNE PHOTOS ?? Mark Silgalis, right, and children Audrey and Xander Silgali, watch the pride flag-raising ceremony Thursday in Buffalo Grove.
SHANNA MADISON/CHICAGO TRIBUNE PHOTOS Mark Silgalis, right, and children Audrey and Xander Silgali, watch the pride flag-raising ceremony Thursday in Buffalo Grove.
 ?? ?? Bob and Carolyn Pinta raise the pride flag during a ceremony Thursday in Buffalo Grove. The ceremony serves as the kickoff to Pride Month festivitie­s.
Bob and Carolyn Pinta raise the pride flag during a ceremony Thursday in Buffalo Grove. The ceremony serves as the kickoff to Pride Month festivitie­s.

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