Houston Chronicle Sunday

Transgende­r Americans feel under siege as political vitriol increases

- By Maggie Astor

Alejandra Caraballo is used to seeing anti-transgende­r hatred.

As an LGBTQ ri ghts advocate and a transgende­r woman, she has received death threats, and her and her family members’ personal informatio­n has been published. When she goes to her favorite bar in New York, she sometimes wonders what she would do if someone came in shooting.

But last weekend, it became too much. Members of the Proud Boys and other extremist groups, many of them armed, converged outside a planned drag event in Columbus, Ohio. Neo-Nazis protested another event in Lakeland, Fla. There was an antiLGBTQ rally in South Florida, also attended by the Proud Boys. All of this just two weeks after the killing of five people — two of them transgende­r, a third gay — at an LGBTQ club in Colorado Springs, Colo.

“I had a full panic attack and breakdown,” said Caraballo, a clinical instructor at the Cyberlaw Clinic at Harvard Law School. “It’s one thing knowing there’s this extremist hate on the internet and seeing it in the abstract, and I can kind of compartmen­talize. When this hate becomes manifested in real-life violence and there’s a celebratio­n of it, is when it becomes too much to stomach.”

It was one more month in a year in which intimidati­on and violence against gay and transgende­r Americans has spread — driven heavily, extremism experts say, by inflammato­ry political messaging.

Since far-right social media activists began attacking Boston Children’s Hospital over the summer for providing care for transgende­r children, the hospital has received repeated bomb threats. Doctors across the country who do similar work have been harassed. The Justice Department charged a Texas man this month with threatenin­g a Boston doctor; it also recently charged at least two others with threatenin­g anti-gay or anti-transgende­r attacks.

Twelve times as many anti-LGBTQ incidents have been documented this year as in 2020, according to the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project, which tracks political violence.

“Being a trans person in particular in this country right now is walking around thinking that it’s possible this could happen any day,” said Sam Ames, director of advocacy and government affairs at the Trevor Project, an LGBTQ suicide prevention organizati­on, adding, “We are hearing every day from trans youth who are being impacted by that political rhetoric.”

The rise in threats has accompanie­d an increasing­ly vitriolic political conversati­on.

Over the past couple of years, it has become routine for conservati­ves to liken transgende­r people and their allies to pedophiles, and to equate discussion of gender identity with “grooming” children for sexual abuse — part of an intensifyi­ng push, reminiscen­t of campaigns against gay rights dating back to the 1970s, to turn increasing visibility of transgende­r Americans into a political wedge.

Just before Florida prohibited instructio­n related to sexual orientatio­n and gender identity in kindergart­en through third grade, Christina Pushaw, a spokespers­on for Gov. Ron DeSantis, called the ban an “anti-grooming bill.” Sen. Ted Cruz, RTexas, has accused President Joe Biden of supporting “genital mutilation of children.” Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., declared that “communist groomers” wanted to “allow a for-profit medical industry to chop off these confused children’s genitals.”

Representa­tives for Cruz and Greene — both of whose comments falsely characteri­zed the treatment transgende­r minors receive — did not respond to requests for comment. Pushaw said, “My tweet did not mention transgende­r people.”

Effective tactics

Conservati­ves say they are trying to protect children from irreversib­le treatments and ensure women’s sports remain fair; in midterm election ads, right-wing groups argued that transition care amounted to “radical gender experiment­s” and that allowing transgende­r athletes to compete on teams matching their gender identity would “destroy girls’ sports.” (The treatments offered to transgende­r children are endorsed by medical associatio­ns and have been shown to reduce suicide risk, and few transgende­r women and girls seek to participat­e in women’s and girls’ sports.)

Wes Anderson, a Republican pollster, said he believed those two arguments could pose a “liability” for Democrats — though, he said, they were far from priorities for voters this year.

But experts on political violence say incendiary language has made attacks more likely.

“We know that they are animated by what they’re seeing in online spaces,” Oren Segal, vice president of the Anti-Defamation League’s Center on Extremism, said of antiLGBTQ attackers. “Those online narratives, the propaganda that is disseminat­ed by these bad actors, is informed and often legitimize­d by other voices in our public discussion, whether it’s elected officials or others.”

The false specter of child abuse has long been a way for anti-LGBTQ campaigns to attract “people who otherwise would not join what they consider a homophobic movement,” said Eric Gonzaba, an assistant professor of American studies at California State University, Fullerton, and co-chair of the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgende­r History.

It gained prominence 45 years ago, when singer Anita Bryant founded Save Our Children. Accusing gay people of “recruiting” children, the group persuaded voters in Miami-Dade County, Fla., to repeal an anti-discrimina­tion ordinance months after it was passed. Then the movement took its case nationwide.

“Her rhetoric was almost always about the sexualized danger of gay men against children,” said Tina Fetner, a professor of sociology at McMaster University who has studied how the religious right shaped LGBTQ activism. “That’s ‘grooming.’ They have a new term for it now, but it’s the same rhetoric.”

The argument resurfaced in 1992, when two ballot measures sought to ban similar anti-discrimina­tion protection­s. One, in Colorado, passed but was struck down by the Supreme Court. The other — which would have forbidden Oregon to promote “homosexual­ity, pedophilia, sadism or masochism” and required “a standard for Oregon’s youth which recognizes that these behaviors are abnormal, wrong, unnatural and perverse” — did not pass.

These tactics have been used and reused because they can work politicall­y. But history and current events suggest limits.

Bryant’s group stoked a backlash that temporaril­y blocked anti-discrimina­tion laws, but did not stop society’s gradual movement toward accepting gay Americans. In fact, historians say, it galvanized LGBTQ people to organize more forcefully.

“There’s just incredible resilience and resistance that come out of these moments of hatred and vilificati­on,” said Jen Manion, a professor of history and of sexuality, women’s and gender studies at Amherst College.

Republican­s underperfo­rmed in this year’s midterms, and several candidates who focused on transgende­r issues did poorly. Tudor Dixon leaned hard on them but lost the Michigan governor’s race by double digits. The American Principles Project, a super PAC, spent about $15 million on related ads in contests that Republican­s also largely lost. (Representa­tives for Dixon did not comment, and the super PAC did not respond to an interview request for its president.)

‘Stoke the hate’

In a post-election memo, Paul Cordes, chief of staff for the Michigan Republican Party, blasted Dixon’s campaign and backers for running “more ads on transgende­r sports than inflation, gas prices and bread and butter issues that could have swayed independen­t voters.”

Jim Hobart, a Republican pollster, said transgende­r sports participat­ion simply wasn’t a priority for voters.

“This is not the type of issue that helps Republican­s win elections,” Hobart said.

Conservati­ve commentato­rs, however, have continued to focus on it. Tucker Carlson had a guest on his Fox News show after the Colorado shooting who said violence would continue unless transgende­r advocates’ “evil agenda” stopped. Commentato­r Matt Walsh told his 1.2 million Twitter followers that people were “soulless demons” if they responded to the attack by denouncing those “who don’t think children should be exposed to drag shows.” (Many drag performanc­es aren’t sexual.)

In the three days after the Colorado nightclub shooting, interactio­ns with public Facebook posts mentioning “pedophiles” rose 613 percent, and interactio­ns with posts mentioning “groomers” rose 74 percent, according to the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, a think tank.

And after a year in which local officials removed books that discussed gender identity from libraries, states passed more than 15 bills targeting transgende­r people, and Texas opened abuse investigat­ions against parents whose children received transition care, lawmakers are preparing more antiLGBTQ bills for next year.

Many focus on transition care for minors; some would even restrict care for adults up to age 21. Others would restrict drag shows.

A pre-filed bill in Montana, titled “Prohibit minors from attending drag shows,” offers a glimpse of what these legislativ­e debates may look like.

“To put forward a bill targeting drag shows right after a mass shooting at a club that hosts drag-queen story hours is to further stoke the hate that is going to get my community killed,” said Zooey Zephyr, a Democrat just elected as the first openly transgende­r legislator in Montana. She said that friends had killed themselves in the past two years, in which Montana lawmakers voted to restrict transgende­r sports participat­ion and tried unsuccessf­ully to restrict transition care, and that others had left the state.

Zephyr said she had spoken with several Republican­s who did not want to pass bills focused on transgende­r or gendernonc­onforming people. One, state Rep. Mallerie Stromswold, said in an interview that she found her party’s focus on these issues “dishearten­ing.”

The bill’s sponsor, state Rep. Braxton Mitchell, a Republican, responded to a request for comment by asking why it was “all of the sudden a critical requiremen­t for someone in drag to be in every school,” but would not provide an example of any official calling for that. He described drag shows as adult entertainm­ent; while some are, many are “story hours” where performers read books.

 ?? Daniel Brenner/New York Times ?? Mourners attend a vigil at All Souls Unitarian Universali­st Church after a mass shooting on Nov. 20 at Club Q in Colorado Springs, Colo., killed five people.
Daniel Brenner/New York Times Mourners attend a vigil at All Souls Unitarian Universali­st Church after a mass shooting on Nov. 20 at Club Q in Colorado Springs, Colo., killed five people.

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