Los Angeles Times

The Dodgers found their way back to their queer values

- LZ GRANDERSON

The Dodgers have only themselves to blame for the beating they’ve taken from the left and the right over the decision to first invite to Pride Night — and then disinvite — a charity organizati­on fronted by drag queens dressed as nuns.

The team’s apology to the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence on Monday afternoon doesn’t erase the damage done. The Dodgers tried to have it both ways. But in today’s America, there simply isn’t a lot of bandwidth left for corporatio­ns that shake hands with homophobia in May, then try to hoist rainbow flags in June.

Not even for our friends who eventually come to the right decision.

“We made a mistake,” Dodgers team President Stan Kasten said Monday about disinvitin­g the Sisters. “We have extended a new invitation to the Sisters, and they have accepted.” The team will honor the charity with a Community Hero Award.

The controvers­y started because some — like Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) — find the Sisters’ use of religious imagery offensive. Kasten said the uproar over honoring the organizati­on was a lesson for the Dodgers.

“This is new territory for us,” he said. Facing a pressure campaign, Kasten said, “we weren’t sure what to do, but we wanted to address the issue quickly and we made this judgment too quickly. Before really hearing out all of the people and the points of view, particular­ly from the LGBTQ community whom we’ve had a long and very good relationsh­ip with.”

Indeed, it hasn’t been a year since the team commemorat­ed the life of Glenn Burke, baseball’s first openly gay player, during its last Pride celebratio­n. In recognizin­g the former Dodger, the organizati­on also acknowledg­ed its mistreatme­nt of him, including trading Burke to Oakland in 1977 after he refused the team’s bribe to marry a woman. Sadly, the immensely talented Burke was run out of the league by 1979.

Coincident­ally, that is the same year the Sisters formed. The group uses religious imagery for satire and has used humor to raise money in the fight against HIV/AIDS. It is the same disease that ultimately took Burke’s life in May 1995. The Dodgers invited 40-plus members of the Burke family, trying to heal wounds this current incarnatio­n of the franchise did not cause but wanted to address nonetheles­s. That’s not performati­ve. There are executives in the organizati­on — including Kasten, Lon Rosen, Erik Braverman — whose commitment to equality isn’t just talk.

“It’s a misstep today,” Kasten said about the decision to disinvite the Sisters, “but I am happy we have an opportunit­y to correct it.”

What the Dodgers faced isn’t unique. As the latest skirmishes of the culture war veer into 2024 primary season, businesses that support the LGBTQ+ community have been targeted by opportunis­tic politician­s looking to score points with conservati­ve voters.

Neither side responds well when businesses attempt to avoid these conflicts.

It was on a Tuesday back in 2022 when Disney’s then-chief executive Bob Chapek thought “apolitical” was a good stance to take with his statement on Florida’s antiLGBTQ+ policies. By Wednesday, he was in the center of a hornet’s nest. By Thursday, he was apologizin­g, saying “I understand our political approach, no matter how wellintent­ioned, didn’t quite get the job done.” It sure didn’t.

Bud Light sponsored an Instagram post by a transgende­r influencer in April, pressure came, sales dropped. And then Anheuser Busch’s CEO tried to issue an “apolitical” statement looking for safety: “We never intended to be part of a discussion that divides people. We are in the business of bringing people together over a beer.” Great.

These stances look clueless against the backdrop of hundreds of pieces of legislatio­n across the country targeting LGBTQ+ people. Why on earth would Bud Light or Disney or the Dodgers or any corporate entity believe it could be seen as “fighting for equality” without actually fighting? Read the room. There are mass shootings at gay clubs, endless violence against trans people, laws intended to erase LGBTQ+ from history. Businesses are either invested in change or complicit with the status quo.

Attempting to play both sides counts as the latter.

But companies can see the light and do better.

The Dodgers are a far cry from the team that chose homophobia over Burke decades ago. It is now the organizati­on that hosted a stadium wedding for their senior vice president Braverman and his husband. It is the organizati­on that counts Billie Jean King as an owner. There are a lot of enemies of the LGBTQ+ community. The Dodgers are not one of them. Their real priorities won out when they reinvited the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence to Pride Night.

When Rubio sent a letter to Major League Baseball Commission­er Rob Manfred protesting the Sisters’ inclusion in the event, it read in part: “Baseball has always been tied to our nation’s values, at the heart of which is faith in God.”

I give the senator credit: It takes a lot of gall to lecture the franchise that hosts Jackie Robinson Day every season about the history of baseball’s values. But in the end, Rubio did help the Dodgers find themselves. The flap gave them a chance to show what it really means to fight for equality.

Why on earth would the team believe it could be seen as ‘fighting for equality’ without actually fighting? Businesses are either invested in change or complicit.

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