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The Far-Right Attacked Drag Events in 4 States This Weekend

  
Via:  Ender  •  2 years ago  •  18 comments

By:   Tess Owen

The Far-Right Attacked Drag Events in 4 States This Weekend
Protests against drag events have been an almost weekly occurrence this year. This weekend was no different.

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Neo-Nazis, Proud Boys, militiamen, Christian nationalists, and culture warriors in at least four states mobilized to shut down and intimidate events involving drag queens over the weekend. 

In Columbus, Ohio, a Unitarian Church was forced to cancel a planned Drag Queen Story Hour event when Proud Boys and a coalition of other far-right groups showed up to intimidate it. 

At least 50 Proud Boys showed up in their “colors,” some of whom wore tactical vests and covered their faces with masks and ski goggles, according to videos posted to social media by videographer Brendan Gutenschwager. 

About 30 members of the white nationalist group Patriot Front also joined the fray, as well as a group of armed men in camouflage. 

About 15 others affiliated with the network “White Lives Matter” showed up waving their flag—a white square with a cross in the corner—and performed Hitler salutes. Some members of that group also held a large homemade banner that read “Groomers Not Welcome.” A group of counterprotesters also showed up; at one point police had to intervene in some heated verbal exchanges between Proud Boys and counterprotesters, according to Gutenschwager.

It’s been two weeks since a 22-year-old gunman’s deadly attack on a drag queen’s birthday celebration at an LGBTQ club in Colorado Springs left five dead, but family-friendly drag queen events have been targeted by far-right extremists for years. This year in particular, those attacks have become more persistent and sinister in nature, as the entire Right—fringe militants, to Fox News, to “Libs of TikTok,” and the GOP—coalesced around anti-LGBTQ rhetoric. These groups have seized on not just drag queen story hours but also  LGBTQ characters in Disney movies  and even  LGBTQ teachers  wearing Pride badges to school, to push baseless claims about “grooming” children. These narratives have even influenced legislation. State and federal lawmakers have filed  record numbers  of bills taking aim at LGBTQ rights this year. Recent bills filed in Tennessee and Idaho explicitly seek to ban public drag shows. 

All this has created ripe conditions for emboldened fringe groups to put boots on the ground and take matters into their own hands—and in the case of the shooting at Club Q, with potentially deadly consequences. 

Meanwhile, protests against drag events have been an almost weekly occurrence this year. This weekend was no different. 

In Lakeland, Florida, members of NatSoc Florida, a new white supremacist group, dressed in their red and black uniform, gathered outside a venue where a family-friend music, art and drag show was taking place and waved swastika flags and a white Lives Matter flag. 

Also in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, uniformed Proud Boys joined forces with the local “Moms for Liberty” chapter for an “anti-grooming rally.” Moms for Liberty is part of a national right-wing network that takes aim at things like “critical race theory,” exposure to LGBTQ education, and COVID-19 restrictions in schools. Also present were a right-wing group “Gays Against Groomers.” 

Far-right activists also targeted three separate drag queen events in New York over the weekend. Members of an anti-semitic, Holocaust-denying group called the Goyim Defence League tried to disrupt a Drag Story Hour event at the Lincoln Center in Manhattan and ended up facing off with about a dozen counterprotesters,  according to  freelance videographer Oliya Scootercaster. 

About 20 far-right activists also protested a Drag Queen story hour event   in Staten Island , and a smaller group showed up to a similar event at the Jewish Children’s Museum in   Oceanside in Long Island, New York,   where they were outnumbered by counterprotesters. 

Proud Boys in the Chicago area menaced the organizers of a slated drag show in the suburb of Aurora by posting information about the event and  threatening to dox performers . Members of the group never showed, but about 50 antifascists and other community organizers did.

Plans for this year’s annual Christmas parade in Taylor, Texas, which took place this weekend, were thrown into disarray when religious leaders complained about the involvement of drag queens in last year’s event. The city ultimately had to come up with a compromise: religious leaders, who wanted all parade floats to reflect “traditional and biblical family values,”  according to   The Washington Post,  would hold their own parade, and the city would sponsor a separate parade.

And in Southern Pines, North Carolina, far-right protesters secured a permit to protest outside a theater ahead of a drag show called “Downtown Divas” on Saturday night. Police erected barricades and put up signs saying that weapons were banned from the vicinity of the event. About 50 protesters showed up. They prayed and held signs saying things like “this is porn not female impersonators,”   according to The Pilot.  

Drag queen Naomi Dix told   The Washington Post   that she’d received threats leading up to the event. So when the power went out at the venue—and across Moore County—organizers and performers immediately feared that they were under attack. 

Investigators say that the power outage was due to an individual or individuals shooting deliberately into two substations, and that it appears “targeted.” The sheriff says that they’re exploring the possibility that the drag show was the intended target but haven’t identified any clear links yet. The FBI have also joined the investigation.


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Ender
Professor Principal
1  seeder  Ender    2 years ago
Recent bills filed in Tennessee and Idaho explicitly seek to ban public drag shows.

Christian fascists at it again...

 
 
 
Ender
Professor Principal
2  seeder  Ender    2 years ago

Seems like Florida is becoming a cesspool of right wing hate.

 
 
 
Split Personality
Professor Guide
3  Split Personality    2 years ago

Ironic isn't it.

All these men dressing up like GI Joe

to intimidate 

All these men dressing up like women.

Which group has the most issues? /S

 
 
 
devangelical
Professor Principal
3.1  devangelical  replied to  Split Personality @3    2 years ago

GI joe homophobe.

 
 
 
bbl-1
Professor Quiet
4  bbl-1    2 years ago

Interesting.  And Putin has just upped the punishment and strengthened laws against anything not heterosexual.  Is the US right wing an arm of Putin's autocracy?

 
 
 
Ender
Professor Principal
4.1  seeder  Ender  replied to  bbl-1 @4    2 years ago

How does one even argue with idiots that think God tells them to be bigots.

 
 
 
bbl-1
Professor Quiet
4.1.1  bbl-1  replied to  Ender @4.1    2 years ago

And never explain which god or goddess they are referring to.

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
5  Kavika     2 years ago

America's version of Iran's ''Morality Police''.

 
 
 
Trout Giggles
Professor Principal
6  Trout Giggles    2 years ago
l ans for this year’s annual Christmas parade in Taylor, Texas, which took place this weekend, were thrown into disarray when religious leaders complained about the involvement of drag queens in last year’s event. The city ultimately had to come up with a compromise: religious leaders, who wanted all parade floats to reflect “traditional and biblical family values,”  according to The Washington Post,  would hold their own parade, and the city would sponsor a separate parade.

Is that petty or what? Can't share the parade with others who don't think like them so they go off and have their own parade. Did these "paragons of virtue" forget that Christmas and its symbology is mostly pagan? I really hate jerks like this

 
 
 
Ronin2
Professor Quiet
7  Ronin2    2 years ago

[Deleted, meta]

How many people were injured, killed, or maimed in these attacks? How many were arrested and charges.

[Deleted]

 
 
 
Drakkonis
Professor Guide
7.1  Drakkonis  replied to  Ronin2 @7    2 years ago

Noticed that as well. Also, they link the Q  LGBTQ club shooting in Colorado in with this, even though I haven't been able to find anything that suggests the guy is either left, right or center in his views or why he was even there in the first place. 

On the other hand, while I don't mind people protesting drag shows, not a fan of extreme right groups doing anything at all, even protesting things like this. 

 
 
 
Jack_TX
Professor Quiet
7.2  Jack_TX  replied to  Ronin2 @7    2 years ago
removed for context
 
 
 
Ender
Professor Principal
7.3  seeder  Ender  replied to  Ronin2 @7    2 years ago

So one cannot be verbally attacked?   Uh huh...

 
 
 
pat wilson
Professor Participates
8  pat wilson    2 years ago

I support political protest but are tactical gear and assault weapons necessary to make your opinion known ? It makes them look really stupid.

 
 
 
devangelical
Professor Principal
8.1  devangelical  replied to  pat wilson @8    2 years ago

it would be an absolute necessity if those worthless fucks ever tried that shit in my state.

 
 
 
Drinker of the Wry
Senior Expert
8.1.1  Drinker of the Wry  replied to  devangelical @8.1    2 years ago

Is that in your imaginative state?

 
 
 
Greg Jones
Professor Participates
9  Greg Jones    2 years ago

[deleted]

 
 
 
Jeremy Retired in NC
Professor Expert
10  Jeremy Retired in NC    2 years ago
Drag queen Naomi Dix told      The Washington Post      that she’d received threats leading up to the event. So when the power went out at the venue—and across Moore County—organizers and performers immediately feared that they were under attack.

Washington Post running with conspiracy theories again.  Moore County NC:

Officials will not say if they’re looking at any connections to this incident and domestic extremism, saying they don’t want to jeopardize the investigation.

I'm pretty sure those investigating the other instances have a similar statement.  But let's continue with run with conspiracy theories.

 
 

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