Battling those supposed transgender demons
Folks on the right are spending lots of their time (and our patience) battling the unseen demons of transgender men and women.
Republicans are rallying around a call to “protect our kids” from learning there are people out there who aren’t exactly like them.
ThatĢƵ a call thatĢƵ illustrative of the lack of any desire to govern.
There are far more compelling issues confronting Americans in 2023.
A 26-year-old transgender influencer isn’t among them.
All it took for there to be a right-wing transgender hubbub was for Anheuser-Busch to feature transgender spokesperson Dylan Mulvaney in a Bud Light commercial on Instagram on April 1.
According to the Washington Post, thatĢƵ when folks on Fox News referred to Mulvaney with “disparaging and often transphobic terms nearly a dozen times over the next three days.”
That, in turn, helped to unleash a torrent of rhetoric against Anheuser-Busch and other national commercial brands (Target, North Face), and the LA Dodgers, for featuring transgender people and clothing as part of their marketing.
I don’t drink Bud Light. Probably because I don’t drink. If I did, I’d throw down a couple of them in protest of their protests.
In the meantime, I’m taking a measure of all of the right-wing conniptions that have become the equivalent of 6-year-olds stomping their itty-bitty feet.
Gone are the days when Republicans groused about “death panels,” “Benghazi,” or “HillaryĢƵ emails.”
They’re now attacking people and the pronouns they use to describe themselves.
There are fewer than 100 trans athletes in a country of over 300 million people. But these days, trans athletes are now under governmental scrutiny.
According to the Human Rights Campaign, there have been 525 pieces of anti-LGBTQ+ legislation introduced this year. And 220 of them target transgender community members.
In 2020, dismantling Black history became a battle cry for candidates around the country.
Next year, you can bet there’ll be campaign speeches dripping with anti-trans rhetoric – to lure votes from parents hoping to protect their children from people who select their own pronouns.
Eric Bolling has his own program on that upstart Newsmax station.
He got so worked up on the air recently that he just blurted out, “I’ll tell you point blank…” (Note: When somebody starts to tell you something “point blank,” look out!) “… I would not be seen holding a Bud Light.”
In one of BollingĢƵ previous diatribes, he expanded his kill shots to include more companies.
“If you’re gonna barbecue, don’t drink Bud Light. If you’re thinking about Target, go to Walmart instead. I don’t know, if you’re going to go to North Face, I’d go to REI,” he said.
Bolling certainly isn’t alone in wishing companies ill because they recognize there are Americans of all stripes who buy their products.
ThereĢƵ Kari Lake, who should probably be enjoying her obscurity as a failed Arizona gubernatorial candidate. Instead, sheĢƵ free to grandstand (for no apparent reason, I might add).
“The people I know, who turn their back on Bud Light, they would rather die of thirst than to take a sip of Bud Light. This is where itĢƵ getting with this stuff,” she said on Newsmax.
WE’RE TALKING ABOUT BEER!
Not life or death. Not the prospects of war. Or not world hunger.
Beer.
I’d like to take Lake up on her bold proclamation.
I’d like to find somebody who is staging a Bud Light boycott. I’d like to take them out in the desert near Phoenix. I’d leave them with nothing to drink, besides a can of Bud Light. I’d like to see them… well, maybe I won’t. But you catch my drift, don’t you?
But now to the crux of this.
There are right-wingers who’re feverishly fighting to shield their children from learning they live in a world where not everybody is like them.
The real problem is those same people have no desire to go to battle against the biggest killer of AmericaĢƵ children – guns.
For that, they remain silent.
Maybe they should boycott gunmakers.
Edward A. Owens is a multi-Emmy Award winner, former reporter, and anchor for Entertainment Tonight, and 50-year TV news and newspaper veteran. E-mail him at freedoms@bellatlantic.net.