Waving the Pride Flag

If you watched or read the news last month, you couldn’t miss some story about “Pride Month.” It was everywhere- all the time.

Most of the stories were about a particular event – like the fiasco on the White lawn – or parade or something with some slant on LBGTQ from a group or participant in one or more of them.

For some reason lately, whether it’s June or not, there’s nary a day that some reference or coverage of LGBTQIA+ isn’t “news.” I guess since the current administration has made a big deal about its support of it, news anchors think the general public must have a burning interest.

As old as I am, I remember when there was a “pride day” – and not a month. And it was about gays, not the expanded version of sexuality we see now. So, let’s look at a little history of the whole “pride” thing.

On June 28, 1970, the first ‘gay pride parade’ was held in New York City. Parades were also held in Chicago, Los Angeles, and San Francisco.

In June 2000, President Clinton officially designated June as Gay and Lesbian Pride Month. An expanded name was chosen in 2009 by President Obama: Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Pride Month.

The origins of Gay Pride Month were also honored by Obama when, in 2016, he created the Stonewall National Monument, a 7.7-acre area around NY’s Stonewall Inn where the modern gay rights movement began.

The expansion of “pride” keeps growing. First it was gays, then bisexuals and transgenders were added. Now queer, questioning, intersex, asexual and A+ are added. One needs a dictionary to know what each letter of the acronym stands for.

We’re told it’s now all about “inclusivity.” It looks to me like the gays have been hijacked. In any case that’s why the pride flag is continually updated.

In 2017, black and brown stripes were added to better represent non-white people in the ‘community.’

In 2018, a multi-colored symbol was added to the flag.

The flag then included black and brown stripes to represent marginalized LGBTQ ‘communities’ of color, along with the colors pink, light blue, and white, which are used on the “Transgender Pride Flag.”

Then, in 2021 there was “a new yellow triangle and purple circle to better represent the intersex community.

Actually, there are even entirely different “pride flags,” including flags for Bisexual Pride, Trans Pride, Lesbian Pride, Pansexual Pride, Asexual Pride, and many more.

The one most often seen now is being called the Progress Pride flag. To see it click on the link below.

https://www.verywellmind.com/what-the-colors-of-the-new-pride-flag-mean-5189173

To go along with the regularly updated flags is the updated LGBTQ term, which is currently is expanded to  LGBTQIAP2S+.

The latest update is meant to include people with autism.  This latest flag has a big multi-colored 8 across the rest of the flag.

If autistic people are now part of this ‘community’ one has to think: what about those with Down syndrome, Tourette’s syndrome, OCD, dementia, etc. etc.?

Where does this inclusiveness stop? What about veterans, military, dog-lovers, foodies, vegans, the obese, amputees?  The list is endless.

One of the so-called big deals last month was sports teams wearing or not wearing a pride flag on their jerseys. In addition, many corporations got involved with their own work forces and support of LBGT… events and parades – “Celebrations.”

There are no hard numbers on each of the groups now represented by LGBTQIAP2S+. Best estimates are 4% of the population is gay while 0.5% is transgender. It would be even smaller percentages for the seven groups that have been added in the last 5-6 years.

But I guess if the really small minority becomes a bigger really small minority, it carries more weight somehow.

Lastly, drag shows.

The school districts and teachers that make drag shows part of the curriculum are way off base. For example, New York: the state and the city, has paid over $200,000 to drag performers for appearances in New York City public schools since 2018. In addition, NYC is currently paying a drag group for Drag Story Hour NYC in its elementary schools.

I don’t hesitate to suggest parents do not send their kids to school to be exposed to drag. I would further speculate the overwhelming parental majority has no interest in taking their children to drag shows off school campuses. I have no idea why this subject is supposedly controversial when it comes to young kids.

Most of us have no problem with the gay/transgender folks who think drag is entertainment. Just leave the rest of us, especially our kids, alone.

Most of us have no problem accepting the non-heterosexual people to have their events, parades and exploits on the White House lawn.

But why are LGBTQIAP2S+ advocates interested in going further into the rest of the culture and religious beliefs? Some kind of moral superiority?

It’s July now.

Enough.

****************

Have a great and prosperous week.

Hug somebody.

References:

https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2023/06/a_perfect_replacement_for_the_everchanging_pride_flag.html

https://www.history.com/topics/gay-rights/pride-month

https://legalinsurrection.com/2022/06/new-york-has-spent-hundreds-of-thousands-on-drag-shows-in-public-schools-since-2018/

SPIDER Bites

This week’s trivia question: Who was the first American woman in space? The answer to last week’s world’s smallest country: The Vatican. The Vatican covers 110 acres. Monaco is 2nd smallest at 510 acres and a casino.

I was fascinated by the story in the June edition of Florida Trend about a Florida startup headed by tech engineer and entrepreneur Trina Chiasson. After dealing with several setbacks including bug viruses and COVID, she now has expanded the company to a 2nd Mississippi location insect farm, primarily raising crickets to substitute for meat protein in pet food.

As retailers try to unload the quantities of Bud Light they found themselves with after the then most popular beer in America tanked subsequent to its partnership with transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney, AB Inbev continues to dig the hole deeper. Instead of just owning up to their stupidity and issuing an apology to America, Bud Light has been conducting a major social media campaign on their Twitter, hoping that tweet after tweet after tweet … after tweet … digs them out of the hole. And it’s failing in absolute flying colors. Question: How to become a failed marketing exec? Answer: Assume your market thinks like you do. AB and other companies are finding the ‘in your face’ folly of adopting the oxymoron “woke capitalism.”

Eligible for EV tax credits? Cars priced above $55,000, and trucks, vans and SUVs priced over $80,000, aren’t eligible for the tax credit. They also must also “undergo final assembly” in the U.S., Canada, or Mexico to be eligible for the credit. So, the auto industry is cranking out more electric vehicles, but there’s one big problem: not enough buyers. EV sales, which account for about 6.5% of the U.S. auto market so far this year, are expected to surpass 1 million units for the first time in 2023. But Cox Automotive reports a 92-day supply — roughly three months’ worth of EVs, and nearly twice the industry average. For comparison, dealers have a relatively low 54 days’ worth of gasoline-powered vehicles in inventory. Despite the government’s ‘socialistic” attempt to create an artificial market, automakers are left waiting for EV buyers to show up. Without the credit, and dependent on the model, it’s estimated to take 8 to 11 years to break even on buying an EV.

U.S. inflation slowed to the weakest pace in more than two years in June, with the CPI – minus food and energy – falling to 3.1%. The market still thinks the Fed will raise interest rates again later this month.

Anchor Brewing, the stalwart San Francisco brewery, is shutting down after 127 years in business.

Bidenomics has the value of the dollar plummeting again. It reached its low in Asia currency markets last week. Meanwhile, President Biden at the NATO summit had trouble distinguishing the Ukraine from Russia. Embarrassing! On the home front, VP Harris explained that AI is a two-word fancy thing, and the Secret Service closed its investigation on cocaine found in the WH without a suspect.

The White House has come out against a provision in the annual defense spending bill that would require the military to base promotion decisions on who is the best candidate for the job, regardless of their race. Here’s a quote used to object: “DoD’s strategic advantage in a complex global security environment is the diverse and dynamic talent pool from which we draw.” What’s sad is merit has to be put in a spending bill. What’s ‘sadder’ is an administration that objects to such a provision.