In the past few days, I noticed that
my friend, James Holcomb, was upset about an incident that happened during the
25th Annual Capital City Pride in Olympia, Washington. The first post I saw from him was a
photo of a sign saying, “BANNED FROM PRIDE FOR BEING A GAY LIBERTARIAN.”
After being
unable to get any of the local media to cover his experiences at Pride, TheBlaze interviewed him. If an online
magazine says “liberal” in a way that is meant to be derogatory, I do my best
to avoid them. Many times has The Blaze
said “liberal” in a derogatory manner. Hence, I do my best to avoid them. That
doesn’t mean I completely shut them out, as there are a few articles here and
there that legitimately catch my interest. Despite my general distaste for TheBlaze, the coverage of James’ Capital
City Pride experience is well illustrated.
As detailed
on TheBlaze and by talking with
James, we know that the Libertarian Party of Washington State booked and paid
for a table weeks before Capital City Pride. Despite wanting to have a speaker,
they were not given permission. The LPWA has been able to table at Pride for
four years in a row, with no issues. James asked the chairwoman, Anna Schlecht,
if members could open carry because there had been a problem at Seattle Pride – not
with the LPWA, but with a demo regarding a person named Sparkles. (Interestingly enough, there is no problem with open carry at Whatcom County Pride.) He wanted
to be able to tell the rule to the volunteers, just in case – “knowing the
nature of libertarians.” Upon asking, James and the LPWA were asked to never
return.
Neither
James nor the LPWA were involved with the open carry protestors. James stood at
a corner alone for five hours, protesting with his sign by himself. He
attracted attention – he was called “racist” several times, but he also had
productive conversations with some strangers. According to him, some who were
against the open carry group came to tell him off as well, but once they heard
his story, felt bad for him.
In a bit of
a tangent, I am bothered by how very few other people seem to be irked by the
bi-shaming experienced by the member of the open carry group. Bi/pansexuals
have enough to deal with, excluding the harassment from fellow queers and “allies.”
During
James’ experience and since then, my Facebook newsfeed has been filled with
anger towards what happened with him and the LPWA, as well as dismay of how the
people at Pride are not tolerant of the 2nd Amendment and open
carry, and why they should be. I believe that that is a completely different
story. Personally, I have no problem with people (responsibly) open carrying,
but I can understand how an event organizer may be uncomfortable with allowing
that when attendees may become irritated or feel unsafe. Let’s face it – those
kinds of crowds are mostly liberals and leftists, who believe in no or limited
firearm freedom. A lot of libertarians probably agree with the protestors from
the open carry group (but hopefully not their tactics and rowdiness), but I am
clarifying now that this is not what I am writing about. And again, the LPWA and open carry group are unaffiliated.
No one
should be able to argue that Capital City Pride had the right to not allow open
carriers at their event. As a private institution, it was within their rights
to turn away open carriers. You can argue if it was the right thing to do,
followed by many-a-debate about whether or not the 2nd Amendment is
obsolete. Even if there was not a mix-up between the LPWA and open carry
organization, could Pride not allow an organization with certain views to
table? Certainly. However, if this particular view was not in display (whether
through pamphlets and other educational materials or by someone open carrying)
and has no bigoted background, one should question the motivation of enforcing
such rules.
When I
asked James why he worded the sign the way he did, he responded with, “I’m not
the right kind of gay.” The gay who is pro-open carry. The gay who is
Libertarian.
The fact
that the LPWA was even allowed to table at Capital City Pride shows for a fact
that Pride did not openly discriminate towards Libertarians. James is not
entirely sure if they would have been allowed to table if the mix-up had not
happened. According to him, Schechter does not like the LPWA and would not
allow them to have a speaker at the event (this was weeks before the open carry
fiasco). In other words, they were keen on finding an excuse to give the LPWA
the boot. It still comes to question why the LPWA was allowed to table in the
first place if they perceived that they are hated so much. (Revenue?) Not every
aspect of this story will ever truly be clear to us.
Capital
City Pride discriminated against open carriers, which means they discriminated
against Libertarians. They discriminated against conservatives. They
discriminated against any other group that believes in open carry. But how is
discriminating against a conservative open carry advocate different from a
Libertarian open carry advocate? Historically, the Libertarian Party was the
first major party to announce support for gay marriage, and include it in their
platform. John Hospers, who was the first presidential candidate for the Libertarian
party (1972), was the first openly gay man to run for president. (He and the vice-presidential candidate, Tonie Nathan, received an electoral vote, making Nathan the first female candidate in United States history to receive one.)
Pride made the choice to do away with an ally that has been supporting gay
marriage for longer than the two major political parties, as well as the gay
man who is a member of the Libertarian Party, who believes in 2nd
Amendment rights. They kicked out an organization that is on their side and
paid money weeks beforehand for their table because of their unwillingness to
have open carriers at the event, ignoring the fact that they had probably made
a mix-up with the LPWA and open carry group. The event organizers, whether you
agree with their decisions or not, handled the dismissal immaturely and
unprofessionally. If they realized a mix-up had been made, they were probably
too hateful, stubborn, or feeble-minded to make amends.
Capital
City Pride discriminated against Libertarians in a way that other private
entities discriminate subtly (and sometimes under-the-law). If a business does
not want to hire an older person, they will look for someone “not planning to
retire.” And so on. James and the LPWA were not the “right kind of gay” – the
kind that shares the same views on a variety of issues – and done away with. It
is something libertarians, especially progressive libertarians, have to
regularly deal with.
Whether or
not you agree with the wording of James’ sign and that Capital City Pride
discriminated against Libertarians, you have to admit that seeing his sign was
quite the conversation starter…and that the event organizers for Capital City
Pride are major assholes.
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