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If there's a company in America you'd expect to have the gumption and spirit to see off a stupid and specious attack on the selling of LGBTQ+-themed merchandise for Pride Month in June, it would be Target.
After all, the Minneapolis-based company is one of America's biggest retailers, racking up more than $100 billion a year in sales. Only a few weeks ago, its chief executive, Brian Cornell, was boasting that "our long-standing commitment to diversity, and equity, and inclusion … has fueled much of our growth over the last nine years."
Yet when the braying mob of anti-LGBTQ+ reactionaries targeted Target, the company folded like a cheap off-the-rack suit. It told personnel in many stores to shrink or even eliminate their Pride-themed merchandise displays or move them to less conspicuous sections of the stores. Some LGBTQ+ designers say their products have been taken off the shelves.
Target explained its reaction by citing physical threats to its store workers from anti-LGBTQ+ militants. But something more is going on here, and Target's response doesn't show the company in a good light.
The context is a concerted effort from the right wing to demonize the LGBTQ+ movement and thereby make any outreach or even acknowledgement of this community toxic for consumer businesses. The goal is to disappear these people and their advocates, reversing a decades-long trend toward acceptance, equity and inclusion.
The attacks take many forms, all of them chiefly employed by Republicans and their right-wing acolytes and all of them equally factitious.