(C) Wisconsin Watch
This story was originally published by Wisconsin Watch and is unaltered.
. . . . . . . . . .



Wisconsin LGBTQ+ history: Hate rises when acceptance grows [1]

['Jeff Bollier', 'Green Bay Press-Gazette', 'Natalie Eilbert', 'More Jeff Bollier', 'More Natalie Eilbert', 'Government Watchdog Reporter', 'Wisconsin Watch']

Date: 2023-10-20 10:59:00+00:00

Reading Time: 5 minutes

This story was produced as part of the NEW (Northeast Wisconsin) News Lab, a consortium of six news outlets covering northeastern Wisconsin.



Wisconsin Watch is a member of the network. Subscribe to our newsletter to get our investigative stories and Friday news roundup.

Wisconsin’s LGBTQ+ residents in recent years have faced a wave of harassment, threats and legislation that aim to erode support and growing acceptance.

In 2023 alone, about 650 anti-LGBTQ+ bills have been introduced across the country; at least 574 are specifically anti-trans. Such bills seek to block transgender people from access to basic health care, education, legal recognition or the right to publicly exist.

And on Oct. 12, the Wisconsin Assembly passed three bills that would ban gender-affirming care for minors and bar transgender girls and women from competing on high school and college women’s sports teams. The Senate on Tuesday voted to pass the bill barring medical procedures for minors, while the other two bills have yet to go to the full Senate for a vote. Democratic Gov. Tony Evers vowed he would veto all three of the bills if they reached his desk.

Related Story Wisconsin’s transgender bill hearings were full of misinformation. Here are the facts. Republicans have proposed banning gender-affirming care for transgender youth and regulating transgender participation in high school and college sports.

But the current deluge of anti-LGBTQ+ activity across Wisconsin doesn’t stop at the state Capitol. It also includes book bans, the diminishment of affirming spaces, court-sanctioned rights to deadname and misgender youth, pride event protests and social media-fueled pressure campaigns. They target LGBTQ+ people, sponsors, safe spaces and support networks.

These efforts can have devastating effects, but are not new.

Wisconsin’s LGBTQ+ people have, since the 1880s, endured a cycle where new rights, growing acceptance and public popularity are inevitably met with a loud, demeaning, often-violent backlash. Sometimes the issues and foci changed over the last 150 years, but the pattern has not, said Michail Takach, a Wisconsin LGBTQ+ historian, author and co-host of the “Be Seen” podcast, which documents Wisconsin’s LGBTQ+ history.

“The mainstreaming of LGBT content or events followed by this attack and moral outrage, this cycle has repeated the last two centuries over and over and over,” Takach said. “As drag, as the LGBT rights movement has achieved some wins and high visibility, this outrage has expressed itself. It’s what always happens.”

Frequent targets of threats, disinformation

The swarm of threats, disinformation, misinformation, attacks, protests and public action impacts most corners of Wisconsin.

Related Story Green Bay area LGBTQ+ youth, families overcome hate to find support N.E.W. Pride, the Green Bay area’s annual LGBTQ+ community gathering, became a microcosm of the national debate over LGBTQ+ rights and families’ need for support.

Whether policies like this get enacted or survive legal challenges, the damage is already done for a majority of LGBTQ+ youth. Nearly two in three LGBTQ+ youth said hearing about potential LGBTQ+ bans at the local or state level dramatically worsens their mental health, according to a 2023 survey from the Trevor Project.

An American Psychological Association report on psychological harm noted upticks in suicide attempts, anxiety and depression in LGBTQ+ youth, especially trans youth, who are constantly besieged by debates on their right to exist.

“Young trans people today are experiencing a tremendous amount of anxiety,” wrote APA President Thema Bryant in the report. “There is a sense of not feeling safe. This increased sense of animosity toward this already vulnerable population is even affecting those living in states where antitransgender legislation isn’t even on the table.”

In light of recent legislative attacks on LGBTQ+ youth, the Evers administration proclaimed Oct. 17 “Rise Up for LGBTQ+ Youth Day” throughout the state. The campaign, orchestrated by the national Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network, commonly referred to as GLSEN, invites individuals to make a pledge advocating for the rights of LGBTQ+ youth, be they safe learning environments, affirming curricula and the rejection of anti-LGBTQ+ bills and rhetoric.

“I want LGBTQ folks, including our trans kids, to know they are welcome, wanted, and belong here in Wisconsin, and I will keep fighting every day to continue our work to build a state where they feel safe, supported, and loved being exactly who they are,” Evers said in a press release.

Wisconsin’s first drag show happened in Milwaukee in 1884

In 1884, Francis Leon, aka “The Only Leon,” and his boyfriend Edwin Kelly brought their world-renowned drag troupe to Milwaukee and put the growing city on the cultural map. The performance predated the advent of plumbing or electricity in the city.

In 1899, Milwaukee police arrested Millie Brown, also known as Harry Hynes, for living life as a woman, and she spent 60 days in jail. Without evidence, police speculated Brown and others “masquerading” as women were planning a crime spree.

In the 1920s and ’30s, drag queens, then called “pansy performers,” gained popularity in cities across the U.S. The “pansy craze” increased visibility for LGBTQ+ people until 1933-34 when Catholics led a push to ban and reduce the presence of LGBTQ+ people in public life.

Drag performers routinely entertained straight audiences at nightclubs in cities like Milwaukee in the 1950s, but the performers’ popularity was met with “three-piece laws.” Although never an official law, the rule emboldened police to coerce people into showing their genitals if they were seen wearing three articles of clothing of the opposite sex. Such overexertion by police encouraged opponents to wield power over trans people, according to trans historian and author Susan Stryker.

Wisconsin LGBTQ History Project historian Michail Takach (Courtesy of Michail Takach)

“This rule, which may or may not have ever existed, terrorized gender non-conforming people in cities all over the nation,” Takach said. “It was simply a way to control behavior through fear.”

Fear is the name of the game for many of the loudest protesters. But for Mel Freitag, an LGBTQ+ health educator and advocate, it stems from a fear of losing control and power. That fear comes at a time when the LGBTQ+ population is diversifying and growing rapidly, especially for people under 30.

“As those identities become less dominant — literally not the majority — there’s going to be major systemic resistance,” Freitag said. “And we’re not going away, regardless of how we identify. More and more of us will continue to present outside the binary, whether or not people believe we exist.”

Takach said the volume of these attacks and attention they receive gives the perception of a loud, outsize group when in fact they’re a dwindling minority.

“This last gasp of conservative outrage and pearl-clutching morality appears to be the prevailing voice, but it’s not,” Takach said. “A one-time moral majority is losing their foothold, losing their grasp on the national narrative. It’s all happening out of fear, a fear of losing control, of losing power, of losing relevance. In the meantime, the most vulnerable people in our community don’t have the resources to fight back.”

This story is part of the NEW (Northeast Wisconsin) News Lab’s fourth series, “Families Matter,” covering issues important to families in the region.

Republish This Story Republish our articles for free, online or in print, under a Creative Commons license.

Close window X Republish this article This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. Scroll down to copy and paste the code of our article into your CMS. The codes for images, graphics and other embeddable elements may not transfer exactly as they appear on our site. *** Also, the code below will NOT copy the featured image on the page. You are welcome to download the main image as a separate element for publication with this story. *** You are welcome to republish our articles for free using the following ground rules. Credit should be given, in this format: “By Dee J. Hall, Wisconsin Watch”

Editing material is prohibited, except to reflect relative changes in time, location and in-house style (for example, using “Waunakee, Wis.” instead of “Waunakee” or changing “yesterday” to “last week”)

Other than minor cosmetic and font changes, you may not change the structural appearance or visual format of a story.

If published online, you must include the links and link to wisconsinwatch.org

If you share the story on social media, please mention @wisconsinwatch (Twitter, Facebook and Instagram), and ensure that the original featured image associated with the story is visible on the social media post.

Don’t sell the story or any part of it — it may not be marketed as a product.

Don’t extract, store or resell Wisconsin Watch content as a database.

Don’t sell ads against the story. But you can publish it with pre-sold ads.

Your website must include a prominent way to contact you.

Additional elements that are packaged with our story must be labeled.

Users can republish our photos, illustrations, graphics and multimedia elements ONLY with stories with which they originally appeared. You may not separate multimedia elements for standalone use.

If we send you a request to change or remove Wisconsin Watch content from your site, you must agree to do so immediately. You are welcome to republish our articles forusing the following ground rules. For questions regarding republishing rules please contact Coburn Dukehart, associate director, at [email protected] Wisconsin LGBTQ+ history shows hate ramps up whenever acceptance grows <h1>Wisconsin LGBTQ+ history shows hate ramps up whenever acceptance grows</h1> <p class="byline">by Jeff Bollier / Green Bay Press-Gazette and Natalie Eilbert / Green Bay Press-Gazette, Wisconsin Watch <br />October 20, 2023</p> <p>Wisconsin's LGBTQ+ residents in recent years have faced a wave of harassment, threats and legislation that aim to erode support and growing acceptance.</p> <p>In 2023 alone, about <a href="https://www.mapresearch.org/file/MAP-Under-Fire-Erasing-LGBTQ-People_2023.pdf">650 anti-LGBTQ+ bills </a>have been introduced across the country; at least <a href="https://translegislation.com/">574 are specifically anti-trans</a>. Such bills seek to block transgender people from access to basic health care, education, legal recognition or the right to publicly exist.</p> <p>And on Oct. 12, the Wisconsin Assembly passed three bills that would ban gender-affirming care for minors and <a href="https://www.jsonline.com/story/news/politics/2023/10/12/assembly-passed-legislation-thursday-that-would-ban-transgender-girls-from-competing-on-high-school/71154940007/">bar transgender girls and women from competing on high school and college women's sports teams</a>. The Senate on Tuesday voted to pass the bill barring medical procedures for minors, while the other two bills have yet to go to the full Senate for a vote. Democratic Gov. Tony Evers <a href="https://www.jsonline.com/story/news/politics/2023/10/12/assembly-passed-legislation-thursday-that-would-ban-transgender-girls-from-competing-on-high-school/71154940007/">vowed he would veto </a>all three of the bills if they reached his desk.</p> <p>But the current deluge of anti-LGBTQ+ activity across Wisconsin doesn't stop at the state Capitol. It also includes book bans, the diminishment of affirming spaces, court-sanctioned rights to deadname and misgender youth, pride event protests and social media-fueled pressure campaigns. They target LGBTQ+ people, sponsors, safe spaces and support networks.</p> <p>These efforts can have devastating effects, but are not new.</p> <p>Wisconsin's LGBTQ+ people have, since the 1880s, endured a cycle where new rights, growing acceptance and public popularity are inevitably met with a loud, demeaning, often-violent backlash. Sometimes the issues and foci changed over the last 150 years, but the pattern has not, said Michail Takach, a Wisconsin LGBTQ+ historian, author and co-host of the <a href="https://www.npr.org/podcasts/1103310345/be-seen">“Be Seen” podcast</a>, which documents Wisconsin's LGBTQ+ history.</p> <p>“The mainstreaming of LGBT content or events followed by this attack and moral outrage, this cycle has repeated the last two centuries over and over and over,” Takach said. “As drag, as the LGBT rights movement has achieved some wins and high visibility, this outrage has expressed itself. It’s what always happens.”</p> <h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>Frequent targets</strong> of threats, disinformation</h2> <p>The swarm of threats, disinformation, misinformation, attacks, protests and public action impacts most corners of Wisconsin.</p> <ul> <li><a href="https://www.postcrescent.com/story/news/education/2022/06/02/kiel-residents-talk-life-amid-bomb-threats-school-pronoun-controversy-wisconsin/7461788001/">Kiel residents</a> last year were thrust into the national spotlight after a sexual harassment investigation into students who mispronounced another student's gender pronoun disrupted daily life for residents and drew bomb threats and conservative media outrage.</li> <li>An Outagamie County Board member's <a href="https://www.postcrescent.com/story/news/local/2023/05/11/outagamie-county-board-member-makes-transphobic-comment-during-meeting/70204280007/">transphobic comments</a> during a May committee meeting were met with <a href="https://www.postcrescent.com/story/news/local/2023/05/16/appleton-protesters-condemn-outagamie-county-board-members-transphobic-comment/70224827007/">heated protests</a>.</li> <li>A group of protesters hurled homophobic and antisemitic epithets at Watertown Pride attendees in July, drawing <a href="https://www.jsonline.com/story/news/politics/2023/07/31/evers-slams-disgusting-hate-group-protest-at-watertown-pride-event/70501059007/">condemnation from Gov. Tony Evers</a>.</li> <li>An <a href="https://www.wpr.org/local-parents-sue-eau-claire-school-district-over-gender-identity-guidelines">Eau Claire</a> lawsuit in 2022 challenged the school district's gender identity policies.</li> <li>Both <a href="https://www.greenbaypressgazette.com/story/news/local/2023/02/08/green-bay-mayor-casts-tie-breaking-vote-on-city-hall-flagpole-policy/69883180007/">Green Bay</a> and the <a href="https://www.greenbaypressgazette.com/story/news/education/2023/09/18/de-pere-school-board-doesnt-ban-pride-flags-for-now/70864875007/">Unified School District of De Pere</a> considered proposals to enact flag policies that aimed to remove LGBTQ+ pride flags from flagpoles and classrooms.</li> <li>The Kettle Moraine School District has <a href="https://www.jsonline.com/story/communities/lake-country/news/delafield/2022/07/29/kettle-moraine-bans-pride-and-political-flags-classrooms/10173368002/">banned pride flags and prohibited the use of pronouns</a> in emails and email signatures.</li> <li>The Pulaski School District <a href="https://www.greenbaypressgazette.com/story/news/education/2023/10/13/pulaski-schools-gets-restraining-order-against-wisconsin-gays-against-groomers-leader/71169508007/">secured a four-year restraining order against the leader of the Wisconsin chapter of Gays Against Groomers </a>on Oct. 13 after he posted "harassing, intimidating, and threatening statements" against a school district staff member on social media.</li> <li>The Waukesha School District has a “<a href="https://go.boarddocs.com/wi/wauk/Board.nsf/files/CMTPT466184A/$file/Resolution%201-11-23.pdf">parental rights” policy </a>that prevents school staff from actions regarding students' gender identity and sexuality without parents' consent. It also requires students to use bathrooms and locker rooms consistent with their sex assigned at birth. And in response to a <a href="https://www.jsonline.com/story/news/education/2023/10/03/waukesha-judge-blocks-kettle-moraine-school-district-policy-on-pronouns-names/71047177007/">legal challenge</a> to the district's gender identity policy, a Waukesha County judge has <a href="https://www.jsonline.com/story/news/education/2023/10/03/waukesha-judge-blocks-kettle-moraine-school-district-policy-on-pronouns-names/71047177007/">barred district staff</a> from using transgender students' names and pronouns without parents' permission.</li> </ul> <p>Whether policies like this get enacted or survive legal challenges, the damage is already done for a majority of LGBTQ+ youth. Nearly two in three LGBTQ+ youth said hearing about potential LGBTQ+ bans at the local or state level dramatically worsens their mental health, according to a<a href="https://www.thetrevorproject.org/survey-2023/"> 2023 survey from the Trevor Project</a>.</p> <p>An American Psychological Association report on psychological harm noted <a href="https://www.apa.org/topics/lgbtq/mental-health-anti-transgender-legislation">upticks in suicide attempts, anxiety and depression in LGBTQ+ youth</a>, especially trans youth, who are constantly besieged by debates on their right to exist.</p> <p>"Young trans people today are experiencing a tremendous amount of anxiety,” wrote APA President Thema Bryant in the report. “There is a sense of not feeling safe. This increased sense of animosity toward this already vulnerable population is even affecting those living in states where antitransgender legislation isn’t even on the table.”</p> <p>In light of recent legislative attacks on LGBTQ+ youth, <a href="https://www.greenbaypressgazette.com/story/news/2023/10/17/gov-evers-joins-lgbtq-advocacy-campaign-pledging-to-support-youth/71216137007/">the Evers administration proclaimed Oct. 17</a> "Rise Up for LGBTQ+ Youth Day" throughout the state. The campaign, orchestrated by the national Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network, commonly referred to as GLSEN, invites individuals to <a href="https://www.glsen.org/riseup">make a pledge advocating for the rights</a> of LGBTQ+ youth, be they safe learning environments, affirming curricula and the rejection of anti-LGBTQ+ bills and rhetoric.</p> <p>"I want LGBTQ folks, including our trans kids, to know they are welcome, wanted, and belong here in Wisconsin, and I will keep fighting every day to continue our work to build a state where they feel safe, supported, and loved being exactly who they are," Evers said in a press release. </p> <h2 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>Wisconsin's first drag show happened in Milwaukee in 1884</strong></h2> <p>In 1884, Francis Leon, aka <a href="https://wislgbthistory.com/people/peo-l/leon_francis.htm">"The Only Leon,"</a> and his boyfriend Edwin Kelly brought their <a href="https://wislgbthistory.com/g-hist-timeline.htm">world-renowned drag troupe</a> to Milwaukee and put the growing city on the cultural map. The performance predated the advent of plumbing or electricity in the city.</p> <p>In 1899, Milwaukee police arrested <a href="https://wislgbthistory.com/people/peo-h/hynes_harry.htm">Millie Brown</a>, also known as Harry Hynes, for living life as a woman, and she spent 60 days in jail. Without evidence, police speculated Brown and others “masquerading” as women were planning a crime spree. </p> <p>In the 1920s and '30s, drag queens, then called “pansy performers,” gained popularity in cities across the U.S. The “pansy craze” increased visibility for LGBTQ+ people until 1933-34 when Catholics led a push to ban and reduce the presence of LGBTQ+ people in public life. </p> <p>Drag performers routinely entertained straight audiences at nightclubs in cities like Milwaukee in the 1950s, but the performers’ popularity was met with “three-piece laws.” Although never an official law, the rule emboldened police to coerce people into showing their genitals if they were seen wearing three articles of clothing of the opposite sex. Such overexertion by police encouraged opponents to wield power over trans people, according to trans historian and author <a href="https://www.susanstryker.net/about">Susan Stryker</a>.</p> <figure class="wp-block-image alignright size-full"><img src="https://wisconsinwatch.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Michail_Takach.jpg" alt="Wisconsin LGBTQ History Project historian Michail Takach" class="wp-image-1283200" /><figcaption class="wp-element-caption">Wisconsin LGBTQ History Project historian Michail Takach (Courtesy of Michail Takach)</figcaption></figure> <p>“This rule, which may or may not have ever existed, terrorized gender non-conforming people in cities all over the nation,” Takach said. “It was simply a way to control behavior through fear.”</p> <p>Fear is the name of the game for many of the loudest protesters. But for Mel Freitag, an LGBTQ+ health educator and advocate, it stems from a fear of losing control and power. That fear comes at a time when the LGBTQ+ population is diversifying and growing rapidly, <a href="https://www.newsweek.com/nearly-40-percent-us-gen-zs-30-percent-christians-identify-lgbtq-poll-shows-1641085">especially for people under 30</a>.</p> <p>"As those identities become less dominant — literally not the majority — there's going to be major systemic resistance," Freitag said. "And we're not going away, regardless of how we identify. More and more of us will continue to present outside the binary, whether or not people believe we exist."</p> <p>Takach said the volume of these attacks and attention they receive gives the perception of a loud, outsize group when in fact they’re a dwindling minority. </p> <p>“This last gasp of conservative outrage and pearl-clutching morality appears to be the prevailing voice, but it’s not,” Takach said. “A one-time moral majority is losing their foothold, losing their grasp on the national narrative. It’s all happening out of fear, a fear of losing control, of losing power, of losing relevance. In the meantime, the most vulnerable people in our community don’t have the resources to fight back.”</p> <p><em>This story is part of the NEW (Northeast Wisconsin) News Lab's fourth series, "Families Matter," covering issues important to families in the region.</em></p> This <a target="_blank" href="https://wisconsinwatch.org/2023/10/wisconsin-lgbtq-history-hate-harassment-acceptance/">article</a> first appeared on <a target="_blank" href="https://wisconsinwatch.org">Wisconsin Watch</a> and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.<img src="https://i0.wp.com/wisconsinwatch.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/cropped-WCIJ_IconOnly_FullColor_RGB-1.png?fit=150%2C150&quality=100&ssl=1" style="width:1em;height:1em;margin-left:10px;"><img id="republication-tracker-tool-source" src="https://wisconsinwatch.org/?republication-pixel=true&post=1283195" style="width:1px;height:1px;"> Copy to Clipboard

[END]
---
[1] Url: https://wisconsinwatch.org/2023/10/wisconsin-lgbtq-history-hate-harassment-acceptance/

Published and (C) by Wisconsin Watch
Content appears here under this condition or license: Creative Commons BY-ND 4.0 Intl.

via Magical.Fish Gopher News Feeds:
gopher://magical.fish/1/feeds/news/wisconsinwatch/