logo
‘Harvey would say, we're on the brink': why conservatives are coming for a gay rights hero

‘Harvey would say, we're on the brink': why conservatives are coming for a gay rights hero

Yahoo2 days ago
As San Francisco's pride festivities came to a close last week, a cloud hung over the otherwise joyful celebrations as the city's LGBTQ+ community learned that the US government had stripped a naval ship of its name honoring the gay rights pioneer Harvey Milk.
Donald Trump's defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, claimed the action showed the administration's commitment to 'taking the politics' out of military naming conventions. San Francisco's queer community saw things differently.
For many, the move was yet another example of Trump taking a swipe at progressive values. To others, the decision to remove Milk's name from the frigate represented something more sinister: an intention, on the part of an emboldened administration, to take the LGBTQ+ community out of public view and to strike their accomplishments from the historical record.
It's blatant malice. They want to erase us and eradicate our history like we don't exist
Eric Berchtold
'On its own, it is not the most significant offense that we've witnessed in the past six months,' said Marc Stein, a professor of history at San Francisco State University who researches sexuality and politics. 'But when combined with so many other things, it sends a powerful message.'
Hegseth's announcement is the latest attack on Milk's legacy from conservatives in California and on the national stage. In 2023, the southern California city of Temecula made news when its school board attempted to remove references to Milk from elementary school textbooks. Before that, it was revealed that Tucker Carlson, while a college student, had apparently been connected to a society celebrating Milk's murderer.
Related: 'Accelerated censorship': advocates criticize US supreme court ruling on LGBTQ+ books
Since Trump took office, the rollback of LGBTQ+ rights and visibility has only accelerated, from a directive to purge the military of transgender service members, to a supreme court decision allowing K-12 students to opt out of reading materials with LGBTQ+ themes.
Taken together, LGBTQ+ advocates and community members fear that much of the progress made to secure their rights since Milk's assassination in 1978 is in peril.
'The renaming of the ship is part of a broader pattern wherein the Trump administration and its allies are trying to roll back the advances of the last several decades,' said Stein.
At the Cinch Saloon, a historic gay bar in San Francisco's Castro district, June's Pride month celebrations were held against a backdrop of conversations about the fate of the community. Bartender Eric Berchtold expressed fear that the administration is working up to rescind the right to same-sex marriage. 'It's blatant malice,' Berchtold said. 'They want to erase us and eradicate our history like we don't exist.'
Suzanne Ford, executive director of San Francisco Pride, said that fears of rolling back progress have been felt most acutely by older members of the community who were part of the gay liberation movement in the 1960s and 70s.
Among those affected people are Cleve Jones, an activist and friend of Milk's who worked in Milk's office when he was city supervisor. 'I can remember when we were criminalized, when we were routinely beaten and fired, when you could not have a job if you were known to be gay,' said Jones.
When Milk was elected as city supervisor in 1977, he was the country's first openly gay politician. Two decades prior, he had been forced to resign from the navy due to his sexuality.
That's why publicly displaying Milk's name on a military vessel represents much more than a public gesture, explained Craig Loftin, professor of American studies at California State University, Fullerton and a scholar of LGBTQ+ history. 'In the big-picture history of LGBTQ people, the quest for public visibility and recognition is at the core and center of that narrative,' he said.
'[Milk] was a leader in this idea of not hiding in the shadows.'
That isn't to say that the quest for gay liberation has been linear.
While the gay liberation movement made enormous strides on the fronts of decriminalization and visibility in the 1960s and 70s, the rise of the religious right as a powerful political bloc in the 80s paused progress. That coincided with the onset of the Aids pandemic, which devastated gay communities across the country – nowhere more acutely than in San Francisco. In response to silence on the part of the federal government and the Reagan administration, a new wave of activism was spurred that demanded research into treatment and condemned homophobic discrimination.
'It's waxed and waned,' said Loftin. 'It took several years before we had activist groups like Aact Up channeling their rage in a strategic, focused way that yielded significant results and moved gay culture further than where it had been,' Loftin said. In the decades that followed, the community saw same-sex marriage legalized, the military's 'Don't ask don't tell' policy repealed, and, most recently, a surge of visibility for trans Americans. 'There is a pendulum quality to a lot of history, but especially LGBT history.'
Knowing this, Loftin is hopeful that the community will come together and fight back with vigor. 'My optimistic thought is that because they're hitting us so hard and so fast, the pendulum will swing back the other direction, hopefully harder and faster,' he said. '[Trump] is awakening a dragon.'
Berchtold, the Cinch Saloon bartender, said he saw a lot more activism among patrons today than he did when he started working at the bar 22 years ago.
Jones is more fearful. To him, there is a gulf between an older generation that remembers the traumas of past decades, and a younger cohort that takes the advances for granted.
'Younger ones never watched everyone they knew die,' said Jones. 'I carry those memories with me as I interact daily with young people who are completely oblivious to that reality.'
To Stein and others, what is most jarring about the renaming of USNS Harvey Milk is that it lifts the veil on which groups the administration plans to target. Until now, policy decisions have primarily focused on restricting the rights of trans Americans – which advocates say has had the effect of making cisgender members of the LGBTQ+ community complacent.
'It is a lie that the administration is only going after trans people,' said Stein. 'They are especially targeting trans people … but [cis] gay and lesbian people should not feel like they are going to be safe from what's happening.'
Jones echoed: 'There is a significant number of gay and lesbian men and women who may think this is going to stop with trans people. That's just foolishness.'
Advocates and scholars also see attacks on the LGBTQ+ community as connected to the administration's larger ambitions to curb civil liberties, including those of women and immigrants.
'There is going to be great variation depending on … where you live,' said Stein, drawing a thread between disparities in access to gender-affirming care, abortion rights and immigrant protections. 'Those of us who are in San Francisco and California are protected in some respects from the worst of what's going on, but we also live in a nation with a powerful federal government.
'Everything is very fragile at this moment,' added Ford. 'You can't take for granted that they're not going to try to take your rights.'
Jones says that if he were alive today, Harvey Milk would agree. A Jewish American who came of age during the second world war, he would have seen the government's actions as indicative of an unhealthy democracy and sounded the alarm.
'He would say, 'Watch out. We are on the brink. It is happening again. It is unfolding all around us.''
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US revokes ‘terrorist' designation for Syrian president's former group HTS
US revokes ‘terrorist' designation for Syrian president's former group HTS

Yahoo

time29 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

US revokes ‘terrorist' designation for Syrian president's former group HTS

The United States will revoke its designation of Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) as a foreign terrorist organisation (FTO) as Washington softens its approach to post-war Syria following the fall of Bashar al-Assad's government last year. The decision, which takes effect on Tuesday, comes as part of US President Donald Trump's broader strategy to re-engage with Syria and support its reconstruction after more than a decade of devastating conflict. 'This FTO revocation is an important step in fulfilling President Trump's vision of a stable, unified, and peaceful Syria,' US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said in a statement Monday. HTS had been designated as a 'terrorist' group by the US since 2018 due to its former ties to al-Qaeda. The group emerged out of the al-Nusra Front, once al-Qaeda's official branch in Syria, but formally severed those ties in 2016 after HTS leader Ahmed al-Sharaa declared the group's independence. Al-Sharaa, who led the opposition forces that removed al-Assad in a lightning offensive last December, has since become Syria's president. He has launched what many experts have described as a charm offensive aimed at Western powers, including meetings with French President Emmanuel Macron and, most recently, Trump in Riyadh in May. The Trump administration and the European Union have since lifted sanctions on Syria. 'In line with President Trump's May 13 promise to deliver sanctions relief to Syria, I am announcing my intent to revoke the Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO) designation of al-Nusrah Front, also known as Hay'at Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), under the Immigration and Nationality Act,' Rubio said. 'Tomorrow's action follows the announced dissolution of HTS and the Syrian government's commitment to combat terrorism in all its forms.' HTS was dissolved in late January, with its forces folded into the official Syrian military and security forces. Damascus welcomed the US decision as a step towards normalisation. In a statement, Syria's Ministry of Foreign Affairs said the delisting of HTS was a 'positive step toward correcting a course that previously hindered constructive engagement'. The ministry added that it hoped the move would 'contribute to the removal of remaining restrictions that continue to impact Syrian institutions and officials, and open the door to a rational, sovereign-based approach to international cooperation'. Meanwhile, HTS remains under United Nations Security Council sanctions, which were imposed in 2014 over its previous affiliation with al-Qaeda. Al-Sharaa also remains under UNSC sanctions, which can only be removed by the Council itself. Al-Sharaa is reportedly preparing to attend the UN General Assembly in New York this September.

US revoking 'terrorist' designation for Syria's HTS
US revoking 'terrorist' designation for Syria's HTS

Yahoo

time29 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

US revoking 'terrorist' designation for Syria's HTS

The United States on Monday announced it was revoking its "foreign terrorist organization" designation of Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), a group once linked to Al-Qaeda that toppled Syria's government in December. "In line with President (Donald) Trump's May 13 promise to deliver sanctions relief to Syria, I am announcing my intent to revoke the Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO) designation of al-Nusrah Front, also known as Hay'at Tahrir al-Sham (HTS)," said US Secretary of State Marco Rubio in a statement. An armed coalition led by HTS leader Ahmed al-Sharaa overthrew then-Syrian president Bashar al-Assad last year, ending half a century of brutal rule by the latter's family. Sharaa took over as interim president, a move that has been cautiously welcomed in Washington, Europe and elsewhere, with historic foe Israel seeking to build ties with the new government. Washington's move will formally take effect on Tuesday, and comes after US President Trump last week formally dismantled his country's sanctions against Syria. "Tomorrow's action follows the announced dissolution of HTS and the Syrian government's commitment to combat terrorism in all its forms," said Rubio. HTS was earlier known as Al-Nusra Front, and was formerly the branch of Al-Qaeda in Syria, but it broke ties with the jihadist group in 2016 and sought to soften its image. As of 2017, HTS claimed control of swaths of the province of Idlib, in Syria's northwest, and went on to develop a civil administration in the area, amid accusations of brutal abuses against those who dared dissent. In January, after overthrowing Assad's regime, the new authorities announced the dissolution of all armed factions, with some groups including HTS being integrated into bodies such as the country's new police force. Trump had lifted most sanctions against Syria in May, responding to appeals from Saudi Arabia and Turkey to help reintegrate the war-battered country into the global economy. The United States had already removed a bounty on Sharaa's head after he came to power. - International reengagement - On Friday, Syria said it was willing to cooperate with the United States to reimplement a 1974 disengagement agreement with Israel. The United States and European countries have moved steadily to reengage with Syria since Sharaa took over as interim president, with Britain reestablishing diplomatic ties on Saturday after more than a decade. Britain has also lifted sanctions on Syria's interior and defense ministries, as well as on various media groups, intelligence agencies and some sectors of the economy. The Assad regime was toppled after more than 13 years of civil war by a rebel offensive led by Sharaa. The rebellion was sparked in 2011 by protests against the Assads' brutal rule that were part of the Arab Spring movement. The growing international backing comes as Syria's new leaders attempt to rebuild the country and reboot its moribund economy, both ravaged by the conflict and crippling sanctions. From wanted jihadist to statesman embraced by world leaders, interim president Sharaa has undergone a stunning transformation in just six months. He now leads a government through a five-year transitional period under a temporary constitution that experts and rights groups say concentrates power in his hands. lb-aha/

What to know about a potential deal to keep TikTok running in US
What to know about a potential deal to keep TikTok running in US

Yahoo

time29 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

What to know about a potential deal to keep TikTok running in US

Less than a month after extending a deadline to ban TikTok for the third time, President Donald Trump told reporters late Friday night that, 'We pretty much have a deal,' on TikTok — but he did not offer details. The details and timing of a potential deal are not clear. TikTok did not immediately respond to messages for comment on Monday. Emarketer analyst Jeremy Goldman said while TikTok is 'reportedly planning' a U.S. version of its app to comply with legal restrictions, the platform — if it launches without the original TikTok algorithm — 'risks losing the very personalization that drives user engagement.' In other words, TikTok just isn't TikTok without its algorithm. 'And getting millions to download a new app is no small feat, to say the least,' Goldman added. Here's what to know about where TikTok stands in the U.S. following Trump's comments. Extensions continue Though he has no clear legal basis to do so, Trump has continued to extend the deadline for TikTok to avoid a ban in the U.S. This gives his administration more time to broker a deal to bring the social media platform under American ownership. It is not clear how many times Trump can — or will — keep extending the ban as the government continues to try to negotiate a deal for TikTok, which is owned by China's ByteDance. While there is no clear legal basis for the extensions, so far there have been no legal challenges against the administration. Trump has amassed more than 15 million followers on TikTok since he joined last year, and he has credited the trendsetting platform with helping him gain traction among young voters. He said in January that he has a 'warm spot for TikTok.' TikTok stays for now For now, TikTok continues to function for its 170 million users in the U.S. Tech giants Apple, Google and Oracle were persuaded to continue to offer and support the app, on the promise that Trump's Justice Department would not use the law to seek potentially steep fines against them. Americans are even more closely divided on what to do about TikTok than they were two years ago. A recent Pew Research Center survey found that about one-third of Americans said they supported a TikTok ban, down from 50% in March 2023. Roughly one-third said they would oppose a ban, and a similar percentage said they weren't sure. Among those who said they supported banning the social media platform, about 8 in 10 cited concerns over users' data security being at risk as a major factor in their decision, according to the report. Trump said Friday that on Monday or Tuesday, the U.S. would take the proposal to Chinese leader Xi Jinping or one of his representatives. The president said he thinks they 'probably' need China to approve the deal but he wasn't sure they needed to. When asked whether he was confident China would approve the deal, Trump said, 'I'm not confident but I think so.' He said that for the U.S., 'we make a lot of money if the deal goes through." Who wants to buy TikTok? Although it's unclear if ByteDance plans to sell TikTok, several potential bidders have come forward in the past few months. Aides for Vice President JD Vance, who was tapped to oversee a potential deal, have reached out to some parties, such as the artificial intelligence startup Perplexity AI, to get additional details about their bids, according to a person familiar with the matter. In January, Perplexity AI presented ByteDance with a merger proposal that would combine Perplexity's business with TikTok's U.S. operation. Perplexity had no comment on Monday. Other potential bidders include a consortium organized by billionaire business executive Frank McCourt, which recently recruited Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian as a strategic adviser. Investors in the consortium say they've offered ByteDance $20 billion in cash for TikTok's U.S. platform. And if successful, they plan to redesign the popular app with blockchain technology they say will provide users with more control over their online data. 'Every day that passes without a qualified divestiture of TikTok puts Americans at greater risk of manipulation and surveillance. We believe the administration will ultimately obey the courts and follow the requirements for a lawful divestiture,' McCourt's internet advocacy organization, Project Liberty, said in a statement. "We look forward to working with members of the administration, policymakers, and our many outstanding partners in The People's Bid to achieve this goal.' Among other possible investors are the software company Oracle and the investment firm Blackstone. Neither company immediately responded to messages seeking comment on Monday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store