The LGBTQ+ community weigh up their options in a hostile climate

A collective feeling of dread
Options to consider
Pink weapon sales soar
Self-defense
Heading to more friendly climes
Back-up plan
Pill problem
Desperate prospect
Trump's promises
Two genders
Sports issue
Disturbing claims
Fighting chance
A 26-state ban so far
Heartbreaking pact
Nowhere to go
A collective feeling of dread

Given Donald Trump’s anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric on the campaign trail, it is hardly surprising that members of this community are dreading the start of Trump 2.0.

 

Options to consider

While some are considering uprooting and moving to more LGBTQ+-friendly turf, others are stockpiling medicines and still more are starting to carry a weapon.

 

Pink weapon sales soar

In fact, firearms sellers and trainers focused on marginalized groups, such as the Pink Pistols national gun group, have reported a huge hike in sales since the election.

Self-defense

“We all feel the need to make sure that we’re aware of our surroundings and protect ourselves in general, but even more so now,” Ashley Parten, 38, a bisexual woman told The Guardian after buying stun guns for herself, her daughter and three nieces.

 

Heading to more friendly climes

Meanwhile, transgender woman Zoei Montgomery, is thinking of moving to Canada in response to Trump’s win.

 

Back-up plan

“I would hate to leave home,” Montgomery, 25, tells The Washington Post. “But it makes me less anxious to have an exit plan in place.”

Pill problem

Montgomery also told the Post that she has been stockpiling estradiol and spironolactone pills since September in case her care is vetoed in Congress.

 

"Nothing will be the same"

“Many people around me are acting like everything is the same since Nov. 5,” she said. “But nothing will be the same for the LGBTQ+ community once Trump’s in power, and he has promised that.”

 

"We are not afraid of you"

Speaking to Reuters, transman Angelo Myers, 26, a PhD student in New York, directed this message to Trump and his Republican allies. “We are not afraid of you.”

 

Photo: screenshot Teuters video.

Desperate prospect

Having said that, Myers added, “Without the care I have now I would go as far as to say I might be in the percentage of people who don’t make it to the end of Trump’s presidency.”

 

Trump's promises

Trump promised supporters at his pre-election rallies that he would ban gender transition care for children and eliminate federal spending on care for adults.

 

Two genders

He also promised to table a bill establishing just two genders – those that are assigned at birth.

Sports issue

As far as the issue of trans women in sport is concerned, Trump is adamant: “We will of course keep transwomen out of women’s sports,” he told crowd of supporters in Salem, Virginia on November 2.

 

Disturbing claims

Faced with disturbing rhetoric coming from the anti-LGBTQ+ camp, such as, “Your body, my choice. Forever,” spouted by the white nationalist podcaster Nick Fuentes on X, the tangible fear among LGBTQ+ members and their families is understandable.

 

Fighting chance

“If there’s men out there that really think like that, I want at least a fighting chance if I ever encounter one,” Kylee Ortega, 24, from Texas told The Guardian, explaining why she has purchased her stun gun.

A 26-state ban so far

Tennessee has joined 26 states in banning gender affirming care for trans minors, according to CNN. The decision is currently being challenged in the Supreme Court.

Heartbreaking pact

Carolyn Fischer, meanwhile told The Washington Post that her 16-year-old trans son made a heartbreaking pact to end his life with three other young trans people if Trump won the election.

 

Nowhere to go

In the end they didn’t take their own lives, but Fisher and her husband are considering a move. “Nowhere in the country seems safe for LGBTQ+ kids right now,” she said.

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