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LINK Public drag performances restricted in Tennessee -- ABC News

Tennessee is the first state to pass this kind of legislation.

Tennessee has become the first state to restrict drag performances in public.

HB 9, signed by Gov. Bill Lee, makes “a person who engages in an adult cabaret performance on public property" -- or where it can be viewed by minors -- a criminal offense.

The bill includes “topless dancers, go-go dancers, exotic dancers, strippers, male or female impersonators, or similar entertainers” in the definition of "adult cabaret performance."

A first-time offender will be charged with a misdemeanor. A second or subsequent violation would be a Class E felony, the legislation reads.

Lee also signed a bill banning transgender health care for people under the age of 18.

Right-wing and conservative backlash against drag shows and the transgender community has prompted legislative restrictions on both groups.

Drag performers have told ABC News that family-friendly drag shows are being misconstrued as sexual.

“For a couple of minutes, an hour or two, whatever the case may be – I just want everybody to forget all their troubles,” Catrina Lovelace, a drag queen, previously told ABC News. “For me, what a drag show is, is just a celebration of life.”

Activists and allies say this is an attempt at banning queer spaces and culture, and a move to push LGBTQ people back into the closet, according to the Human Rights Commission.

“Neither of these laws are about protecting youth - they are about spreading dangerous misinformation against the transgender community,” said Human Rights Campaign Legal Director Sarah Warbelow.

She continued, “They are about doubling down on efforts to attack drag artists and transgender youth … drag is a longstanding, celebratory form of entertainment and a meaningful source of employment for many across the state.

Laws against drag, cross-dressing and gender nonconformity were similarly enforced in the early to mid-1900s, which led to the criminalization of the community.

Sen. Jack Johnson, a sponsor of the bill, celebrated the bill as it headed to Lee's desk.

"This bill gives confidence to parents that they can take their kids to a public or private show and will not be blindsided by a sexualized performance," Lee said in a tweet.

Several similar bills have been recently introduced against drag shows in states like Florida, Arizona, Texas and others.

snytiger6 9 Mar 3
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Activists and allies say this is an attempt at banning queer spaces and culture, and a move to push LGBTQ people back into the closet, according to the Human Rights Commission.

Of course it is. Problem is this about law and, as the criminal known as don can tell you, law is only something for the most powerful to use against others. It does not apply to the lawyer who finds a legal distinction and wins with it. Scores a Touchdown, you might say, while losers suffer concussions (if not worse). This is the backlash from individualizing identities instead of all human citizens. Of course, the FR isn't even willing to say who's a citizen or have that status removed at will of The Authority. SCOTUS will likely uphold this law and we will go back into hiding or die in for-profit Con jails.

The ACLU has said ti will file suit of constitutional violations as soon as they attempt to enforce the law.

The reasoning of waiting until they arrest somebody is to show in court that drag performances are nto sexual, as the people who wrote and supported the bill claimed, and it is in fact an attack on the LGB+ community based solely in bigotry.

@snytiger6 Aint they clever? ACLU know law better than I so will accept their cleverness. I hope they win but I doubt that means anything outside having standing. Of course it's an attack, one that will also affect PRIDE Parades and festivals, but they may have found an angle. Kids. Hard to argue with protecting the sensitive brains of kids and brushing those concerns aside might anger parents in general. Like closing schools did (certainly in WV and NV). Maybe the ACLU might use that cleverness to get a str8 Cabaret-style act arrested and challenge the law? That would seem very clever.

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Shameful!!!!!

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