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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsHe wanted to throw an Idaho town's first Pride. Angry residents had other ideas.
In the beginning, Tom Wheeler didnt expect he would need a fence. He wanted to give Canyon County, Idaho, its first Pride celebration, and when he imagined that day, he pictured a park without barriers, an open space where everyone was welcome.
But then the mayor said the event conflicted with her beliefs, and angry residents called for a protest. Wheeler was a real estate agent from Boise, an out-of-towner, and worse, gay.
Far-right extremists had already targeted another small-town Idaho Pride, and now, Wheelers event seemed to be at risk, too. His mother begged him to stay home. An uncle urged him to wear a bulletproof vest. At the very least, local officers said, he might want a barricade.
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At best, they hoped, they might raise $1,000 enough for T-shirts and rainbow-colored streamers. In their planning documents, they estimated 50 people would attend.

Drag queen Cookie Pusss performs for the crowd at the festival. (Kyle Green for The Washington Post)
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msongs
(73,077 posts)magicarpet
(18,457 posts)The wastelands of AmeriKKKan Fascism.
Funtatlaguy
(11,872 posts)Bucky
(55,334 posts)He wrote from Texas