The pinkwashing of Melbourne ‘Pride’
By: Bobuck Sayed
Feb
5, 2016
The protest at this year’s annual ‘Pride’
march in Melbourne, and the violent
reaction it subsequently received, draws critical attention to the ethical
compromises the queer community has made to gain the power, funding and
visibility we now have.
A group of queer and transgender activists disrupted the march in front
of the NAB faction with a peaceful sit-in to demonstrate that ‘Pride’ is not
simply a celebration, a statement from the group outlines, but a protest
fighting for liberation for everyone harmed by heteronormativity,
cisnormativity, misogyny, ableism, racism and other forms of oppression.
Video footage shows people from the crowd verbally vilifying the
protestors for disrupting the parade and then assaulting them with fists,
shoves and discoloured water from hoses and buckets. Each succeeding attack on
the masked protestors, who were both able-bodied and disabled, is followed by
roaring affirmation from the mob. It is horrifying to watch members of the
march aggressively confront the protestors, attempt to steal their flags,
litter them with insults, and then have the audacity to demand them to “show
your fucking face, you cowards!”
Our queer forbearers fought for our freedom
to be out and proud. But what is the Pride movement costing us if the voices
and actions of those demonstrating among us are violently silenced and policed?
The protestors’ concerns were with Midsumma Festival’s continued
affiliation with ethically compromised corporations who co-opt LGBT causes to
valorise their own public image. This phenomenon is called pinkwashing, and
there is growing backlash around the world
against organisations and governments who intentionally associate themselves
with queerness as a marketing campaign, without rectifying the damage they
cause to other marginalised communities.
NAB is a major partner of Midsumma Festival, and AGL is a gold-supporting
partner, whatever that means. These companies are notorious for investing in
fossil fuels and, as such, the socio-environmental devastation that climate
change is responsible for. Furthermore, NAB invests in Transfield, which
manages the ‘security services’ at offshore refugee processing centres in Nauru and PNG. As the
statement from the protesters describes, some of those processed offshore by
Transfield are queer and gender diverse. Another sponsor of the festival,
Jetstar, is similarly complicit in the forceful deportation of asylum seekers.
The value of a protest against the
contentious affiliations of Midsumma, one of the largest queer festivals in Australia, and its ties to
fossil fuels and offshore detention centres cannot be ignored. Especially
because many of the participants at ‘Pride’ had little knowledge of these
affiliations before the protest.
The fact that this political gesture had to be staged in the middle of
the march, and received such ardent antagonism from onlookers, testifies to how
few opportunities there are for criticism of the queer community to be voiced
from within the queer community. Ignoring these examples of our diversity
renders us vulnerable to the same dogmatic homogeneity that has historically
erased our own histories and visibility.
Many of the onlookers allegedly interpreted the peaceful sit-in as a
homophobic gesture, despite the protestors holding a trans flag and proclaiming
a banner that read: “Queers Revolt!” If these markers of queerness, alongside
the protestors’ chants of ‘no pride in pinkwashing’ and ‘no pride in
deportation’, fell on deaf ears, then we need to seriously consider why. The
violence they endured must only have exacerbated the existing alienation many
trans and queer people feel from a gay culture that has effectively been
commodified and deradicalised. There is no humour in police having to
defend queer protesters from the trigger happy, violently defensive onlookers
at a ‘Pride’ march.
While the concept of pinkwashing may remain largely
reserved to academic branches of the queer community, it is our collective
responsibility to spread awareness of our own ethically fraught links to
corporate funding and the vocabulary used to describe it. Would anyone bat an
eyelid if your drag queens this evening were brought to you by Adani Mining?
It’s not about boycotting Midsumma. The festival itself does good work.
It’s about listening to those from within our community when they are brave
enough to stop us in our tracks and tell us something’s wrong. These protesters
are not homophobic and they did not miss the deadline for joining the day’s
events – they abstained from the march due to its contentious funding and
sponsorship links. Herein lies the irony in Midsumma’s chairperson John
Caldwell innocently saying, after the march, that the protestors would have
been welcome to join in.
In Sydney, campaigns to
rebrand Telstra’s public phone booths and ANZ’s ATMs, nicknamed GAYTMS, with
rainbows during Mardi Gras are further examples of Australian pinkwashing.
These companies make a public spectacle of supporting the queer community, but
the logic behind these efforts is simple. In fact, in a quote cited in the SMH,
Melissa Tandy, chair of ANZ’s global Pride network, explicitly acknowledges
that corporate support for queerness is tied into increasing productivity by
freeing the time and energy that workers might otherwise be using to hide their
identities in the workplace. Queer activist Nic Holas rightly challenges the
authenticity of this corporate sentiment in the same article, asking, “What are
the corporate policies on transgender bathroom access, for example?”
Be not fooled: these rainbow campaigns are not
an altruistic and ethical investment into our struggle. Co-opting the symbols
and histories of queer people, loaded as they will forever be with the blood of
queer martyrs, is deeply disrespectful and exploitative no matter the ethical
orientation of whoever appropriates them. But pinkwashing by corporate giants,
responsible as they have historically been for the erasure of queer visibility,
rubs salt into the wound. Lest we forget that none of these companies support
the marginalised unless they come with a profit margin.
With the eve of marriage equality in Australia nigh upon us,
liberation in one form beckons. All the same, it is vital that we encourage the
diversity of queer struggles and the value of criticism from within our
community, in order to continue our liberation from the multi-layered and often
obliviously intra-LGBT oppression that many of us receive.
When I attend queer events, I want to believe that, somewhere in the
twinky mass, there is awareness of the struggles for liberation beyond the
governmental and religious institution of marriage. I want to believe that the
dearth of ethnic diversity is acknowledged and questioned by others besides me.
I want to believe that cis-gender white gay men are also fighting against the
disproportionate cultural representation they receive from queer media. But
when I see efforts to demonstrate the diversity of the queer community in all
its radical beauty squashed by other queers, I’m inclined to believe that none
of us can stare into the mirror and see beyond ourselves.
Bobuck
Sayed is a queer Afghan-Australian writer, editor and performer currently
knee-deep in the murky waters of a literature thesis on ecocritical
postcolonialism.
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