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Arkansas Moves To Criminalize Drag Shows

A bill in Arkansas that reclassifies drag performances as adult entertainment has been approved by Republicans in the state Senate and will now move to the House for consideration.

SB 43, introduced by Republican state Senator Gary Stubblefield, would outlaw drag performances on public property or “where a minor can view” them. The full Senate passed the measure along party lines, 29–6, according to LGBTQ Nation. 

Stubblefield said the measure is about “protecting children” from obscene or sexually explicit content, and he advised his colleagues to ask themselves “if God would approve” of drag queens. “I can’t think of anything good that can come from taking children and putting them in front of a bunch of grown men who are dressed like women,” Stubblefield added, referring to drag queen story hours.

Drag shows would join adult theatres, cabarets, and nude modelling studios on the list of adult-oriented businesses in the state.

Image Credit: Pixabay

Under the measure, a “drag performance” is defined as one in which an individual exhibits a gender identity that is different from their sex assigned at birth “using clothing, makeup, or other accessories that are traditionally worn by members of and are meant to exaggerate the gender identity of the performer’s opposite sex.”

A “drag performer” is defined as an individual who lip-syncs, dances, or otherwise performs for an audience of at least two people in an act that is “intended to appeal to the prurient interest.” Prurient, as defined by the Oxford English Dictionary, refers to individuals “having or encouraging an excessive interest in sexual matters.”

Trans activist and researcher Erin Reed points out the sweeping language in the bill could “ban all trans people performing, doing karaoke, making a dirty joke” in front of an audience of two or more people.

A trans activist in the UK cited academic lectures as another potential target of the law. “So I think it’s illegal for me to give a talk at a university in Arkansas now?” tweeted LGBTQ+ advocate Katy Montgomerie.

Arkansas joins multiple states looking to sweep drag queens and trans individuals from public view.

In Tennessee, a proposed bill would add “male and female impersonators” to a list of businesses and performers prohibited from being viewed by a minor and from operating within 1,000 feet of schools, public parks, or places of worship.

In Oklahoma, lawmakers want to criminalize individuals who adopt “a flamboyant or parodic feminine persona with glamorous or exaggerated costumes and makeup” and charge them with a misdemeanor, punishable by up to a year in jail. Two bills in West Virginia would make it illegal to subject a minor to “transgender exposure” and “patently offensive” material.


Read related myGwork articles here:

Arkansas Governor Urges Republicans To Send A “Message Of Compassion” To Trans People

Another Anti-Trans Bill In Arkansas Allows People That Share Bathrooms With Trans People To Sue

Arkansas Will Now Allow Medical Workers To Legally Refuse Treatment to LGBT+ People

Arkansas AG Introduces Bill To Ban Trans Athletes From Girls' School Sports

Former Arkansas Governor Calls LGBT+ People Greatest Threat to US


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