Search This Blog

Monday, June 23, 2025

Who Killed Pride Month?

 by Stephen Soukup via American Greatness,

As you may have noticed, celebrations of “pride” have been much more subdued this Pride Month than they were in recent memory. The parades this year are less conspicuous and bombastic. Corporate websites are less obnoxious and explicit. And perhaps most notably, triumphant in-store displays have disappeared almost entirely or, at the very least, are much smaller and more restrained than in past years.

According to some in the mainstream media, all of this moderation—or abandonment—of LGBT “pride” has the same root cause as all evils in contemporary America: Donald Trump. The president is so mean, so nasty, and so omnipotent that companies fear him and do whatever they can to avoid incurring his wrath, including, apparently, forsaking longstanding practices, affiliations, and beliefs:

Corporate America has fallen out of love with Pride Month... and it’s because of Donald Trump.

Businesses that used to smother their merchandise in rainbow flags for the month of June have dramatically scaled back this year, many wary of provoking an investigation by the Trump administration.

Meanwhile, Pride events across the US are facing budget shortfalls as corporate sponsors duck out.

Now, with all due respect to the president, the media, and the people cited in the above article (some of whom are very smart, in fact), the idea that Trump killed Pride Month is, well, kind of stupid. Not only is the notion thoroughly ahistorical, but it also gets the causative forces in American politics precisely backward.

For starters, it’s important to remember how and when the backlash against “pride” began in earnest.

Recall that on March 31, 2023, Bud Light was not only the most popular beer sold by the world’s largest brewing company but was also the most popular beer on the planet by sales. It was, inarguably, America’s—and the world’s—go-to beer. The following day, however, everything would change. Bud Light—and LGBT “Pride”—would consciously choose to self-immolate.

The next day, Alissa Gordon Heinerscheid, Bud Light’s young, smart, and talented vice president of marketing, launched her campaign to remake the brand and to bring it into the 21st century. She worried the beer she had been hired to keep at #1 was associated too closely with the common folk. She fretted about its history of “fratty and out-of-touch humor” and believed she had been tasked with making it more “inclusive…and lighter and brighter and different.”

As part of that more “inclusive” strategy, Heinerscheid and her team contracted with a young TikTok sensation named Dylan Mulvaney to promote the brand in a short video. And so, on that fateful day, April Fool’s Day 2023, Mulvaney, who is famously and flamboyantly transgender, uploaded a video in which he/she, dressed like Audrey Hepburn in “Breakfast at Tiffany’s,” sang the praises of the new, au courant Bud Light.

The rest, as they say, is history. Within a week, Bud Light’s sales tanked, the result of a conservative-led boycott of the brand. Within a month, it had lost precisely what it sought to protect, its vaunted status as the nation’s best-selling beer. By Independence Day, Bud Light was no longer even in the top 10 best-selling beers in America, having fallen all the way down to 14th place.

And then the real collapse began.

As sales of Bud Light fell, so did the sales of the brewer’s other brands. And so did AB InBev’s stock. From its high on April 6, the company’s share price fell more than 18%. Before the bleeding finally stopped in October, the share price had fallen by more than one-fifth.

Recall as well that two months after Bud Light’s disastrous fling with Dylan Mulvaney, Target Corporation, a longtime LGBTQ ally, launched its most aggressive Pride Month campaign ever, featuring children’s Pride displays, a “tuck”-friendly swimsuit for men who wished to hide their…uhhh…manhood, and designs from a UK brand that also produced “Satanic” designs.

Again, the backlash was swift and merciless. As with Bud Light, Target was the object of considerable online and cable news outrage. The company saw its sales fall dramatically in the face of a conservative-led boycott and, in time, saw its share price collapse as well. The nation’s “normies” had, once again, done what had never been done before and what was once thought impossible: they had organized and sustained a conservative boycott of a major corporation. They had been pushed too far by what they saw as aggressive corporate politicization, and they had successfully and spectacularly pushed back against it.

The truth of the matter is that Donald Trump didn’t have anything to do with the death of Pride Month. “Pride” killed itself, as it was destined eventually to do. It’s one of the Seven Deadly Sins for a reason, after all, namely because it is inherently self-destructive. “Pride,” as Proverbs famously puts it, “goes before disaster, and a haughty spirit before a fall.” And fall they did.

Ever since these twin retail disasters, American companies have been notably (and understandably) more circumspect about their efforts to promote politically divisive themes, especially LGBT Pride. Many corporations—with a push from conservative activist Robby Starbuck—ended their participation with and sponsorship of the Human Rights Campaign, the LGBT activist group that helped turn Pride Month into a national event and actively punishes companies it perceives as less than ideally supportive of its agenda.

And note that all of this—from the Bud Light debacle to the Target disaster to Robby Starbuck’s humiliation of the HRC—took place while Joe Biden was president and Donald Trump was a private citizen. Indeed, the first two took place before Trump had even secured a single convention delegate or Republican primary vote. In other words, the media can blame him all they want for the death of Pride Month, but the timing is off.

Additionally, and more to the point, the media—and countless others, including most Democratic elected officials—radically misunderstand how American politics works. Trump didn’t cause the cultural backlash that killed Pride Month. The cultural backlash that killed Pride Month also caused Trump. Or at least it caused his re-election.

In my nearly three decades as a macro-political analyst for large institutional investors, I have always insisted on the existence and relevance of one simple truth that defines American politics and its inevitable twists and turns: Washington is not where the biggest and most important decisions are made in this country. Those decisions are made in the states, cities, towns, school districts, churches, and families of the nation. Washington is merely where the score is kept.

Or, as Andrew Breitbart more pithily put it, “Politics is downstream from culture.”

Donald Trump won the presidency in 2016 because the American people rejected the foreign policy and cultural excesses of the Obama years. Likewise, Trump was re-elected in 2024 because the voters rejected Biden’s even more significant cultural excesses. Trump wasn’t elected to convince normies to dislike Pride, Pride Month, or “woke” more generally. He was elected because the normies had already come to loathe them all on their own.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/who-killed-pride-month

3 easy, healthy foods you can grow at home — even if you only have a window sill

 Talk about a plant-based diet.

You don’t actually need a green thumb to start growing your own healthy food at home, promises Welsh chef and influencer Gaz Oakley — in fact, you don’t even need a garden or a yard.

Oakley says there are several things you can grow inside your house or apartment with just a sunny window, some soil and water — and he handpicked the three easiest, most low-maintenance foods that have tons of nutritional value.

“I’ve actually started doing this as an experiment to show people that you don’t need space,” he told The Post.

Chef and influencer Gaz Oakley told The Post that there are several things you can grow inside your house or apartment with just a sunny window, some soil and water.Tom Lewis

#1: Microgreens

“I think the most nutritious thing you could start off with and that takes up a limited space is microgreens,” said Oakley, who recently published “Plant to Plate: Delicious and Versatile Plant-Forward Recipes.”

These come in lots of varieties and include cauliflower, broccoli, cabbage, watercress, radish, arugula, radicchio, chard, spinach, chives, dill, endive and herbs like mint, basil, rosemary, sage and oregano — all harvested when they’re small and young.

Nutrients in microgreens are more concentrated than in full-grown plants, meaning they pack 4 to 40 times as much nutritional punch.

Kale, for example, has tons of vitamins.

You don’t need any special equipment, either. He uses a cut-open Oatley milk carton, fills it with soil and sprinkles in seeds.

Microgreens are easy to grow at home.ronstik – stock.adobe.com

“They need just sunlight, so you need to be putting them somewhere where there’s sun, and give them daily watering,” he recommended.

“I always say most vegetables are less sensitive than your average houseplants. Houseplants are the most drama queen plants I’ve ever known. You give them everything and they just die, and it’s really annoying. But vegetables, they’re a bit more resilient.”

You can harvest these after about eight days when they’re around 2 inches tall, and they’ll continue to grow back over and over again.

“They’re so nutritious and you should eat them right away that they’re incredible for you,” said Oakley, who recommends them as toppings or ingredients for smoothies.

#2: Tomatoes

Tomatoes are great for your heart, lungs, eyes, skin, teeth and blood vessels. Besides vitamins C and K, potassium and folate, they’re packed with the antioxidant lycopene — which can lower your risk of cancer and help manage a bunch of diseases.

Oakley says these are very easy to grow — and planting these in front of a sunny window will “all be worth it.”

Tomatoes are great for your heart, lungs, eyes, skin, teeth and blood vessels.stock.adobe.com
“You just need a small bucket with some holes in the bottom. Put a plate underneath it. Or you can go fancy and get a nice terracotta pot and fill it with some compost,” he said.

“You can get it to buy a tomato plant from a garden center, or you can sow your seeds into a little tray first and then transplant it. Water every now and then, and maybe give it some support with a piece of bamboo. 

“And then in about two months’ time, you will have tomatoes to harvest.”

End up with more tomatoes than you can eat? Oakley recommends fermenting them into something like his tomato kimchi recipe. It’s “so delicious,” he said — and you get that extra bang for your buck since fermented foods are great for gut health.

Finally, lettuce is great if your home doesn’t get much sunlight.geshas – stock.adobe.com

#3 Lettuce

If your home doesn’t get a ton of sunlight, you should still be able to grow lettuce — and it does best in spring and autumn climates.

No special planters necessary for this, either: He grows his in an old pipe split in half, filled with compost.

“Sprinkle some lettuce seeds on top, water every now and then, and within about 21 days, you’ll have lettuce,” he said.

“Pick the outer leaves and then leave the center leaves to grow and get bigger.”

Even if lettuce doesn’t get you terribly excited, it’s certainly versatile — and full of vitamin K (good for blood and bones), flavonoids (gets rid of those free radicals) and the “eye vitamin” lutein.

https://nypost.com/2025/06/23/health/3-healthy-foods-you-can-grow-at-home-even-without-a-yard/

5 health issues worsen in heat wave — how high temps can trigger heart attack and stroke

 This week, millions of Americans — including New Yorkers — are grappling with what forecasters are calling a “very sweaty” heat wave.

It’s miserable — but it’s worth remembering that, without the proper precautions, it’s also extremely dangerous.

Dehydration can cause dizziness, headaches, low blood pressure, blurred vision, kidney problems and, in extreme cases, fatal heatstroke.

And that’s just in healthy people.

Dr. Thomas Gut and Dr. Nima Majlesi explain how high temperatures can increase the risk of heart attack and stroke, kidney issues, respiratory problems and more.realstock1 – stock.adobe.com

While everyone should try to stay cool and hydrated in these sizzling temperatures, The Post spoke to two doctors who warn that people with these health issues are at especially high risk.

Heart disease

“Those with cardiovascular disease are at high risk since these patients are often asked to limit fluid intake,” Dr. Thomas Gut, associate chair of medicine at Northwell’s Staten Island University Hospital, told The Post.

“Sweating beyond the normal daily expected amount can lead to significant fluid shifts and electrolyte imbalances that can cause significant harm, especially to those already taking diuretics medications.”

Dr. Nima Majlesi, who practices emergency medicine at the same hospital, told The Post that high temperatures can mess with the normal blood flow to the heart, potentially causing acute coronary syndrome, which spikes the risk of heart attack.

When you get really hot, your body needs to work harder to cool you down, which can also place more strain on the heart.

For this reason, people who are at risk for heart failure are also in danger of getting worse in the heat, Majlesi noted.

Gut warns that people with respiratory diseases are at greater risk because “hot air, especially if humid, can trigger patients with even well-controlled breathing conditions into rapid and shallow breathing.”cunaplus – stock.adobe.com
Respiratory diseases

It’s normal to experience some difficulty breathing when it’s really hot, because your body’s attempts to cool down require more oxygen.

However, Gut warns that people with respiratory diseases are at greater risk because “hot air, especially if humid, can trigger patients with even well-controlled breathing conditions into rapid and shallow breathing.”

Those who depend on supplied oxygen are of particular concern, since power outages are more common during heat waves due to “the increased demand for homes needing cooling — power outages can leave those vulnerable patients without additional oxygen supplies,” he said.  

Drink half a glass of water per hour, or as instructed by your doctor, to stay properly hydrated.Antonioguillem – stock.adobe.com

Kidney disease

“Patients with kidney disease are also at high risk for electrolyte imbalances as their hydration status and sweating fluctuates during heat waves,” Gut said.

Psychiatric conditions and drug users

“In younger populations, neuropsychiatric conditions and underlying drug use disorders create a very high risk for issues with heat stroke,” Majlesi said.

“Cocaine-related deaths increase exponentially during heat waves, for example.”

Cocaine is a stimulant that increases your body temperature and puts extra strain on your heart, both of which can cause serious issues during a heat wave.

The same goes for other psychological conditions that put your heart to work — such as anxiety.

Anyone on medication that slows the body’s natural cooling process

“Diuretics, allergy medications and psychiatric medications can all create issues in this patient population,” Majlesi said.

What’s the worst that can happen?

According to Gut, dehydration can lead to headaches, fatigue and nausea — and in worse cases, confusion, muscle spasms, seizures and even coma.

“Heat stroke has dire consequences for a large percentage of patients,” said Majlesi. “Time [it takes] to cool is the No. 1 risk for death and severe injury.

“Gastrointestinal hemorrhage, vomiting and diarrhea occur frequently as blood is shifted away from intestinal perfusion.”

Liver and kidney injury are also possible, though the former won’t happen until the second or third day.

“Cerebral ischemia leading to stroke is common in the setting of excessive heat stress also for similar reasons as blood shunts away from central circulation to cool,” he added.

How can you avoid getting sick?

To stay safe, Gut recommends the following:

  • Drink half a glass of water per hour, or as instructed by your doctor
  • Consume drinks that contain electrolytes without added sugar
  • Avoid coffee, soda and alcohol
  • Stay in the shade or, better yet, indoors
  • Avoid being in direct sunlight
  • If you have to be in the sun, wear sunscreen and cover your head
  • Cool off with a misting spray bottle with water