Putnam County Enacts Measure Some Say Could Restrict Drag Shows

The language of the ordinance is identical to one adopted earlier this month in Jefferson County, West Virginia.

The Putnam County Commission approved an ordinance Tuesday that could restrict drag shows.

With a 3-0 vote, Putnam County’s commissioners banned minors from seeing certain adult performances in unincorporated areas of the county.

Although the ordinance does not specifically single out drag, opponents say that is the intent.

As written, the law does not appear to prohibit a drag show at a city park in Hurricane where the Putnam Pride festival is scheduled to take place this weekend.

The language of the ordinance is identical to one adopted earlier this month in Jefferson County, West Virginia. 

As the ACLU of West Virginia points out, drag performances are protected speech. Federal courts have recently blocked similar laws in Florida and Tennessee.

Us & Them: Sodomy, Stonewall & Pride

Not that long ago, you could get locked up for being gay. 

A West Virginia man tells “Us & Them” host Trey Kay about being sent to a mental institution for violating sodomy laws. Standing in front of the historic Stonewall Inn in NYC’s Greenwich Village, gay activist Brendan Fay tells Trey how things have changed over the past five decades for LGBTQ people in America and around the world.

On this week’s episode of the “Us & Them” podcast: the pride, progress and ongoing struggle of gay rights.

From West Virginia Public Broadcasting and PRX, this is “Us & Them” the podcast where we tell the stories about America’s cultural divides.

Subscribe to “Us & Them” on Apple PodcastsNPR One or wherever you listen to podcasts.

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