Casperâs Target store took down its LGBTQ pride apparel display around midday Thursday, joining stores across the U.S. South that did the same earlier this week. Â
Target stores in some states have moved their Pride Collections to the backs of their stores this week in response to national outrage over the collection's inclusion of children's toys and clothes.Â
Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom and others, in turn, criticized the big box retailer for caving to the pressure.Â
The store's national headquarters volleyed a response Wednesday, saying it shuffled the collection to the back of many stores because people have been threatening employees.Â
Target's trading shares have dropped by a collective $9 billion since the boycott started, the New York Post reports.Â

'Just Infuriates Me'
An employee at Casperâs Target said many of the items are now in the back of the store with womenâs swim apparel. Â
âItâs disappointing,â said Casper resident Lisa Wertz Ehrlich in a Thursday interview with Cowboy State Daily. She said she reached out to LGBTQ advocacy group Casper Pride, and a group leader told her Casper is merely trying to protect its employees. âSo, itâs not, you know, Target against them, or anything.âÂ
Casper Pride did not immediately return an email requesting comment. Â
Ehrlich said she is straight but has a lot of gay friends and has been an advocate for LGBTQ issues since the mid-1980s. Â
âWe think we get so far with this fight for equality for everybody, including the gay people and so on and so forth, and then now weâre taking significant steps backwards in this stuff, right?â she said. âIt just ⊠infuriates me.â Â
The Casper Police Department said it could not search its call logs specifically for threatening incidents at Target this month. A Casper Targetâs human resources worker directed Cowboy State Daily to ask the corporate media office, which did not immediately return a voicemail Thursday. Â
Ehrlich said she hasnât seen any âoutright hostilitiesâ in the community, but âthe ugly comes outâ on social media. Â
Cheyenne Still On Display Â
There have been zero threatening incidents reported at Target in Cheyenne, the Cheyenne Police Department told Cowboy State Daily.Â
Wyomingâs other Target store in Cheyenne still had its pride display as its front-entrance focal point as of Thursday afternoon. Employees told Cowboy State Daily they werenât certain of its fate either way. Â
Pride CheyenneÂ
The controversy heated up this month on social media when many people, including non-partisan group Gays Against Groomers, called for a boycott on Target due to the Pride Collectionâs emphasis on children. The group claimed Target is run by âgroomers.â Â
Stuart Campbell of Pride Cheyenne countered, telling Cowboy State Daily that âtrans kids have always existed,â but that some seeking to rile up the national social-political scene are using transgender kids to advance other anti-LGBTQ agendas. Â
Campbell said itâs unfortunate that the Casper Target has shunted its collection to the back of the store. Â
âObviously, we think that visibility is important and itâs sad to see a corporation kind of bow down to national bullying, but we would obviously wish the situation were different,â he said. Â
Also, Toys And Books
The collections also contain toys, books, journals, candles and other merchandise, some for kids. Â
The Cheyenne and Casper collections have coloring books featuring gay couples kissing and snuggling, and Kidd Kenn dolls.Â
Kidd Kenn, 20, is a gay rapper who uses sexually and racially-charged lyrics. Â
Also in the Pride Collection are adult swimsuits advertising âtuck friendlyâ construction for concealing male genitalia; and adult, child and baby-sized clothing. Â
Missed The Mark
State Sen. Anthony Bouchard, R-Cheyenne, speculated that Target could suffer as severely as Bud Light has after the beer brand partnered with transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney, whom supporters call inspiring and detractors call sexist.Â
âWhat the hell are they thinking?â said Bouchard in a Wednesday interview with Cowboy State Daily. âDo straight people wear shirts saying, âIâm straight?â Is that their main identity when theyâre walking around? Why should anything of their sexual preference be worn on their sleeve anyway?â
Contact Clair McFarland at Clair@CowboyStateDaily.com




