Target has pulled some of its products celebrating Pride Month and the LGBTQ community in response to threats and "confrontational behavior" at certain stores.
In recent days, social media has buzzed with conservative backlash to Pride merchandise at Target. One video showed a man taking down and stomping on a rainbow #takepride cardboard store display. Others showed people confronting store employees about the Pride sections or products.
Target has also received calls threatening violence on its customer hotline. Target declined to go into specifics, including if any direct threats were made to its Minneapolis headquarters and what items are no longer available.
"Since introducing this year's collection, we've experienced threats impacting our team members' sense of safety and wellbeing while at work," the company said in a statement. "Given these volatile circumstances, we are making adjustments to our plans, including removing items that have been at the center of the most significant confrontational behavior."
While Target didn't list the specific items removed from its shelves, the online outrage appeared to center on a few products.
Some were swimwear made for those who identify as transgender with a "tuck-friendly" crotch and "light binding" chest construction. Several social media users, including some prominent politicians, incorrectly said the swimsuits were made for children. Those items were still available online and part of the Pride displays at the fronts of the Nicollet Mall and Minneapolis Quarry stores Wednesday.
The other apparel and accessory items were from U.K.-based brand Abprallen, which critics accuse of expressing "Satanist" views in its designs. On the brand's website, the designer — who identifies as a gay, trans man — explained that he juxtaposes the use of pastels with "imagery of skulls and spooky things," an interest of his since childhood as "there's something magical about the unknown, the frightening and the mystical."
Those products are no longer on Target's website. But one of the designer's items — a pink fanny pack with a space theme saying, "We belong everywhere" — was still on shelves at the Minneapolis Quarry and Richfield stores.