So the concerns of queer people of color are totally irrelevant to Pride. Only how they treat queer white people matter, and as long as all's good there, that should be celebrated. Also, apparently queer people of color aren't part of the homosexual community. Gotcha. Good to know.
If that's what Pride is becoming (which I know it sadly it and is probably not stoppable at this point), then even as someone who's white and bisexual I want nothing to do with it if it's in any way making any of my black brothers and sister feel uncomfortable or forgotten about.
And before you say it, I know none of that is in any way what you mean. I'm confident you didn't mean for any of that to come of that that way. But it's not just intent that matters when those words and choices have the same result regardless and have the same impact. Regardless of how good the intention, the result remains the same, so we have to be careful about that. If you're thinking along the lines you are in your post, that shows that your heart may be in the right place but you're missing the mark a bit and capable of being better. So be better.
And in any case, cops are allowed to participate--they just can't do so in uniform. If they nonetheless care more about wearing their uniform of all things than making sure that queer people of color actually feel comfortable being there at Pride with them, then that just tells me everything I need to know about their priorities and how they apparently want to participate in Pride while at the same time missing the entire point of it, trying to make it more about them than the people it's supposed to be celebrating.
Gonna be totally honest here - my initial reaction to this post was anger. Then I did some reading. Took two articles to realize I hadn't put in enough effort.
I appreciate your response - sincerely - and I'll try to be better.