On Wednesday #HeterosexualPrideDay burbled forth from the collective id of Twitter to ascend to the top rung of United States trending topics.

It is unclear if the hashtag originated as some kind of earnest, hetero rebuke to Gay Pride events, which have been taking place throughout American cities over the past few weeks. But it was quickly overtaken by smart-aleck Twitter users only too happy to turn the hashtag on its head.

My parents kicked me out of my home when they discovered I was straight. They also discovered I was 32. #HeterosexualPrideDay — LOLGOP (@LOLGOP) June 29, 2016

So #HeterosexualPrideDay is an actual thing? Like for real? REALLY? You sure you wanna do this? pic.twitter.com/xD2tP3u8PO — Cynthia Erivo (@CynthiaEriVo) June 29, 2016

Please find all the countries where you get killed for being straight highlighted in yellow! #heterosexualprideday ? pic.twitter.com/Awymdgjx4u — Jamie Lambert (@JamieCollabro) June 29, 2016

#HeterosexualPrideDay don’t worry if you miss today , it’s happening tomorrow. and the next day , and the next day pic.twitter.com/4pKQ0UiDLU — jacqueline (@pliffs_) June 29, 2016

#HeterosexualPrideDay is a reminder–we must keep marriage between one man & a series of progressively younger women pic.twitter.com/CBpLzCU3uq — Donald J. Drumpf (@RealDonalDrumpf) June 29, 2016

Can I refuse bake a cake for #HeterosexualPrideDay based on my religious liberty from having to serve idiots? — BWD (@theonlyadult) June 29, 2016

Others seemed peeved that the hashtag descended into parody at all, Daily Caller‘s Amber Randall quipping that “some users seriously couldn’t handle the most common sexual orientation being recognized.” Sad!

One post struck a more sober note, quoting LZ Granderson‘s op-ed published in CNN in June 2013, in which he wrote:

And if you ever find yourself wondering “How come there’s no Straight Pride month?” I say the day being straight becomes a crime — as being gay still is in many parts of the world — start one. Gay Pride was not born out of a need to celebrate not being straight but our right to exist without prosecution. […] So maybe instead of wondering why there isn’t a straight pride month or movement, straight people should be thankful they don’t need one.

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