Business advocate vows ‘We will never be afraid again’ after shooting at LGBTQ+ nightclub
November 21, 2022 | Startland News Staff
Kansas City’s LGBTQ+ business community remains defiant in the face of bigotry and vigilant in its commitment to protect its members in the wake of a deadly mass shooting this weekend in Colorado, said Suzanne Wheeler.
“Our ever-resilient community will continue to uproot hatred and bigotry with deeds of love and visibility,” said Wheeler, executive director of the Mid-America LGBT Chamber. “We will continue to proudly do business, live our lives, and show the world we will never be afraid again.”
Shortly before midnight Saturday, a man killed five people and injured 25 others at Club Q, a Colorado Springs LGBT nightclub. Anderson Lee Aldrich is facing five counts of first-degree murder and five counts of a bias-motivated crime causing bodily injury, CNN reported Monday afternoon, noting new hate crime charges detailed in court records.
The shooter was stopped by patrons of Club Q, limiting the number of deaths and casualties, according to media reports.
“This devastating shooting comes amid escalating violence directed against the LGBTQ+ community and should be a call to politicians and public officials to curb the rising anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric that adds fuel to that violence,” Wheeler said in a statement Monday. “We encourage you to reach out to your elected leaders and let them know that it is time the hatred ends.”
The Mid-America LGBT Chamber membership includes more than 1,200 active individuals from more than 300 organizations, including individual, non-profit, small business, public entities and offices, and corporate members.
“Our hearts go out to [Club Q] for the hate crime against their Queer Community …” read a social media post from Fountain Haus KC, an LGBTQ+ nightclub in Westport on Sunday. “We must stand together to fight and protect our safe LGBTQ+ spaces and end this senseless violence.”
The Westport business and LGBT Chamber member organized a Sunday night vigil and is planning a Dec. 4 fundraiser for victims of the shooting and their families.

Suzanne Wheeler, Mid-America LGBT Chamber, speaks in May 2022 during a chamber event at Fountain Haus KC; photo courtesy of the Mid-America LGBT Chamber
Wheeler drew specific attention to the timing of the shooting — the night before Transgender Day of Remembrance, a day to honor those killed in the past year “for simply daring to be their authentic selves.”
RELATED: Kansas bill targeting transgender kids is not just wrong — it’s bad for business, too
President Biden joined in condemning an “epidemic of violence and murder against transgender women — especially transgender women of color.”
Businesses like Club Q have not proven immune from gun violence that leaves “more families left with an empty chair at the table and hole in their lives that cannot be filled,” Biden said.
“Places that are supposed to be safe spaces of acceptance and celebration should never be turned into places of terror and violence. Yet it happens far too often,” the president said. “We must drive out the inequities that contribute to violence against LGBTQI+ people. We cannot and must not tolerate hate.”
The Colorado Springs shooting comes six years after 49 people were killed at an LGBTQ+ nightclub in Orlando.
There are more lives lost today and more people hurting, not just in Colorado but people the world over.
Hate of people for who they are.
Guns.
We must call out hate and the people who spread and profit from it.
We must keep working so mass shootings aren’t routine.
— Mayor Q (@QuintonLucasKC) November 20, 2022
Featured Business

2022 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Modern world requires entrepreneurs to think like creatives, says KU’s Innovator in Residence
Editor’s note: The University of Kansas’ School of Business is a partner of Startland News. LAWRENCE, Kansas — Building a skill set around creativity is critical to entrepreneurship — especially at a time when careers can be short-lived, said Josh Wexler. “Jobs are no longer for life,” explained the Innovator in Residence at the University…
Grantmaking reboot ‘just one piece of the larger puzzle’ in Kauffman Foundation reset, CEO says
Overhauling the Kauffman Foundation’s grantmaking strategy aligns with a broader, holistic reset for the influential Kansas City organization, said Dr. DeAngela Burns Wallace, emphasizing org-wide moves to deepen the impact and dialogue sparked by its giving. “We’re still engaged in the work happening locally, regionally, and nationally,” said Burns-Wallace, president and CEO of the Ewing…
Midwest crypto platform Normal aims to bring blockchain ‘banking’ to the mainstream
Cryptocurrencies are poised to radically disrupt and transform monetary systems across the globe, said Joshua Blew, noting the coming financial freedom offered by such developments is closely tied to individuals’ access to the best tools and ownership of the right assets. But connecting to them in a world of banking behemoths and entrenched financial institutions…

