"The gay movement should always, always be about expanding freedom for everyone, even bigots"
Matt Welch | December 22, 2008, 7:29am
So says Andrew Sullivan, in a pretty persuasive (to me) chunk of writing about the controversy over Barack Obama inviting Prop. 8 supporter Rick Warren to give the inaugural invocation (on which, make sure to read Katherine Mangu-Ward's piece from Friday). Excerpt from Sullivan:
Virtually Normal was an attempt to construct a theory for gay civil rights which rests on as much freedom and as little power as possible. I want to live in a free society alongside people who genuinely believe I am a sinner destined for hell - and I want to get along with them. I am concerned (but not obsessed) with changing their minds, but totally repelled by the idea of coercing or pressuring them to do so. I am simply interested in having the government treat me as it would treat them. Once we establish that, we can all believe and say and argue for precisely what we want. May a thousand theologies bloom.
So I oppose hate crime laws because they walk too close to the line of trying to police people's thoughts. I support the right of various religious associations to discriminate against homosexuals in employment. I support the right of the most fanatical Christianist to spread the most defamatory stuff about me and the right of the most persuasive Christianist to teach me the error of my ways. I support the right of the St Patrick's Day Parade to exclude gay people - because that's what freedom of association requires. In my ideal libertarian world, I would even support the right of employers to fire gay people at will (although I am in a tiny minority of gays and straights who would tolerate such a thing). All I ask in return is a reciprocal respect: the right to express myself freely and to be treated by the government exactly as any heterosexual in my position would be treated.
I deliberately framed my own case for gay rights away from forcing or even pressuring any other citizen to accept me - because that impedes their freedom and, in my view, the gay movement should always, always be about expanding freedom for everyone, even bigots. That's why I focused on the government treating gays and straights alike.
Whole thing here. Reason on gay/lesbian issues here, including:
* Walter Olson's 1996 review of Virtually Normal, in which Sullivan "emerges much more clearly as a partisan of classical-liberal, if not quite libertarian, views."
* Senior Editor Jacob Sullum more recent argument that "legal equality does not mean requiring universal acceptance of homosexuality," and
* Jonathan Rauch's 2004 examination of "what Friedrich Hayek can teach us about gay marriage."
KipEsquire | December 22, 2008, 9:09am | #
Besides the whole church-and-state thing (you can thank radical right-wing theocrat FDR for that), the point for most gays who are indignant about the Warren pick has nothing to do with any right/left/libertarian purity/impurity test. Few if any gays would give much of a dang if Obama were, say, to have Warren lead the first presidential prayer breakfast.
The indignation comes from other observations:
--As Hitchens (no theocrat)
notes, the only feasible justification for a religious invocation is because an inauguration is a special event intended to unite all Americans in a brief moment of national solemnity. But its special nature in turn demands that the least divisive figures possible be selected for the invocation and benediction. Billy Graham was
no supporter of gay marriage, but he acheived the status he did precisely because of his ability to dilute down his faith-in-the-public-square sermons to lowest-common-denominator milquetoast drivel. Warren is as far from that as is Louis Farrakahn.
--Warren, and most of the MSM, are distorting the issue by suggesting that this is only about Warren's role in Prop 8. It's more than that. As recently as
one week ago, Warren equated gay marriage with incest and pedophilia. Call us perverts (wrongly) and we call you bigots (rightly). It's that simple.
--Many are reaching the increasingly undeniable conclusion that the pick was politically based. Typical Clinton-Rove maneuver:
How can we milk this apolitical event for maximum political points? (Or, if you prefer:
This is a bleeping valuable thing! You don't just give something like this away for bleeping nothing!) Obama simply miscalculated how it would play out.
--Finally, there is the lie that Warren is a different kind of right-wing theocrat. Gays cannot join Saddleback Church, but gays are expected to "reach out to him"? Warren has stated publicly that Jews cannot get into heaven, that Mormonism is a cult, and that it is a sin to vote for an atheist. Etc. (But don't you dare call him "homophobic," because he gives us doughnuts and stands vigil over dying gay AIDS patients -- so he can assure them, a la Pat Boone, that God forgives them for their sinful lifestyle.)
With all due respect to Sullivan, publicly shaming and shunning people for their misconduct is a long-standing, revered tool of dogmatic Christianity. Gays are finally figuring that out and using it against the bigots. "Can't we all just get along?" has given way to "No more Mister Nice Gay." Enough is enough.