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HRC’s Horrid Choice

December 2003

 

The Human Rights Campaign (HRC), the nation’s highest profile “lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender” advocacy group, recently named Massachusetts State Senator Cheryl Jacques as its new executive director. Given Jacques dreadful record on civil liberties issues and her Anita Bryant-like political exploitation of sexual hysteria, HRC’s selection is horribly inappropriate.

 

Jacques began her political career as an assistant prosecutor in the Middlesex County (Massachusetts) District Attorney’s office, infamous for its headline-grabbing prosecution of sex cases. Indeed, Jacques rose to prominence for her central role in the prosecution of Ray and Shirley Souza, accused in the… Continue reading

Facts, Not Fear

November 2003

 

Treatment for HIV infection has advanced dramatically since the 1980s. Back then, contracting HIV meant almost certain death, usually after a series of highly visible, body-ravaging opportunistic infections. Lacking any effective treatments, those with HIV grasped at longshot potential therapies– teas made from fermented fungus, herbs from the pharmacopoeia of traditional Chinese medicine, procedures to return blood back to the body after being removed and heated, white light visualization and other forms of faith healing. None worked. Treatment advances came only after ACT-UP demanded action by the government, researchers, and pharmaceutical companies– all of which had… Continue reading

Who Killed Father Geoghan?

October 2003

 

In 2002, John J. Geoghan, a Roman Catholic priest, was sentenced to ten years in Massachusetts prison for touching a 10-year-old boy’s backside at a public swimming pool in 1992. Geoghan’s case received unprecedented media coverage. Local papers and television stations told us again and again that Geoghan had abused over a hundred other boys. Soon, dozens of other Boston-area priests were similarly accused– not with legal evidence, but rather with allegations and unsubstantiated hearsay dating back decades. Eventually, over 500 lawsuits alleging misconduct by clergy were filed against the local archdiocese demanding millions and millions… Continue reading

Dean’s Deadly Flip-Flop

September 2003

 

Among the gaggle of candidates for the 2004 Democratic presidential nomination, former Vermont governor Howard Dean is held in reverence by many lesbigay organizations and publications. Indeed, Dean’s support for gay civil unions in his native Vermont has won him the overwhelming support of gay and lesbian voters, thus providing his first-ever national campaign with a vital financial and organizational base that has startled television and op-ed pundits.

 

Many gay groups and publications note Dean’s support for civil unions and anti-discrimination laws protecting homosexuals and thereby credit Dean as being a principled civil libertarian. Dean… Continue reading

Justice for Matthew Limon

August 2003

 

People who care about sexual freedom and civil liberties can celebrate this summer’s Supreme Court ruling in Lawrence and Garner v Texas striking down sodomy laws. The repugnant notion that the government can police our bedrooms to dictate how we use our own mouths, assholes, and genitals has, at long last, been recognized as legally impermissible.

 

Most politically aware gay people are familiar with the case: Houston police, responding to a neighbor’s erroneous weapons report, forced their way into John Lawrence and Tyrone Garner’s bedroom. There, they discovered the two men having sex. Police arrested… Continue reading

Our Enduring Message

July 2003

 

The chronicler of gay sex Boyd McDonald remarked, “Some people have gotten a lot out of their homosexuality, so they have a lot to give back.” Though he was speaking about the letter-writing contributors to his series of true homosexual experiences, Boyd’s observation also applies to the gay community’s political leadership.

 

The initial message of the modern gay movement was “gay is good.” Though simplistic, the slogan was an antidote to social condemnation of homosexuality. Instead of buying into prevailing morality, people were encouraged to trust their own experience over pieties about appropriate sexual conduct.… Continue reading