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Editorials

Sex, Love, and Television

December 2000

 

Even a casual channel surfer cannot help but notice a tremendous change in television content in the last few years. Gay and lesbian people are everywhere: sitcoms, talk shows, and made-for-TV dramas now routinely feature gay characters. And no longer are such roles relegated to the quirky closeted neighbor, depraved psychopath, or tragic victim; today's television homosexuals are often appealing, witty, sympathetic central characters.

 

We can applaud television's more inclusive programming (what kid can now think they're "the only one"?), yet a closer look at the sexual attitudes and values projected by even the most gay-friendly shows… Continue reading

Make Your Vote Count: Vote Nader

November 2000

 

Given Al Gore's terrible record on sexual freedom and social justice issues, why are many gay and lesbian voters supporting him? Gore voted to retain DC's sodomy law, defended the military's "don't ask, don't tell" debacle, boasted to the Christian right that he opposes gay marriage, waffled on HIV discrimination protections, and refused to utter the "g" word at his convention.

 

Ralph Nader supports gay rights, universal health care, and economic justice– and opposes turning the government into the police arm of a corporate-controlled state. Why aren't more gay and lesbian voters supporting Nader's challenge to a… Continue reading

The ACLU Gets It

October 2000

 

Allowed to compete freely with alternative theories, truth has an advantage. Incomplete understanding or the prejudices of the age may temporarily obscure truth, but when inquiry is unfettered, when dogma receives no subsidy in the form of punishment for dissenters, truth prevails.

 

Recognizing this enduring resilience of truth is part of the classic defense for freedom of expression. Freedom's advocates also note the inherent dangers of enforced "truth." Institutions and individuals, even if well-meaning, who exert their power to "protect" truth by suppressing dissent inevitably end up defending dogma. The Catholic Church may have been able to… Continue reading

Join the Dick Army!

September 2000

 

Remember Dick Armey, the US House of Representatives Majority Leader who caused a stir in 1995 by calling openly gay Representative Barney Frank "Barney Fag"? Armey claimed then that he intended no slur, that "fag" was simply the slip of a tongue trying to say "Frank." No one bought his feeble excuse; his comment, however unintentional, was rightly judged as revealing that he thought of all homosexuals, congressmen included, as fags. Given his ultra conservative ideology, it was fair to label Armey's Freudian slip as homophobic– when right-wing zealots call someone a fag, it is not a… Continue reading

Mbeki’s Lessons

August 2000

 

"What an idiot!" was one HIV researcher's response when contacted for The Guide's July 2000 story on South African President Thabo Mbeki's AIDS policies.

 

That scientist's reaction is common. Mbeki has invited those who claim HIV is not the cause of AIDS to government-sponsored panel discussions. He has repeatedly asserted that European and North American models for controlling AIDS do not make sense in an African context. As a result, in much of the Western press he has been painted both as a fool who has been duped by paranoid charlatans, and as an opportunist exploiting bad… Continue reading

Free Bernard Baran

July 2000

 

In 1985, Bernard Baran, then 19, was convicted of multiple rapes of three-, four-, and five-year-old boys and girls at the Massachusetts daycare center where he worked. Sentenced to three concurrent life terms, he has been incarcerated ever since. In prison, Baran has been beaten, sexually assaulted, and suffered all the torments routinely visited on “skinners” (convicts serving time for sex offenses). He has legitimately feared for his life.

 

But Baran has survived. And he has steadfastly maintained that he is innocent, even though “admitting” his guilt would be his only chance for release.

 … Continue reading