19 April 2009

What is their problem?

In an opinion column in The New York Times, Frank Rich lays into the anti-gay brigade:
What would happen if you crossed that creepy 1960s horror classic The Village of the Damned with the Broadway staple A Chorus Line? You don’t need to use your imagination. It’s there waiting for you on YouTube under the title Gathering Storm: a sixty-second ad presenting homosexuality as a national threat second only to terrorism. The actors are supposedly Not Gay. They stand in choral formation before a backdrop of menacing clouds and cheesy lightning effects. “The winds are strong,” says a white man to the accompaniment of ominous music. “And I am afraid,” a young black woman chimes in. “Those advocates want to change the way I live,” says a white woman. But just when all seems lost, the sun breaks through and a smiling black man announces that “a rainbow coalition” is “coming together in love” to save America from the apocalypse of same-sex marriage. It’s the swiftest rescue of Western civilization since the heyday of the ambiguously gay duo Batman and Robin.
Far from terrifying anyone, Gathering Storm has become, unsurprisingly, an Internet camp classic. On YouTube the original video must compete with countless homemade parodies it has inspired since first turning up some ten days ago. None may top Stephen Colbert’s on Thursday night, in which lightning from “the homo storm” strikes an Arkansas teacher, turning him gay. A “New Jersey pastor” whose church has been “turned into an Abercrombie & Fitch” declares that he likes gay people, “but only as hilarious best friends in TV and movies.”
Yet easy to mock as Gathering Storm may be, it nonetheless bookmarks a historic turning point in the demise of America’s anti-gay movement. What gives the ad its symbolic significance is not just that it’s idiotic, but that its release was the only loud protest anywhere in America to the news that same-sex marriage had been legalized in Iowa and Vermont. If it advances any message, it’s mainly that homophobic activism is ever more depopulated and isolated, as well as brain-dead.
Gathering Storm was produced and broadcast— for a claimed $1.5 million— by an outfit called the National Organization for Marriage. This “national organization”, formed in 2007, is a fund-raising and propaganda-spewing website fronted by the right-wing Princeton University professor Robert George and the columnist Maggie Gallagher, who was famously caught receiving taxpayers’ money to promote Bush administration “marriage initiatives”. Until last month, half of the six board members (including Mr. George) had some past or present affiliation with Princeton’s James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions. (One of them, the son of one of the twelve apostles in the Mormon church hierarchy, recently stepped down.)
(Rico says there's a lot more; go there and read it if you're interested.)
As marital equality haltingly but inexorably spreads state by state for gay Americans in the years to come, Utah will hardly be in the lead to follow Massachusetts, Connecticut, Iowa, and Vermont. But the fact that it too is taking its first steps down that road is extraordinary. It is justice, not a storm, that is gathering. Only those who have spread the poisons of bigotry and fear have any reason to be afraid.
Rico says he found the YouTube video too creepy to watch... Plus, surely there's one or two crises more worthy of worry these days (oh, say, global warming or food species crashes or the failure of good-looking people to reproduce) than whether gays aren't being suppressed enough?

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