Queer

  • “Nice shirt, Britney”

    Some day I’m going to get slapped by a midriff-baring Chelsea muscle queen when that pops out of my mouth as I walk down Eighth Avenue.

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  • Nice homosexuals against the queers

    Have you heard? Margaret Cho got kicked out of a gay event (she was supposed to be the headliner) during the Democratic convention in Boston because they were afraid she might offend some Republicans.

    It reminds me of a scene in a Madeline Olnek play I mentioned earlier on bloggy.

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  • Rick Santorum’s priorities

    Senator Rick Santorum on the anti-gay marriage amendment:

    “I would argue that the future of our country hangs in the balance because the future of marriage hangs in the balance,” he said shortly before the vote. “Isn’t that the ultimate homeland security, standing up and defending marriage?”

    As a New Yorker, I’m pretty sure that gay marriage is NOT the biggest danger we face.

    jcn-911.jpeg

    [photo courtesy of Jesse Chan-Norris]

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  • AIDS? What’s that?

    OK. One more Reagan post and then I’m going to ignore everything about him.

    I recommend writing to the Public Editor of the New York Times and ask why their huge obituary fails to mention AIDS. If you’re feeling particularly ambitious, ask about a few other items:

    • No mention of the illegal mining of Nicaraguan harbors during the Contra/Sandinista period [On The Issues]
    • No mention of Reagan’s support for the apartheid regime of South Africa. In 1985, Reagan one day announced that the vicious apartheid regime of P.W. Botha had already “eliminated the segregation that we once had in our own country.” [The Nation]
    • His support of military death squads in El Salvador (try googling the El Mozote Massacre) is simply “In El Salvador, the Reagan administration supported the government against a Marxist insurgency.” [ibid.]

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  • Reagan is dead

    Some excerpts from The Truth About Reagan And AIDS by Michael Bronski, November 2003:

    For the past two months I’ve been teaching a course entitled “Plagues and Politics: The Impact of AIDS on U.S. Culture” at Dartmouth College and have spent an enormous amount of time thinking about the AIDS pandemic.

    As we read about and discuss the history of the American AIDS epidemic in class, my students — all Reagan babies, born between 1981 and 1985 — are often dumbfounded when faced with simple facts. Although AIDS was first reported in the medical and popular press in 1981, it was only in October of 1987 that President Reagan publicly spoke about the epidemic. By the end of that year 59,572 AIDS cases had been reported and 27,909 of those women and men had died. How could this happen, they ask? Didn’t he see that this was an ever-expanding epidemic? How could he not say anything? Do anything?

    But the public scandal over the Reagan administration’s reaction to AIDS is complex and goes much deeper, far beyond the commander-in-chief’s refusal to speak out about the epidemic. Reagan understood that a great deal of his power resided in a broad base of born-again Christian Republican conservatives who embraced a deeply reactionary social agenda of which a virulent, demonizing homophobia was a central tenet. In the media men such as Pat Robertson and Jerry Falwell articulated these sentiments that portrayed gay people as diseased sinners and promoted the idea that AIDS was a punishment from God and that the gay rights movement had to be stopped. In the Republican Party, zealous right-wingers such as Rep. William Dannemeyer of California and Senator Jesse Helms of North Carolina hammered home this message. In the Reagan White House, people such as Secretary of Education William Bennett and Gary Bauer, Reagan’s domestic policy adviser, worked to enact it in the administration’s policies.

    What did this mean in practical terms? Most importantly, AIDS research was chronically under-funded. When doctors at the Centers for Disease Control and the National Institutes of Health asked for more funding for their work on AIDS, they were routinely denied it. Between June 1981 and May 1982 the CDC spent less than $1 million on AIDS and $9 million on Legionnaire’s Disease. At that point more than 1,000 of the 2,000 reported AIDS cases resulted in death; there were fewer than 50 deaths from Legionnaire’s Disease. This drastic lack of funding would continue through the Reagan years.

    When health and support groups in the gay community were beginning to initiate education and prevention programs, they were denied federal funding. In October 1987 Senator Helms amended a federal appropriations bill to prohibit AIDS education efforts that “encourage or promote homosexual activity” — that is, efforts that tell gay men how to have safe sex.

    When Rock Hudson, a friend and colleague of the Reagans, was diagnosed with AIDS and died in 1985 (one of the 20,740 cases reported that year), Reagan still did not speak out as president. When family friend William F. Buckley, in a March 18, 1986, New York Times opinion article, called for mandatory testing for HIV and said that HIV-positive gay men should have this information forcibly tattooed on their buttocks (and IV-drug users on their arms) Reagan said nothing. In 1986 (after five years of complete silence), when Surgeon General C. Everett Koop released a report calling for AIDS education in schools, Bennett and Bauer did everything possible to undercut and prevent funding for Koop’s too-little-too-late initiative. Reagan, again, said and did nothing. By the end of 1986, 37,061 AIDS cases had been reported; 16,301 people had died.

    I told one of my students that the most memorable Reagan AIDS moment for me was at the 1986 centenary rededication of the Statue of Liberty. The Reagans were there sitting next to French President Francois Mitterand and his wife, Danielle. Bob Hope was on stage entertaining the all-star audience. In the middle of a series of one-liners Hope quipped, “I just heard that the Statue of Liberty has AIDS but she doesn’t know if she got it from the mouth of the Hudson or the Staten Island Fairy.” As the television camera panned the audience, the Mitterands looked appalled. The Reagans were laughing. By the end of 1989 and the Reagan years, 115,786 women and men had been diagnosed with AIDS in the United States, and more than 70,000 of them had died.

    Here are some MP3s of music I’m using to celebrate. Listen to them while you read James‘ post.

    sylvester.jpg

    Sylvester, 1946? – 1988, death from AIDS

    Sylvester – You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real)

    Thelma Houston – Don’t Leave Me This Way

    Vicky Sue Robinson – Turn The Beat Around

    I wonder how Jesse Helms is feeling tonight?

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  • Queercore

    triple-creme.jpg
    Triple Creme

    There I was, reading an article on queercore bands in Newsday. I thought I recognized the woman on the left of the main photo before I saw a caption. Oh my goodness! It’s Christina Mazzalupo! I didn’t recognize her at first because I’ve never seen her look so serious.

    Here is her web site, and her page on Mixed Greens.

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  • Oh no, can’t have any “difficult” homos at the convention

    Remember when I wrote about how Jay Blotcher can’t be a stringer for the NY Times because he did media relations with ACT UP over ten years ago?

    One would hope that the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association would be concerned about such things. You would be wrong, at least in terms of them being on the right side of the issue. As Jay tells us:

    The National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association has barred me from appearing at their Plenary on Journalistic Objectivity, scheduled at the June Convention in NYC.

    The plenary session was created and organized by CNN journalist Rose Arce.

    A month ago, Rose invited me to sit on this panel. She felt my case strongly reflected the current debate over journalistic objectivity. She plans to have the two SF Chronicle lesbian journalists on the panel, who were reassigned from the gay marriage beat after becoming hitched.

    However, when Rose gave her list of panelists to NLGJA’s Executive Committee, she was told I could not sit on the panel.

    Why? NLGJA felt my problem with the NY Times was a “personnel matter” between employer and employee … and NOT an issue of journalistic ethics. This was the same reasoning they gave me in March, when they refused to support my case.

    Note that the NLGJA thinks it was wrong for the San Francisco Chronicle to prevent two lesbian reporters from covering gay marriage after they got married.

    I guess it’s only things related to AIDS that the NLGJA considers mere “personnel matters.”

    Revolting.

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  • RIP Keith Cylar

    Keith Cylar, co-founder of Housing Works, has died. I have never known of an organization that started out as a grass-roots activist organization and grew into something serving so many people while keeping its activist credentials. They have always helped the people — drug users, people with AIDS — that the other service and homeless organizations didn’t want to deal with.

    James has a post about him.

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  • James in the Washington Post

    I should have posted this yesterday. James was in the Washington Post yesterday in an article on gay marriage, quoted along with the likes of Tony Kushner and Bill Dobbs.

    His take on the article is here.

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  • Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell

    If gays in the military are such a bad thing, why does the number of dismissals fall when we’re at war?

    As the United States military continues to wage war in Iraq and Afghanistan, discharges of lesbian and gay military personnel plummeted 17% in FY2003, according to a new report from Servicemembers Legal Defense Network (SLDN).

    Conduct Unbecoming, an annual review of the military’s “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” law, finds that gay-related discharges fell to 787 last year, down from 906 in 2002. The 2003 figures mark a 39% decrease in discharges since 2001, the year before current conflicts in the Middle East began. The number also represents the fewest gay discharges since 1995.

    “Gay discharge numbers have dropped every time America has entered a war,” the report says, “from Korea to Vietnam to the Persian Gulf to present conflicts.” It goes on to note that “more of our allies have dropped their bans, and our American troops are fighting alongside openly lesbian, gay and bisexual allied personnel in the war on terrorism.”

    If our military leaders are so concerned about homos serving, they should be consistent and refuse to work with most of our allies. According to SLDN, the United States and Turkey are the only two NATO countries that do not allow openly gay soldiers.

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