United States & Canada International
Home PageMagazineTravelPersonalsAbout
Advertise with us     Subscriptions     Contact us     Site map     Translate    

 
Table Of Contents
March 2007 Cover
March 2007 Cover

 Editorial from The Guide Editorials Archive  
March 2007 Email this to a friend
Check out reader comments

The War as a Gay Issue
By French Wall

Often, presidential bellicosity and mendacity go unchecked. Both Congress and the American public all-too-dutifully fall in line behind their commander-in-chief when sabers are rattled and the supposed atrocities of "the enemy" trumpeted. Banking on this deference to the executive, the Bush/Cheney administration launched the Iraq War, the centerpiece of their "perpetual" war on terror, with an orchestrated barrage of deceitful propaganda calculated to inflame the populace. Aided by a domestic press both complacent and complicit, Americans were fed a litany of concocted excuses as to why people needed to die and a trillion dollars be wasted. And fear was cultivated in order to justify suspension of civil liberties and smear critics. For a while, it worked.

View our poll archive

But the Iraq War has dragged on long enough to expose both the Administration's ongoing incompetence and the lies on which this needless war was predicated. At long last, the American people have joined the rest of the world in recognizing that the Bush/Cheney first-strike doctrine has made the world more dangerous and the United States ultimately weaker.

While it is a relief that, finally, voices raised in opposition to the war are being heard, our recovery from this debacle will be enhanced with a clearer understanding of how and why the Iraq War is an important gay issue. Many gay groups have been reluctant to devote resources to the anti-war effort, but thoughtful consideration suggests anyone committed to gay liberation must necessarily be committed to stopping the Iraq War and the "war on terror" mindset.

Central to gay liberation is the notion of privacy-- that some parts of our lives are "off limits" to the government. But the Bush/Cheney endless war claims the right to spy on every e-mail you send and every phone call you make. All your internet transactions are to be stored away on government computers, available for scrutiny should government agents choose. No meaningful notion of privacy is compatible with a government that spies on all citizens all the time.

Gay liberation has embraced the rainbow as a symbol that homosexual expression is universal, that people of every color and ethnicity have an interest in freedom from destructive anti-gay attitudes. But this war has led to crass racial profiling whereby some dark-skinned citizens are de facto "suspects," to be harassed at the border, stopped on the street, and forever eyed warily. How can anyone treated thusly ever enjoy true gay freedom? When airport and train station loudspeakers constantly exhort listeners to report any "suspicious looking" person, how can our brown-skinned or differently-dressed brothers and sisters go about their lives without feeling conspicuously alien? The racism and xenophobia generated by the war undermine our commitment to civic equality.

The gay movement has wrapped itself in the mantle of "human rights," the notion that by virtue of being human, each of us-- no matter our sexuality or other attributes-- has a basic dignity and autonomy that civilized governments respect. But the Bush/Cheney war asserts the right to kidnap, imprison, and torture whomever they choose. Any government that claims the right to lock prisoners in freezers for hours, to prod their genitals with electroshock devices, to tie them naked to boards and dunk them in tanks of ice water so as to provoke fear of drowning, to threaten them with snarling dobermans, to pose and photograph them in humiliating sexual positions, to choke them into unconsciousness, and to bind them for long periods in excruciating "stress positions" is a government diametrically opposed to furthering the cause of human rights.

And finally, gay liberation is about learning to celebrate life, to replace indoctrinated fear with transcendent love. War-- inevitably bringing brutality, fanaticism, and death-- is, thus, antithetical to gay liberation and, indeed, to life itself.

Gay freedom cannot flourish in a culture devoted to über-surveillance, fear-mongering, torture, and death. That's why thoughtful gay people know that the Bush/Cheney "perpetual" war must be stopped.

Author Profile:  French Wall
French Wall is the managing editor of The Guide
Email: french@guidemag.com


Guidemag.com Reader Comments
You are not logged in.

Most Recent 1 of 1 Show Full List  [ First | Last ] Post New Message

# Subject Author Date/Time (ET)
1233 questions of liberty slipstream 03/18/07 10:37 PM

Custom Search

******


My Guide
Register Now!
Username:
Password:
Remember me!
Forget Your Password?




This Month's Travels
Travel Article Archive
Seen in Palm Springs
The Party Bar -- Score Bar

Seen in Miami / South Beach

Cliff and Avi of Twist

Seen in Tampa & St. Petersburg

Partygoers at Georgie's Alibi, St Pete



From our archives

Why are so many out to suppress this book about teen sexuality?

Personalize your
Guidemag.com
experience!

If you haven't signed up for the free MyGuide service you are missing out on the following features:

- Monthly email when new
   issue comes out
- Customized "Get MyGuys"
   personals searching
- Comment posting on magazine
   articles, comment and
   reviews

Register now

 
Quick Links: Get your business listed | Contact us | Site map | Privacy policy







  Translate into   Translation courtesey of www.freetranslation.com

Question or comments about the site?
Please contact webmaster@guidemag.com
Copyright © 1998-2008 Fidelity Publishing, All rights reserved.