
June 2006 Cover
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June means gay pride celebrations in big cities
throughout the world. Marches, parades, rallies,
festivals, and parties will commemorate the events
of June 1969 wherein patrons of New York City's
Stonewall Bar stood up
to police harassment. When the bar was raided that
historic night, gay men, drag queens, and street
riffraff-- instead of climbing meekly into the back
of police wagons-- fought back. What the cops had
thought would be
a routine shakedown turned into a riot.
Out of that act of resistance was born the
modern gay liberation movement. Central to the
spirit of Stonewall are two messages. First,
sexuality is not a legitimate concern of the police.
Bars and meeting places
should not be deemed illegal because gay people
congregate there. And second, as long as gay men
and other "perverts" remain cowed by the cops, the
cops will continue to harass, oppress, and extort.
Liberation first
requires shedding intimidating fear.
In Pride celebrations in smaller towns,
where "coming out" can carry personal
consequences, these twin messages of sexual
freedom and the imperative of confrontation are
often still in evidence. But sometimes these core
values seem lost in the rainbow hoopla of the big
city demonstrations wherein marketing
opportunities often overshadow political content.
While everyone enjoys a good party, it
would be exciting to see more of the spirit of
Stonewall in evidence this June.
In the United States, a return to basic
liberationist values is especially important. Our
government is seeking to legitimize police state
tactics: warrantless spying, detention without
charges, and torture. And
the Administration is beholden to a fanatical
Religious Right that, if they had their way, would
imprison or execute
all gay people. A police state able to strip a
"terrorist" of his civil liberties today, tomorrow will
be able to do
the same to "sexual degenerates." To remain true to
Stonewall's spirit, US Pride events must shout a
loud "No!" to the growing police state.
And an infusion of Stonewall spirit would
help rectify and sharpen our own political agenda.
Instead of looking to have our sex lives
legitimized through marriage laws that ape
heterosexual institutions, let's demand that the
state provide contractual options to
any folks raising kids, or to any
folks making
a household together without requiring they signal
their sexual commitment to each other. People
should be free to seek whatever religious service
they desire to proclaim their sexual morals, but it
should not be the
business of the state.
Instead of seeking "extra" equality with so-
called hate crime laws, let us demand adherence to
the noble concept that
everyone is equal before the law. Hate
crime laws, by suggesting some people are
"specially" protected, necessarily suggest that
others-- the homeless, the poor, and other
politically impotent victims of violence-- are left
unprotected.
And let us recognize the current insanity
whereby six-year-olds are suspended from school
for "sexual harassment," 11-year-olds are put on
lifelong registries of "sexually dangerous persons"
for routine sex play,
and adolescents are portrayed as victims of horrific
"abuse" whenever they seek affectionate sex with
adults. Hysterical demonization of sex is a threat to
young people's well-being and a frequent tool with
which to smear
gay men. We must demand it stop.
As you march, dance, and party at this
June's Pride festivities, remember you're celebrating
a riot aimed at stopping police harassment and
creating a more just relationship between citizens
and their government.
God knows, it's a message for our times.
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Editorial from The Guide!
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