Quote of the month:
"If we were to wake up some morning and find that everyone was the same race,
creed and color, we would find some other cause for prejudice by noon."
-George Aiken
Further readings:
The
Trouble With Normal: Sex, Politics and the Ethics of Queer Life, by Michael
Warner.
Web links:
Gays
and lesbians in the military, a collection of links.

Massimo's
Tales of the Rational:
Essays About Nature
and Science

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I never understood what the gay
problem is all about. As far as I am concerned, the moral aspect is simple: as long
as the people involved are consenting adults, what they do in their bedrooms is only and
exclusively their own business, end of story. Alas, plenty of people who are otherwise
adamantly against any interference of the government in the private life of its citizens
(e.g., when it comes to business practice or guns control), cry out loud for a
government-imposed morality that extends from the treatment of gays to that of
abortion practices and school prayer. It was therefore no surprise that last November
the US Army dismissed nine of its linguistsall experts in crucial languages for the
war against terrorism, such as Arabic, Korean and Mandarin Chinese
invoking that most unfortunate Clinton doctrine, the dont ask dont
tell policy that has regulated dismissal of gays from the military over the past few
years.
As readers may remember, President Clinton started out his first term with a couple of
bold moves, one of which was an executive order that would have made it as normal for gays
as it is (now) for blacks to be in the army (the other bold move was the call for a
universal health care system, which ended in total catastrophe despite Democratic control
of both the House and Senate, but thats another story). Soon came immediate
criticism from the far right, coupled with the obvious fact that the gay community
cant muster more than a limited number of votes which usually go to the Democrats
anyway (ah, the beauty of a two-party system with essentially no choices!). The
predictable result was that Clinton moderated his stance and ended up
proposing his infamous dont ask dont tell compromise.
From a moral perspective, the new policy makes no sense: one either thinks that a gay
lifestyle is incompatible with the values of the military, in which case
allowing gays to stay just because they dont declare themselves is simple
opportunism; or one thinks that the sexual habits of ones soldiers matter not to the
functionality of ones army, in which case the policy is an example of moral
cowardice. Either way, Clinton, gays, and rationality lose, while bigotry scores points.
From a practical viewpoint, furthermore, not only there is absolutely no evidence that
the presence of gays in the military has any negative effect on troops morale (remember,
the same was said of blacks and women, before those issues were settled), but we have at
least one glaring examplethe Netherlandsof an army which openly embraces gay
culture and doesnt seem to be any worse for it.
But the more interesting point one can take from this and similar discussions (e.g.,
those about abortion and school prayers) is that the standard distinction between
liberals and conservatives in terms of being respectively in favor
and against a large role of government in our lives just doesnt cut it. In reality,
we need to consider at least two major axes along which political positions and public
opinions can be distinguished: on the one hand, there is the economic axis, on
the other hand, the social axis.
One can call for little governmental interference in economic matters while at the same
time cry out for a large role of big brother in peoples bedrooms and public schools.
Such person would be a religious conservative. But it is also possible to be a libertarian
and favor little or no government influence in any sphere of life (except perhaps national
defense). A third position is occupied by people who would want a large role of government
in the control of the economy (to balance the natural tendency of big business to act
amorally and with reckless disregard for the public good), but little in the sphere of
personal life. That would be a progressive liberal, such as myself. Then there is the
strawman pink liberal that most people in America seem to love to hate, the
guy who wishes for governmental control of everything, communist-style. Needless to say,
this fourth corner of our logical space of political positions is essentially empty in
this country (though certainly not throughout the world).
Reality, of course, is more complicated that this simple classification may hint at,
but thinking along the two axes of economy and social issues at least brings us beyond the
simplistic dichotomy of liberal vs. conservative. It also strongly suggests
that we should have at least three, and possibly four, parties to represent the four
corners sketched above. Instead, we are forced to choose between two alternatives that
dont quite fit what a growing number of Americans actually thinks. I therefore
propose to split the Republican party into one of economic conservatives but social
moderates, and one of economic and social conservatives (the latter mostly populated by
the Christian right). Democrats could split into social and economic liberals on one hand,
and social liberals but economic conservatives on the other. But who is going to force
such healthy multiplication of political choices: the people, or the government? |