The Value of Political Theatre
Superstring01 said:
Unbelievable! You've gotta watch this video.
I like the
Economist blogger's characterization: "
This is what it looks like to win an argument".
Unfortunately, winning the argument and winning the day are two separate things, as Iowa House Republicans reminded. But the bill is expected to crash in the Senate, so W.W.'s other characterization seems accurate: "
Whatever it was Iowa House Republicans were trying to achieve, it certainly wasn't to offer a soapbox to Zach Wahls ...."
And in the larger discussion of politics, I would suggest this is also what it looks like when people fumble away a lost cause. I am
thoroughly convinced, having watched and taken part in this political issue for nigh on twenty years, that the gay rights movement would not have achieved such progress over the period but for the futility of the homophobic argument. That is,
if they had just let go, the status quo would have held for longer than it did.
The blogger described the hearing and vote as "ineffectual conservative political theatre", and it is hard to disagree. Except that it might actually represent
deterioration. It seems to me that such efforts are actually
hastening civil rights regarding sexual orientation.
The gay rights questions have been put to me, largely, by the conseratives. And, for the most part, the conservatives are losing. But as certain issues, such as gay marriage, came to the fore, some political entities felt compelled to stake their territory, and create registries and unions, or codify prohibitions.
We won our first DoMA decision last year. Sure, it took longer than I wanted, but so what? It's here. And it couldn't have come about without the high-profile contention that kept certain questions in the limelight. There would be no question of what to do with a gay partner for benefits if there were no recognized gay partners, which was certainly fallout from the conservative response to
Lawrence v. Texas.
Everything else follows, and they know it. I'm not certain
Lawrence could have come about without the OCA and Measure 9 in Oregon, or Amendment 2 in Colorado. People were happy to ignore the question unless someone asked. So it seems to me the more they asked, the more the conservatives felt rejected. And to some degree, society is actually making some of the progress it is
specifically because conservatives keep asking the question.
And that's how it works. Because there will
always be some conservative schmuck sitting on a school board somewhere who wants to badmouth gay kids
exactly at the moment everyone else is taking a breath and trying to get a handle on the body count and what it means.
Deep down, near the heart of the whole argument, is that men don't want to imagine their sons getting dicked any more than they want to think about their daughters. Or they do, if you're a Freudian pessimist, and everything just gets
really complicated.
But the simple version is that if people don't want to face an issue or aspect of life, they just don't. Hence, the questions never get asked.
But who comes along and asks us to think about it?
They see the conservative schmuck on the school board. They think about the crazy abstinence lady they heard on the radio. They remember the prudes who worked so hard to screw up everyone's understanding of sexual processes in humans. The school principal who did the thong check at the dance probably works her way into people's general view of the issues. Someone may not understand buggery. They might not comprehend the idea of actually wanting that kind of contact. But they also know shit stark crazy when they see it, and so when they're asked to make a decision, they decide in a way that doesn't include them with the shit stark crazy.
And this issue is so
over that we see in that process a suggestion of how the rest of this is going to play out.
As the traditionalists and homophobes lose ground, they'll keep sounding crazier, and more and more of those middle grounders who, I think, would rather never think about such things at all, will separate from the clear insanity.
I mean, this
can't really be worth writing discrimination into Iowa law, can it?
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Notes:
W. W. "The Iowa House v Zach Wahls and his moms". Democracy In America. February 4, 2011. Economist.com. February 7, 2011. http://www.economist.com/blogs/democracyinamerica/2011/02/politics_and_morality_gay_marriage