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26 Nov 2008 07:47 am
Taking It Out On The Gays
Salon recently interviewed Richard Rodriguez. He's one of the most brilliant and soulful gay writers around and this is a typically shrewd insight into the forces behind Prop 8:
American families are under a great deal of stress. The divorce rate isn't declining, it's increasing. And the majority of American women are now living alone. We are raising children in America without fathers. I think of Michael Phelps at the Olympics with his mother in the stands. His father was completely absent. He was negligible; no one refers to him, no one noticed his absence.
The possibility that a whole new generation of American males is being raised by women without men is very challenging for the churches. I think they want to reassert some sort of male authority over the order of things. I think the pro-Proposition 8 movement was really galvanized by an insecurity that churches are feeling now with the rise of women.
Monotheistic religions feel threatened by the rise of feminism and the
insistence, in many communities, that women take a bigger role in the
church. At the same time that women are claiming more responsibility
for their religious life, they are also moving out of traditional roles
as wife and mother. This is why abortion is so threatening to many
religious people -- it represents some rejection of the traditional
role of mother.
In such a world, we need to identify the relationship between feminism
and homosexuality. These movements began, in some sense, to achieve
visibility alongside one another. I know a lot of black churches take
offense when gay activists say that the gay movement is somehow
analogous to the black civil rights movement. And while there is some
relationship between the persecution of gays and the anti-miscegenation
laws in the United States, I think the true analogy is to the women's
movement. What we represent as gays in America is an alternative to the
traditional male-structured society. The possibility that we can form
ourselves sexually -- even form our sense of what a sex is -- sets us
apart from the traditional roles we were given by our fathers.
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