The Accidental Stepford

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January 2011

Johann Hari: Why is it wrong to protect gay children?

I am exhausted. I have spent all week trying to brainwash small children into being gay, by relentlessly inserting homosexuality into their maths, geography and science lessons. Their little eyes widened when the gay algebra lesson started, but it worked: their concept of “normal sexual behaviour” has been successfully destroyed. It’s all part of the program brilliantly co-ordinated by the Homintern to imposed The Gay Agenda on Every Aspect of British Life.

That, at least, is what you would believe if you had read some of Britain’s best-selling newspapers this week, or listened to some prominent Tory politicians. The headlines were filled with fury. The Conservative MP Richard Drax said gays were trying to impose “questionable sexual standards” on kids, while the Daily Mail said we were mounting a massive “abuse of childhood.”

Here’s what is actually happening. A detailed study by the Schools Health Education Unit found that in Britain today, 70 percent of gay children get bullied, 41 percent get beaten up, and 17 percent get told at some point in their childhood that they are going to be killed.

I’ll tell you the story of just one of them. Jonathan Reynolds was a 15-year old boy from Bridgend in South Wales who was accused – accurately or not, we’ll never know – of being gay. He was yelled at for being a “faggot” and a “poof”. So one day, he sat a GSCE exam – later graded as an A - and went to the train tracks near his school and lay on them. He texted his sister: “Tell everyone that this is for anybody who eva said anything bad about me, see I do have feelings too. Blame the people who were horrible and injust to me, see I do have feeling too. Blame the people who were horrible and injust to me. This is because of them, I am human just like them. None of you blame yourself, mum, dad, Sam and the rest of the family. This is not because of you.” And then the train killed him.

I guess nobody told Jonathan Reynolds that, as the columnist Melanie Phillips put it, “just about everything in Britain is now run according to the gay agenda.” The great Gay Conquest didn’t make it from her imagination to his playground, or any playground in Britain. Gay kids are six times more likely to commit suicide than their straight siblings. Every week, I get emails from despairing gay kids who describe being thrown against lockers, scorned by their teachers if they complain, and – in some faith schools – told they will burn in Hell. Every day they have to brave playgrounds where the worst insult you can apply is to call something “gay”. They feel totally lost. This could have been your child, or my child, or Melanie Phillips’ child.

Is it “political correctness” and “McCarthyism” to try to ensure these kids can feel safe in their own schools – or is it basic decency? A few very mild proposals were made this week for how to change the attitudes behind this. They came from an excellent organization called Schools Out, which is run with a small grant from the tax-payer. They gave out a voluntary information pack in which they suggested that, to mark LGBT History Month, teachers acknowledge the existence of gay people in their lessons. They could teach in history about how Alan Turing played a vital role in saving the world from the Nazis and paved the way for the invention of the computer, only to be hounded to death for being gay. They could learn in science that homosexuality occurs in hundreds of species of animals. They could – yes! – maybe even look in maths lessons at the census data, figuring out how prevalent gay people are.

We know that these lessons work in making gay kids much safer. The Schools Health Education Unit found that homophobic violence was dramatically lower in schools that taught about homosexuality. Good schools like Stoke Newington Secondary that followed this program were assessed to have “virtually eliminated homophobic bullying.” That has a very powerful educational purpose: when gay kids feel safe, they can learn.

Yet these pragmatic policies to make kids safe were presented as a wicked plot to endanger children. We can’t stop the endemic intimidation and violence if every time there is a policy to do it, it is grossly distorted and demonized in this way. The critics even whispered that gays want to “impose” sexuality on kids – with hints of the ugliest and oldest lie about gay men, that they are paedophiles.

Yet in one strange way, the current backlash is reassuring. When I was a kid in the 1980s, these sentiments were so widespread that a law – Section 28 – was passed to resolve them, and the cowed critics were derided as “the loony left.” Today, the opinion polls show 80 percent of the British people support gay marriage, and the people offering these views are regarded as the loons. It’s worth pausing and saying to all the people who have been open to persuasion and have changed their minds on this question: thank you. It’s incredibly moving to see how many heterosexual people have rallied to the defence of gay people, and it’s a reminder that we will never go back now.

But this anti-equality shouting still has an effect. It stops many schools from pursuing sensible policies that would save kids like Jonathan Reynolds, for fear of being accused of “political correctness gone mad” – so it’s important to answer the arguments now.

These critics don’t appear to understand what homosexuality actually is. In every human society that has ever existed, and ever will, some 3 to 10 percent of the population has wanted to have sex with their own gender. This is a fixed and unchangeable reality. The only choice is whether you are pointlessly cruel to them, or accept their harmless difference. Homosexuality is “normal sexual behaviour”: it occurs wherever human societies exist. It is not engaged in by a majority, but using that logic, Jews and Muslims are “abnormal” in Britain too – an ugly and foolish claim.

Informing children about these facts can’t make them gay. Nothing can. You can no more teach a child homosexuality than you can teach them left-handedness. Oddly, the homophobes seem to understand this about their own sexuality, but not about other people’s. I once asked Michael Howard, the architect of Section 28, if he would be gay now if he had been taught to be as a child. He moved very anxiously in his seat and mumbled something incoherent.

In order to justify their desire to discriminate against gay people, the few remaining homophobes have concocted a scenario where they are The Real Victims. They can say what they want, set up churches or mosques that preach what they want, and turn away gay people from their homes every day of the week if they so desire – and I would defend every one of those rights to the last ditch. There is only one thing they can’t do. They can’t choose to offer a service to the general public, and then turn people away on the basis of race or sexuality. They can’t put up de facto signs saying ‘No blacks, no Irish, no gays’ at their B&B.

This isn’t a form of prejudice – it is a way of preventing prejudice. Nobody will ever force you to work in a registry office or open a B&B, but if you choose to, you can’t reject the gay couples and expect to remain in post. (In one case where this happened, they offered her a job in the office instead, but she chose to be a bizarre cause célèbre of prejudice instead.) Services for the general public have to be available without contamination by bigotry. It’s a simple principle. Don’t demand the right to spit in the face of gay people, and claim you’re being picked on when you’re asked to stop.

Yes, I know your religious texts mandate bigotry against gay people. They also mandate slavery and stoning adulterers, and they laud a God who feeds small children to bears (see II Kings ii, 23-24). As secular morality has evolved, you have managed to overcome those beliefs. Here’s another that has to catch up. If you are really going to defend Biblical or Koranic literalism, you’ll end up as Stephen Green, head of the tiny Christian Voice sect, who argues that there is biblical authority for the legalisation of rape by husbands. So febrile is the atmosphere in Uganda that David Kato, the incredibly brave campaigner for gay equality, was just lynched as part of the hate-wave.

When people say that a “deeply held religious conviction” should enable you to break anti-discrimination laws and treat gay people as second class citizens, I reply – what about the Mormons? Until 1975, they believed black people did not have souls. (They only changed their minds when the Supreme Court ruled it illegal, and God conveniently appeared to say they did have souls after all.) Should they have been allowed to run adoption agencies that refused to give babies to black people, because of their “deeply held religious conviction”?

But there is an even lower point in the homophobes’ rhetorical arsenal. Being subjected to bullying and violence as children and teenagers makes gay people unusually vulnerable to depression and despair. The homophobes then use that depression and despair to claim that homosexuality is inherently a miserable state – and we shouldn’t do anything that might “encourage” it. They create misery, and then use it as a pretext to create even more misery.

Yet Melanie Phillips, Richard Drax and the last raging band of homophobes are right about one thing. There is a “Gay Agenda.” They are only wrong about its contents. It has one item on the list, and one item only: to ensure that gay people are treated exactly the same as everybody else. That’s it. That’s all. That’s the sum total of our ambitions. To get there we may – yes – have to mention the existence of gay people in schools. It is the only way to save kids like Jonathan Reynolds, and make sure everyone knows – as he said in his final text, before the train hit – “I am human just like them.”

POSTSCRIPT

As a side-note, it’s especially galling to be accused of endangering children by Melanie Phillips, the journalist in Britain who has done more to recklessly endanger children than any other I can think of. She was the leading journalistic champion of the false claim that the MMR vaccine causes autism. She refused to listen to the overwhelming scientific consensus and instead promoted the claims of a fraudster called Andrew Wakefield. After she played a key role in spreading and popularizing his claims, the rate of children being vaccinated plummeted, and several have died.

Even after the British Medical Journal concluded that Wakefield staged an “elaborate fraud”, she has refused to apologise. I’d say persuading parents not to give their kids a life-saving vaccine based on the claims of a charlatan was a bigger “abuse of childhood” than teaching them that gay people exist, wouldn’t you?

Jan 31, 2011 1 note
#Johann Hari #Education #Gay #Gay Rights
Help the homeless?

Beggars can’t be choosers bullies, or rather they shouldn’t be. I am very open to the idea of donating money to homeless charities, and am an occasional buyer of The Big Issue (let’s face it no one buys it to actually read it), but I resent people begging for short change - something I don’t carry generally, and would be suspicious about giving.

The homeless people that ask for change whilst sat on the floor, wrapped in cardboard to try to keep warm, I genuinely feel sorry for. I would like to give them change if I had it, but have grown up being told by teachers not to. We were always taught to give money to the charities helping the homeless rather than to the specific homeless people, I think because then you know the money is being used for the right reasons. Cynical? Very much so.

Last week I met the other kind of homeless person (twice) or in these cases “homeless” person. Whilst waiting for my bus to work in Birmingham a twitchy, angry guy came over and started talking to me. He asked me if I would help a homeless person if I saw one… then he asked if I would buy him a hot drink since it was such a cold day… so was he saying he was homeless? I assume so. His tone was threatening, and made me feel uncomfortable. I was not convinced he was homeless, and I was late for work. So I walked/ran away to a different bus stop. Cowardly move I know, but no one else was about and I was feeling like I was about to be mugged…

Whilst waiting for my bus home that night, a lady approached me to ask if I had any change. I assumed it was for the bus/ something else, and had to tell her that I didn’t carry change as I had a bus pass (true for the most part, I believe I had about 10p in change on me). She then asked if she could use my phone… what?? I told her that I didn’t want to give my phone to a stranger… she said she wouldn’t run off with it… well she would say that wouldn’t she? The bus arrived and I thought that would end things, but no. She had a frickin bus pass, so got on and proceeded to ask to borrow the phone of every person on the bus. No one did. I felt bad, but confused, and justified in my decision, as she could have taken the phone and run off with it…. I was about to tell her about dialling a reverse charge call at a phone box but didn’t.

The incidents made me feel unnerved and ashamed in equal measures. Maybe my actions were cynical and selfish, but I’m not sure I’d do anything differently if similar situations arose in the future.

Jan 25, 2011
#Homeless #Charity #Guilt #bullying
Play
Jan 22, 2011 1 note
#Brandy #Long Distance #Music #Soul
What I have been reading recently

In December I finished Saturday by Ian McEwan, and was at a lost as to what I should follow it with. After reading such a great book, I struggled to settle on my next read. I tried reading Flush by Virginia Woolf (having already read all her other novels with the exception of Night and Day as part of my degree), but I failed to get into it… one for another day I think.

I went through a week without reading anything, then it was Christmas time and I went home to my parents’ house. My salvation came in the form of five great books that I really wanted to read amongst my presents on Christmas morning. I started Imperial Bedrooms by Bret Easton Ellis on Boxing Day and had devoured it by the following day. I wrote my dissertation on Ellis in the Autumn of 2009, and when Imperial Bedrooms came out last summer I knew I wanted to read it (it had originally been scheduled for release whilst I was writing my diss. which had concerned me a lot) but having spent so much time with his works, I need time away from him… I have to say I was mildly disappointed by Imperial Bedrooms. It was amusing and surprisingly streamlined given the sizes of Glamorama and Lunar Park, but I felt like Clay no longer sounded like Clay… he sounded like the fictitious version of Bret himself from Lunar Park. A minor quibble about was a great and challenging piece of literature, but I’m still concerned that Ellis is starting to become unable to create a voice that does not sound like his own.

When I returned to Wolverhampton (and to work), I started to read Mr Norris Changes Trains by Christopher Isherwood and loved it to pieces. I read A Single Man last year and was impressed, but I almost feel that Mr Norris… is a stronger piece. Well maybe not, but I loved it all the same. Arthur Norris is a wonderful creation, and Isherwood presents a vivid image of 1930s Berlin. I thoroughly encourage all to READ READ READ.

What next? I’m not sure. Maybe I should return to my fiance’s list of political theory books (yay… *cough*), or maybe I should read another of Joseph Hanson’s great detective books… hmm…

Jan 15, 2011 1 note
#Bret Easton Ellis #Christopher Isherwood #Flush #Imperial Bedrooms #Mr Norris Changes Trains #Virginia Woolf #What I am Reading at the Moment #books #literature
Play
Jan 10, 2011
#Heather Watson #Tennis #Shuai Peng
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