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Gay Pride's Here! And I'm So Ashamed!

We're asking, so tell us: What about our civil rights?

It's Gay Pride week, and I'm so excited! I'm gearing up to once again be the only one I know at the march this Sunday!

It's just not considered a cool thing to do, since we don't seem to need the self-validation as desperately as before, but also because these kinds of ritualized group activities were never deemed fabulous to begin with by jaded, been-there queers. My très-gay friends generally feel it's a ghettoized event for the people who are only out and proud one day a year, much like fashionistas tend to scorn Halloween as hokey and die-hard drunks detest New Year's as a piss-poor holiday for amateurs.

But though I'm not much of a joiner myself, I still find it stimulating to see all the fragments of the community in one open-air place, and in a celebratory mode, with feathers and whistles on. I'll even be judging a pet fashion contest that day, proving we've come so far that even hairy creatures who sniff each other's butts are gay nowadays. (And please don't say they always were.)

But the truth is that while gay is everywhere, our rights are still being messed with as gay marriage and "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" continue to be battlefront issues that ignite debates about whether or not we deserve to be human. We're in the weird position of being incredibly glam and popular in our culture, yet denied equal rights on a daily basis—lifted up and kicked in the groin at every glittery turn. We've gotten a place at the table—and we even designed the table—but as we sit down, the tablecloth is rudely pulled out from under us every time. We can't even donate blood!

Fortunately, you learn that if you just wait a few minutes, the most virulent homophobes breathing down your neck will get exposed—like the rabidly anti-gay Baptist minister George Alan Rekers, who was caught with a male hustler on a saucy jaunt to Europe a couple of months ago. This was delicious stuff, especially when Rekers tried to explain that he merely needed the kid to lift his luggage. By the time he was exposed as a big old massage queen (at the very least), Rekers needed about 100 escorts to lift the bags under his eyes.

By now, it's old gay hat that closeted self-haters project queasiness about their own sexuality by trying to make everyone else miserable, too. If only these broken-hip hypocrites would be OK with it, then everyone else who's already OK with it could carry on uninterrupted. The bright side is that they're usually possessed with such incredible hubris that, like Rekers, they inevitably get caught holding a red-hot bag of chicken as the whole world laughs and cheers.

But generally, the trend among bold-faced names has been toward voluntarily coming out, and that's fine, too. In a matter of days last year, singer Adam Lambert went from urging a magazine to not make him seem "too gay" to being the queerest, most comfortably outrageous creature ever seen on the telly. Things happen so quickly in showbiz! And he still has a huge career!

Also doing fine are Sean Hayes and Ricky Martin, who nabbed media space with better-late-than-never admissions that the sky is blue (and that they're a significant part of the rainbow). And while the much-ballyhooed coming out of country singer Chely Wright was the very first time I'd ever heard of the woman, if lesser-knowns and has-beens want to make themselves known by announcing their gayness to the world, I say, "Go ahead. Give us the truth, and we'll give you some column inches!"

As gay becomes more OK and all the pertinent issues nab greater discussion, one of the few shocks left is that the church is still demonizing homosexuality, condemning gay marriage as impossible, and refusing to back safer sex as reasonable. Welcome to the Middle Ages. Happy, healthy gays are going to hell, according to the Vatican, but this is the same organization that has long harbored pervy, child-molesting priests, giving them a safe haven via sideways career advancement. Get caught diddling an altar boy? You simply get moved to another parish so you can fondle a new batch of meat. At least Rekers got himself a legal-age, consensual guy—and even paid him.

Every year, a new pedophilia scandal breaks in the media, and Pope Benedict XVI gives lip service to the problem before going back to the old complacency and finger pointing. While it's busy looking pained, the Vatican is careful to inform us that all the church-sheltered pedophilia of the past several centuries has been a direct result of homosexuality. It's not the church's fault for the enforced celibacy and self-loathing, mind you—it's the gays' just for being that way. As they insanely set about trying to remove every gay clergyman one by one, you wonder: 1) Who'll be left?, and 2) Every time a straight teacher molests a child, should the school system try to remove all the heteros?

Fortunately, nothing is secret anymore in today's communication age—though between the economy, the explosion of gay sites, and the increased coverage of gay issues by the mainstream press, traditional LGBT media is becoming even harder to find than a homophobe without a gay wedding singer. (And don't we love that Rush Limbaugh believes in traditional marriage so much that he's done it four times?)

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  • S.J.Cronk 07/21/2010 4:18:00 AM

    I always wondered why some gays actually have an opinion that being gay is corny.I recently found out that I had a three month relationship with a straight.He says, why do you think I kept asking you to leave>\I have had the similar experience with somebody and I thought gee, man, when I say leave my place then leave, man-you know?

  • willam 06/30/2010 1:49:00 AM

    the gays are not known for their prowress round tools but you hit that nail on the head. yes ma'am

  • Toni 06/27/2010 10:34:00 PM

    Love this column Michael and you!

  • brandon 06/27/2010 9:28:00 AM

    Best article I've read from you yet Musto! It's hard to celebrate the lack of "supposed" progress we were supposed to have achieved. Thats purely contextualizing Gay pride as a political event. Gay pride is not about having homo-sex its about the politics, our relationship with society and ourselves. Gay pride and being gay freely is the agenda. It started with Stonewall, why is that not even in my History textbook?

  • Myra 06/25/2010 6:15:00 PM

    See you at the parade Michael! Glad you're coming. I'm proud gay and proud all year round, but Pride Sunday is fun. Period.

  • Ellis 06/25/2010 1:33:00 AM

    Trust me, one of the most prideful sensations is watching the beginning of the parade led by "Dykes on Bikes", with the roar of their huge hog Harleys barreling brashly down FIFTH, and there Pamela Anderson meets Daisy Mae gal friends hanging on tight for dear life. The look on the faces of rookie Italian/Irish cops stationed at crosswalks is a true NEW YORK moment at its grandest. The following queens on the flower sticker festooned Vespas waving like Granny Clampett is the icing on the beefcake to follow. Wave back Michael - We all depend on seeing you at every important event supporting our common cause(s).

  • Konrad Product 06/24/2010 8:12:00 AM

    Musto, you hit the proverbial nail on the head: much sought after coverage - TV & FIlms & Magazines - hasn't been proven to "save lives" so much as careers D.O.A. Queer kids are STILL more likely to end up on the street - or, dead - than their straight counterparts. Until I read this piece, I thought I was living on some denial of reality queer planet. Things are that great? Really? Really??? For better or worse, America's ruled by laws (and even then, open to interpretation) and on this front .. eh. I say, march, show your rainbow prosti self, & feel fabulous about it, but the ACLU (and the National Center For Lesbian Rights - which does amazing work) is where your queer dollars should be going. They're the queer nerd lawyers who are working to change the laws.

  • malamapono 06/23/2010 6:31:00 AM

    *** We've gotten a place at the table—and we even designed the table—but as we sit down, the tablecloth is rudely pulled out from under us every time. We can't even donate blood! *** only blood money!! loved the parade but with (-364) days of festivity working beyond the bubbly k-holes, it seems a vacuum. but, have a wonderful time.

  • amanji 06/23/2010 4:51:00 AM

    i'm all for the parade......i've been many times to Seattle gay pride..... go Musto...!

 

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