Last edited: January 28, 2005


The Republican Rag

In the light of Senator Santorum’s remarks equating homosexuality with bigamy and incest, it seems clear that the 11th Commandment of the Republican Party remains: Thou shalt diss gays.

An Advocate.com exclusive, posted April 22, 2003

By Lewis Whittington

I love it when my sexuality is likened to sins by politicians. It makes me feel alive, fearless, and oh so, so gay. I mean gay, fabulously, in the new and the old sense of the word. Who can forget Trent Lott’s aria about homosexuality being akin to alcoholism? I thought, Sousy, you’re really going to burn in Republican hell if they stay in power. Thank God!

Now a similar prickly gay controversy has been ignited by U.S. senator Rick Santorum, a Pennsylvania Republican who told the Associated Press this past weekend that homosexuality is no better than bigamy, incest, and adultery. Well, he’s right, really—if he’s talking about those documented cases of bigamous homosexuals having sex with his children and the neighbors.

But for the rest of us gays, he’s taken a wrong political turn at the intersection of Queer Street and Homophobia Boulevard, where nobody is going to pick him up. I don’t even think Jesse Helms himself would have made such a costly political blunder.

The issue came up for Santorum when he was asked about the impending decision by the U.S. Supreme Court on the constitutionality of sodomy laws. The case of Lawrence v. Texas concerns two gay men who were arrested for having sex in one man’s home after the police were called to the scene by an anonymous phone call. Texas is one of a few states whose antiquated sodomy statutes apply exclusively to homosexuals, and many court watchers think that inequity alone might be enough to sink the law. In a statement to the AP, Santorum suggested that maybe the U.S. Constitution doesn’t cover homosexuals—and that, in fact, it promises no one any privacy whatsoever. And that’s a good thing, he said.

“If the Supreme Court says that you have the right to consensual [gay] sex within your home, then you have the right to bigamy, you have the right to polygamy, you have the right to incest, you have the right to adultery,” said the senator. “You have the right to anything. All of those things are antithetical to a healthy, stable, traditional family…. It all comes from, I would argue, this right to privacy that doesn’t exist, in my opinion, in the United States Constitution.”

Oh, really, Mr. Santorum? I would suggest that you that you read that document again. The Constitution—and the Bill of Rights and the many amendments that have followed—is based the democratic ideals of individual freedom. As the Declaration of Independence put it, our Founding Fathers believed that everyone deserves “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness,” not a cop in every bedroom. Although Mr. Santorum’s stream of consciousness might be refreshing in an age of scripted politicians (or should I say “scriptured” politicians?), one wonders whether he is deliberately inept, conspicuously malicious, or just a garden-variety opportunist.

Certainly, gay rights initiatives have been completely stymied since September 11, 2001, and they are not currently part of the language of either Republican or Democratic political landscape. But the way Santorum lumps things together into immoral soup speaks to an undeniable political ineptitude in this era of media exactness.

At his age, he has without a doubt been privy to run-of-the-mill gay people publicly, politically, and personally, and it’s alarming that he can think that he can get away with such divisive tactics. The Human Rights Campaign, a gay rights advocacy group, called Santorum’s remarks “marginalizing or attacking an entire segment of the population.”

Now let’s dissect his political judgments against gays. Everybody, from beloved relatives to popes and presidents to kings and even queens (my kind and his kind) has committed adultery, for many reasons—and like consensual gay sex, that’s not the government’s business. Who cares besides Oprah? As for bigamy or polygamy, well, it’s hard to declare a public contract of marriage to multiple spouses in the privacy of one’s bedroom. That’s not polygamy; that’s an orgy. Again, not the government’s business.

What I really take exception to is Santorum comparing homosexuality to incest, with the distinct implication of child abuse. Can he say “consenting adult”? Throwing incest in there, when everyone will hear “pedophilia,” plays directly to the Republican Party’s extreme right wing, whose single agenda is to cast gays as predatory pedophiles who want to recruit their sons and daughters into a life of sin. Hearing Santorum, the third-highest-ranking member of the GOP Senate leadership, it struck me that some people don’t know where politics, legislation, and religious creeds stop and personal, secular decisions begin.

At the 2000 Republican convention, held in Philadelphia, I attended a “gay-friendly” shindig hosted by the gay group Log Cabin Republicans. As the only visible Democrat at that event, I was told by the local Log Cabin president, David Greer, that gays would be welcome among “the top echelon” of the party, which would include George W. Bush (whose official response to Santorum has been to decline to comment—a tacit endorsement). At the same time the gay party faithful were congratulating themselves on breaking the pink barrier within the Republican Party in 2000, down the street on the convention floor the Republicans were cleansing the party platform of any language that would be inclusive of gay rights issues, legalities, or concerns.

Santorum’s remarks are a reminder that Republican homophobia is alive and well and thriving in Washington.


[Home] [Editorials] [Lawrence v. Texas] [Santorum] [Spreading Santorum]