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Author Topic: "Libbing it up" by Michael Bronsky  (Read 10171 times)

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Re: "Libbing it up" by Michael Bronsky
« Reply #13 on: Wed, Jun 14, 2006, 01:07 »

binational same-sex couples simply do not have the possibility to stay together. In such a situation, gay marriage is bitterly necessary for thousands of gay people

Here,I must say that you make a point a favour of marriage being extended to gays.But for a purpose different from the one encountered in
hethro societies where money changes hands when a marriage terminates in divorce.I know by what name to call any exchange of money in
the context of a sexual relation.

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Re: "Libbing it up" by Michael Bronsky
« Reply #12 on: Wed, Jun 14, 2006, 00:48 »

Marriage,at least in its monogamic form,is an hethro institution.It is a prostitution contract which has no basis among gays,who are supposed to be economically independent individuals.I do not mind at all importing in our midst hethro political institutions and manners which succeded in history.

Beg your pardon, you shall accept the simple fact that people are different, and that many gays are entirely happy in monogamous relationships with particular rights and obligations. If in a territorial gay state any gay person will have the right to become resident and live with whom ever he wants, in the rest of the world the reality is looking different: binational same-sex couples simply do not have the possibility to stay together. In such a situation, gay marriage is bitterly necessary for thousands of gay people, and neither are all gays economically independent, nor is monogamy based on sexual oppression - there are many people for whom sex belongs to a special relationship. You actually are doing much self-righteously by denouncing their life model as a "prostitution contract", denying the deep emotional bonds which are often peculiar to these relationships. They might not always last life-long, but for the duration of their existence, they are often faithfull.

Pretty another question is that of "aliments" and governmental subsidization of marital relationships. Here I completely agree with you: there is no need to handle monogamous relationships differently from others. In archaic Greece, the marriages and the divorces were handled very simply: everyone kept his/her property in case of divorce, which was a simple procedure as well. Instead of denouncing the gay marriage out of principle, we should contemplate the ways of embedding this institution into the entire social concept for the gay society - maybe unfettered from it's usual economical implications.
"Never let your sense of morals prevent you from doing what is right!" Salvor Hardin

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Re: "Libbing it up" by Michael Bronsky
« Reply #11 on: Tue, Jun 13, 2006, 13:21 »


Rather than heeding calls from the Left for a closer union (or worse, issuing such calls ourselves), the gay people really ought to be re-evaluating all of the layers of political associations they have built up over the years. Some of them, perhaps many of them, are useful and should be kept, even strengthened. Upon examination though, many will be revealed to be useless wastes of effort.

In any political association of ours with non-gays,the non-gay siide while paying lip service to our concerns will always try to keep us in tow of the
hethro interest.It will take into consideration our cause,but almost at once will dilute and burden it with issues which are of concern only to hethro populations.The tactics of the political left of the 70s were in that respect only a part of a larger hethro strategy.The left and its tactics might have been relegated nowadays to the margins of world politics.But the strategy will remain operational and implemented by whomever we deal with who is in the hethro interest.We will have therefore to diferenciate and disentangle our own interest from the hethro one in its various manifestations.

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Re: "Libbing it up" by Michael Bronsky
« Reply #10 on: Tue, Jun 13, 2006, 07:24 »

If the gay people shall be fighting for anything, it shall be their own rights and their own self-interest. History has demonstrated that the 'ros have no interest in even recognizing the inequities that separate the gay people from what is so piously intoned as "the rights of all people."

Heterosexuals made society as it exists.They breed,own or claim to own every single human being,and reared each and everyone of the members
of society.They are therefore the ones answerable for anything that went wrong,and the ones also with the responsibility for rectifying anything wrong in society.For it is they,as beeders,who wield the power,both demographic and political.We cannot as gays endorse or share any such responsibility like the one of the hethro breeders,when we aren`t even the owners and educators of the youngsters of our own kind.

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Re: "Libbing it up" by Michael Bronsky
« Reply #9 on: Tue, Jun 13, 2006, 03:48 »

I stay with this - in Diaspora, we need equal rights to make a choice - even if this means for some the right to make the wrong choice (for some). You may condemn the institution of marriage, but you must agree that homosexuals must have the same rights to become equally happy or equally unhappy in their suburb one-family homes with a carport and a labrador on the carpet.

Marriage,at least in its monogamic form,is an hethro institution.It is a prostitution contract which has no basis among gays,who are supposed to be economically independent individuals.I do not mind at all importing in our midst hethro political institutions and manners which succeded in history.But I have a bias towards failed,hypocritical or simply outdated hethro institutions,monogamic marriage being on the top of the list.Therefore,what I support while we are living in the context of an hethro society is not the extension of marriage to gays,but its abolition pure and simple for everyone.That`s the way I see equality or at least some measure of it between heterosexuals and gays living in a same society.I see no advantage to be gained in marrying Pierre in Quebec,if it means renouncing having some good time with Fred in Toronto,with
José in Habana,Cuba,with Manfred in Germany,with Yuri in Russia,with Abdallah in Cairo,or with Sunil in New Delhi.I would resent being sued for alimony by another guy,even more should the arbitrer of this matter would be a foreign hethro State.

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Re: "Libbing it up" by Michael Bronsky
« Reply #8 on: Tue, Jun 13, 2006, 03:22 »

Modern heterosexuals themselves no longer adhere to the institution of marriage.And my sympathies - including my political ones - go to them rather than to those middle class suburbian gays who dwell on the gay marriage issue,which I find a bit too much conservative and old fashionned in the context of the 21st century.

I stay with this - in Diaspora, we need equal rights to make a choice - even if this means for some the right to make the wrong choice (for some). You may condemn the institution of marriage, but you must agree that homosexuals must have the same rights to become equally happy or equally unhappy in their suburb one-family homes with a carport and a labrador on the carpet.

While searching for something else, I came upon this wonderful essay that bears somewhat upon this discussion. While it is disconcerting to see my own views so clearly set out in someone else's essay, it's also rather comforting to be able to quote someone else for a change.

A wonderfull essay, indeed!  :!! I am most sure that becoming slightly louder than usual can make wonders even at private level - the people are simply shoked when a quite, polite and decent man turns very angry at something they have said. I have used this tactics 2 or 3 times in my personal environment - it proved more effective, than all decent appeals to people's sense of justice and understanding. Most people do not like to become subject of anger and dissense (or possible verbal or physical attack), while they do not mind the least to abuse kind and decent people.
"Never let your sense of morals prevent you from doing what is right!" Salvor Hardin

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Re: "Libbing it up" by Michael Bronsky
« Reply #7 on: Tue, Jun 13, 2006, 02:29 »

While searching for something else, I came upon this wonderful essay that bears somewhat upon this discussion. While it is disconcerting to see my own views so clearly set out in someone else's essay, it's also rather comforting to be able to quote someone else for a change. It rather goes without saying that I am in strong agreement with Lars Eighner's entire essay, though I quote only a portion of it. It was originally published in the Advocate on February 18, 1988.

Quote
What is Wrong With the Gay Movement

First, too many of us are too nice.

The theory of the current gay movement seems to be to present articulate, reasonable, and well-scrubbed men and women to the American public. Miss Manners tactics will give us the moral high ground and shame the majority into being kinder to us. Public indignation will rescue us.

Does anybody believe claptrap like that? Evidently so. That is exactly the basis of four of six points in "Waging Peace," a supposed battle plan for the gay movement (Marshall K. Kirk and Erasetes Pill, Christopher Street, Issue 9:5).

History seems to suggest the nice-person approach can work. That is an illusion. When the oppressor must negotiate, he chooses to negotiate with the nice people, and the nice people get the Nobel prizes. But nice people win only when there are less-nice people on the scene.

Dr. King succeeded only because there were also a Huey Newton, a Black Panther party, and a hell of a lot of angry people in the streets with torches. The British were impressed with Gandhi's humility only because otherwise they would have had to deal with far-less-humble people.

That is to take nothing away from Dr. King and Gandhi. A movement needs both carrots and sticks. We have plenty of carrots. We need more sticks.

Second, whales do not vote.

Gay people are in the minority. That is a fact. One way of achieving political results when you are in the minority is to form coalitions with other minorities. That is political reality.

But coalitions are supposed to be two-way streets. The object is not to be on the good side of every good issue. The object is to secure gay rights.

The fallacy in the Gays to Save the Whales movement is that whales do not vote. You see plenty of Gays to Save the Whales banners at pro-whale rallies. You never see Whale Lovers to Save the Gays at pro-gay demonstrations.

It is the same story of no quid pro quo with the antinuke movement, the safe contraception movement, the pro-Sandinista movement (doesn't anyone remember what happened to gays under Castro?), and the holistic health movement (which seems to doubt that gay sex is organic). And, unfortunately, the same one-way street too often characterizes our relations with black movement and the women's movement.

Note that the article "Waging Peace" (the full title of which is "Waging Peace: A Gay Battle Plan to Persuade Straight America") is fundamentally the same text as the article "The Overhauling of Straight America" by the same authors that is reprinted here.

As a minority, the gay people very often require the assistance of tactical allies. There must, however, be some sense employed when dealing with them. The whole object of alliances, of forming coalitions, is to get something in return. Rather than heeding calls from the Left for a closer union (or worse, issuing such calls ourselves), the gay people really ought to be re-evaluating all of the layers of political associations they have built up over the years. Some of them, perhaps many of them, are useful and should be kept, even strengthened. Upon examination though, many will be revealed to be useless wastes of effort.
« Last Edit: Tue, Jun 13, 2006, 02:45 by Feral »
Stonewall was a riot.

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Re: "Libbing it up" by Michael Bronsky
« Reply #6 on: Tue, Jun 13, 2006, 01:09 »

;D I have a friend in the age of 60, he is an old-fashioned communist and my most beloved contrahent on social issues. Whenever we come to talk about the gay rights movement as it is now - with gay marriage etc - he is critisizing the burgois mindset of our leading activists. In particular, he criticizes them for their strive to gain the same rights to enter the reactionary institution of marriage, instead of fighting for destruction of this institution. Ironically, he himself takes advantage of all the financial benefits offered to him by his heterosexual marriage - while at the same time denouncing the work done by LSVD-folks on behalf of gays.

I entirely agree with your communist friend as for the institution of marriage: that institution should be abolished.It never inspired me any other sentiment but contempt.Where it should be abolished however constitutes a matter for discussion.Modern heterosexuals themselves no longer adhere to the institution of marriage.And my sympathies - including my political ones - go to them rather than to those middle class suburbian gays who dwell on the gay marriage issue,which I find a bit too much conservative and old fashionned in the context of the 21st century.Of course,your communist friend isn`t gay.If he were,he would never have married heterosexually.

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Re: "Libbing it up" by Michael Bronsky
« Reply #5 on: Tue, Jun 13, 2006, 00:33 »

You have here,my good friend,a sample of gay radical political thinking as it existed about at the time of your birth,a genuine museum artefact.

;D I have a friend in the age of 60, he is an old-fashioned communist and my most beloved contrahent on social issues. Whenever we come to talk about the gay rights movement as it is now - with gay marriage etc - he is critisizing the burgois mindset of our leading activists. In particular, he criticizes them for their strive to gain the same rights to enter the reactionary institution of marriage, instead of fighting for destruction of this institution. Ironically, he himself takes advantage of all the financial benefits offered to him by his heterosexual marriage - while at the same time denouncing the work done by LSVD-folks on behalf of gays. The left may have right with their ideas about marriage, burgoise etc - but it is as well true that if we give up our struggle for equal rights, straight people would simply continue the - highly theoretical - discussion for the next 100 years while gay people will remain the sub-humans of our days. We shall not forget what the institute of marriage means for binational couples - without this institution they would have absolutely no chance to live together.

The hethro left as I once observed it at close range and in its most stereotypical behavior,didn`t had any real malevolent intention towards gays or homosexuality.Save for one thing,that it intended to use gays exclusively for its own ends,as it saw in the gay individual some ideal type of person it needed for its particular type of political activism: unhappy with his lot,with no family ties and with plenty of spare time to devote the cause of the hethro left.

No the left was probably not especially hostile towards gays - but I can't really see that there were a particular devotion to our interests. Both Marx and Engels were maybe not exactly homophobes, but certainly they were regarding homosexuals (that time, "Urnings") with contempt and never came to the idea to do something for their rights. In Germany, social democrats never really opposed the gay rights movement, they were rather indifferent, and every progress was actually enforced by the "Green Party" through political extortion.

If the gay people shall be fighting for anything, it shall be their own rights and their wn self-interest. History has demonstrated that the 'ros have no interest in even recognizing the inequities that separate the gay people from what is so piously intoned as "the rights of all people."

I completely agree. If we do not care for ourselves, who will? It is absolutely clear that any specific problem must be addressed as such, and not in the general context of world improvement. It is absolutely idiotical to preach to animal rights activists that they would better spend their time and ressources on starving children in Africa or victims of land mines - while all of these problems require equal attention, it is absolutely unrealistically to demand from an activist (mostly a volunteer) to share his time between many activities. I have the impression that the political Left simply is weldging in their "Weltschmerz" instead of taking real action for something particular. The way to solve the "social question" is, of course, not to persuade gay rights activists to turn to the worker's problems, but to persuade workers (gay and straight) to get involved in trade unions etc. Certainly, gay businessmen shall see the proletarians as brothers - if they are gay proletarians and gay issues are concerned.

We also desperately need "professional gays" - in the straight world they are called "politicians". Straights spend hundreds of millions of Dollars/Euros for their politicians, whereas our people snort at gays who give up their learned professions and devote most of their time to gay rights lobbying or gay research. How idiotical is such an attitude of discarding our own group interests?
"Never let your sense of morals prevent you from doing what is right!" Salvor Hardin

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Re: "Libbing it up" by Michael Bronsky
« Reply #4 on: Tue, Jun 13, 2006, 00:08 »

This is the problem of the Left, especially in America, but also worldwide. They insist in their heterosexual arrogance that the gay movement must dissolve itself into the concerns of all  people, by which the Left always and inevitably means "all str8 people." Gay concerns are to be swept aside until later, or set aside indefinitely. Another example can be found here.

If the gay people shall be fighting for anything, it shall be their own rights and their own self-interest. History has demonstrated that the 'ros have no interest in even recognizing the inequities that separate the gay people from what is so piously intoned as "the rights of all people."

The hethro left as I once observed it at close range and in its most stereotypical behavior,didn`t had any real malevolent intention towards
gays or homosexuality.Save for one thing,that it intended to use gays exclusively for its own ends,as it saw in the gay individual some ideal type of person it needed for its particular type of political activism: unhappy with his lot,with no family ties and with plenty of spare time to devote the cause of the hethro left.The later didn`t had any real intention to change the balance of power in society and with respect to sexual orientation.It must be said that the hethro left succeded in recruiting many gays who fell for its utopias,as far back as in the 30s and to the point of enrolling gays as spies for the Soviet Union.I was for my part certainly fascinated by the methods of political action,propaganda and organisation of the left which I studied with zeal.But I was too cynical to believe in its utopian or humanitarian ideals.In matters of political litterature,I had beside found myself in contact with such characters like Machiavelli or Bismark,before I read even a line of Karl Marx.

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Re: "Libbing it up" by Michael Bronsky
« Reply #3 on: Mon, Jun 12, 2006, 22:59 »

I find it of certain irony that Mr Bronsky suggests here that US gay rights movement shall "wholeheartedly" argue on behalf of all Americans, while the logical consequence would be that the US gay movement should wholeheartedly argue on behalf of gays worldwide.

This is the problem of the Left, especially in America, but also worldwide. They insist in their heterosexual arrogance that the gay movement must dissolve itself into the concerns of all  people, by which the Left always and inevitably means "all str8 people." Gay concerns are to be swept aside until later, or set aside indefinitely. Another example can be found here.

If the gay people shall be fighting for anything, it shall be their own rights and their own self-interest. History has demonstrated that the 'ros have no interest in even recognizing the inequities that separate the gay people from what is so piously intoned as "the rights of all people."
Stonewall was a riot.

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Re: "Libbing it up" by Michael Bronsky
« Reply #2 on: Mon, Jun 12, 2006, 18:21 »

Michael Bronsky has published an article called "Libbing it up" in The Phoenix. While it is certainly a well-meant attempt to push the US-gays back to more political activity again, I was rather puzzled by the main messages of this sample of gay political thinking 

You have here,my good friend,a sample of gay radical political thinking as it existed about at the time of your birth,a genuine museum artefact.
We were then asked to change hethro society,as if we had the power to do so.The political left,which was behind that orientation,is now belly up.It had its show stolen by radical Islam.Perhaps it is as well like that,as marxism if it were still relevant to world politics as it was in the 70s would constitute for us a serious political rival,including among gays themselves.Now that marxism is dead,we may safely adopt some of its modus operandi and shed some crocodile tears on socialism,and why not incorporate some measure of socialism in our own political program.

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"Libbing it up" by Michael Bronsky
« Reply #1 on: Mon, Jun 12, 2006, 14:47 »

Michael Bronsky has published an article called "Libbing it up" in The Phoenix. While it is certainly a well-meant attempt to push the US-gays back to more political activity again, I was rather puzzled by the main messages of this sample of gay political thinking:

"Five things a retrofitted gay-lib movement should do
 
1) Rather than simply the fight for marriage rights, the gay movement should work with a wide array of groups to ensure that all families — married and non-traditional — will have the economic and social support to be healthy and happy. This could mean anything from working on programs that would train at-home parents for gainful employment, to establishing new tax codes that would reflect the reality of non-coupled families and blood relatives who live together.

2) Gay organizations should collaborate with workers’-rights groups on issues such as comprehensive child-friendly work leave; domestic-partnership rights for straight couples, gay couples, and households of people who are not sexually involved; and greater employee participation, profit sharing, and company management.

3) While always insisting on a strict separation of church and state, gay organizations should work with faith-based groups on economic and social issues in which they are both invested. Working with black churches to preserve federal poverty programs or with the US Conference of Catholic Bishops to oppose capital punishment would create points of social and political contact on which both could build.

4) The gay movement should form alliances on comprehensive-health-care issues — including access to all forms of birth control, pre- and postnatal care, revamped Medicare and Medicaid, sexual-health education, and functional (i.e., non-abstinence-based) AIDS prevention.

5) It should urge and support gay and lesbian people to become involved in their immediate communities. Openly gay people serving on school committees, zoning boards, urban-planning committees, crime-watch groups, local diversity-training groups, and social programs such as Meals on Wheels will not only ensure a high degree of queer visibility, but will ensure that issues of specific importance to gay men and lesbians are discussed."


While the idea of gays participating in the general political discours and engaging in various activities (against death penalty, torture, animal mistreatment, environmental pollution etc) is very honorable as such, the suggestion that the gay rights movement shall write all these (important) tasks on its agenda is an obvious mistake of thinking. Gay Rights movement shall care about gay rights, while animal rights movement shall care for animal rights, which of course shall not prevent individual gays from participating in both. Mr Bronsky suggestion to participate in the social life implicates (in a veiled form, though) that currently gays were not equally participating in all kinds of social work or in local communities - which is simply wrong. Many gays are well engaged in all the good work he suggests to be joined - the real problem is the lacking visibility of all those good gay people. They are often (still) afraid to come out to their friends and colleagues and customers, so that the impression is only straight people are socially engaged. I am afraid, Mr Bronsky missed the point.

"The gay-rights movement has hit a brick wall. [..] Will it be a movement that continues arguing, with diminishing success, merely for the rights of its own people — and even at that, only for those who, say, want to formalize a relationship? Or will it argue wholeheartedly, and without reservation, for a broader vision of justice and fairness that includes all Americans? If the movement does not choose the latter course, it runs the risk of becoming not just irrelevant, but a political stumbling block to progressive social change in general."

I find it of certain irony that Mr Bronsky suggests here that US gay rights movement shall "wholeheartedly" argue on behalf of all Americans, while the logical consequence would be that the US gay movement should wholeheartedly argue on behalf of gays worldwide. 
"Never let your sense of morals prevent you from doing what is right!" Salvor Hardin
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