THE CASE FOR TAX RELIEF

I count myself as a fiscal conservative. I don’t see why any government should ever take more than a third of anyone’s livelihood under any circumstances, except war. I’ve rarely seen a tax cut I didn’t like or support, as long as spending was restrained as well. But there’s one argument for tax cuts that makes no sense and that’s George W. Bush’s. We do not need a tax cut to reboot the economy. Man, I thought we’d left demand-inflating Keynesianism back in the 1970s. If you argue for tax cuts when the economy is slowing, what’s to stop you from arguing for tax hikes if the economy is over-heating? Besides, tax-cuts are the clumsiest, slowest, and weakest way to stimulate an economy. Leave that to Greenspan and monetary policy. What conservatives need to do is make the case for lower taxes as part of a seamless case for greater personal freedom, as a way to devolve decisions about spending away from government officials to countless individuals who are best able to discern what would most benefit them at any given moment. The cuts should always be accomplished with an eye to the broader economic environment – but not as a way to change it. The last time anyone made these kinds of arguments persuasively was in the 1980s. But we need them now as much as ever.

NOW I GET IT

John Ashcroft has pledged that he will “not make sexual orientation a matter to be considered in hiring or firing” at the Department of Justice. (In case you’re wondering, I’d still vote to confirm him, because I think more is to be gained by holding him to his current promises than rehashing the ugly past.) But what does he mean by ‘sexual orientation’? I bet he means someone who may be gay but would never admit it. An openly gay person would qualify as someone pushing the “gay lifestyle,” whatever that’s supposed to mean, not someone who simply has a sexual orientation. This distinction is probably what Ashcroft was referring to in talking about his opposition to James Hormel’s ambassadorship – it wasn’t Hormel’s orientation he objected to, it was his honesty about it! And maybe Ashcroft’s Senate testimony wasn’t therefore perjury, since even Paul Offner said he was asked about ‘sexual preference,’ not ‘sexual orientation,’ implying a choice to pursue an openly gay life rather than merely being gay. All this would give Ashcroft some leeway on the question of perjury. But I cannot help but be reminded of another person who escaped conviction on charges of perjury because of his clever use of language. Altogether now: Bill Clinton. What a legacy the man has. We’ve gone from a man who carefully parsed the words ‘sexual relations’ to one who can play havoc with the words ‘sexual orientation.’ The question is: has John Ashcroft simply chosen the ‘Clinton lifestyle’ or is he just an unusually good dissembler from birth?

AN OFFNER I COULDN’T REFUSE

Several readers have asked why I believe Paul Offner. I should have said so, but I regularly ran pieces by him on the mid 1990s on health-care reform in The New Republic. He worked for Pat Moynihan back then, and was a reliably sane, moderate, and clear-thinking neo-liberal on all those tangled areas. I came to trust his judgment. I see no reason why he would make this up. To answer some other points: a) Why have no others come forward? Well, few straight guys are exactly happy to enter the national media circus on the grounds that they were once asked if they were gay or not, and I don’t blame them. Many potential Ashcroft hires were probably conservative enough not to have been offended by the gay question and may not even remember it today. Closet-cases who were asked equally don’t want to come out now to say so; so no big surprise Offner is the only one; b) Is there a way in which Offner can be right and yet Ashcroft didn’t commit perjury? First off, if Ashcroft had said he couldn’t remember whether he had ever asked that question, it would be one thing. But he said he couldn’t imagine ever asking such a question. I think that’s hooey on the face of it. Ashcroft has a long history of deep animus against homosexuality, and has never been reluctant to say so. If I were being charitable, I’d say that Ashcroft doesn’t mind gay people as long as they never bring it up, are prepared to deny it publicly and are prepared to support policies which would criminalize their own relationships. Since Ashcroft believes homosexual sex is a sin, then association with open homosexuals might violate his sense of purity. Some evangelicals take seriously the injunction to avoid even the appearance of consorting with sinners. (How they get that attitude from the example of Jesus is a mystery I will leave to the theologians.) So maybe Ashcroft feels pity for homosexuals, but doesn’t want to be associated with publicly identified ones. But if that’s the case, he should say so, instead of lying to the Judiciary Committee. I don’t think I’m on a witch-hunt here. I’ve tried hard to give Ashcroft and Bush the benefit of every doubt; and I still support Bush’s right to pick whichever Cabinet members he wants. But it would be a dereliction of judgment for me not to say that the evidence is very strong that Ashcroft perjured himself last week. If that no longer matters to some conservatives, then they have some hard rethinking to do about their conduct in the Clinton years.

ASHCROFT AND GAYS

Some readers have asked me why, in defending President Bush’s right to pick John Ashcroft for attorney-general, I still persisted in describing him as unsavory and someone I would never personally have chosen. The answer is in today’s Washington Post. Paul Offner, a health-care expert, has testified that in an interview for a job under Ashcroft, he was directly asked by Ashcroft if he was gay or not; and then asked if he had ever taken an illegal substance. Offner, who is straight, was shocked by the questions as well he might be, and was sure that if he had answered yes to being gay, it would have barred him from the job. I believe Offner. He’s not an ideologue; or a culture warrior; and plenty of people have confirmed his claim. Besides, there is no doubt in my mind that, given his record, Ashcroft would never knowingly hire an openly gay person and that he nixed James Hormel for that reason and that reason alone. There is also no doubt in my mind at this point that Ashcroft lied under oath about these matters before the Judiciary Committee when he said that “sexual orientation has never been something I have used in hiring in any of the jobs, in any of the offices I’ve held,” and when he said that he voted against Hormel for other (unspecified) reasons. Where does that leave us? It leaves us with the knowledge that our next attorney-general is a discriminator who has lied under oath. The consolation is that he has pledged not to allow such bigotry to infect his judgment as the nation’s chief law enforcement officer. And if he is true to his word, then that will surely be a gain. But since he has lied under oath already, how do we believe this particular assurance or any other? After eight years of Clinton, do we really want a perjurer running the Justice Department? This revelation troubles me – and not because it reveals an ideology with which I disagree, and not simply because, as a gay man, I am obviously troubled by someone who would bar me from a job purely for my sexual orientation. It troubles me because it gets to the heart of a man’s character. This is a man who voted to impeach a president for lying under oath. How does he expect the rest of us to support his nomination if he has done the same thing himself?

BEGALA AWARD NOMINEE

“By blocking funding, Dubya just reversed over seven years of progress, wiped out hundreds of vital overseas health programs, and made it very clear he fully intends to decimate as much of your right to choose as possible without being thrown too painfully into the fiery pits of sanctimonious political hell by intelligent and appalled women everywhere over his vapid gall and aww-shucks misogyny. Just the first dangerous and smirking political salvo in what promises to be a very ugly assault on women’s personal freedom and self-definition, and which will probably devolve into a big dumb GOP-sponsored defense of abstinence and sexual ignorance and the stiffly mechanical God-fearin’ missionary position, in the dark.” – Mark Morford, San Francisco Chronicle, January 24.

DADDY DEAREST

You’ve got to hand it to Strom Thurmond. Now that Poppy Bush has his son in the White House and Colin Powell has his son at the FCC and Bill Clinton has his wife in the Senate and Mitch McConnell has his wife in the Cabinet, Strom gets to nominate his own 28-year-old son, not long out of law school, to be U.S. Attorney for South Carolina. Those Judiciary Committee Hearings could be tough, couldn’t they? Just so long as Strom doesn’t recognize the kid in front of him.

GAYS FOR VOUCHERS

Log Cabin Republicans just put out an interesting press release, supporting school vouchers. Citing the occasional case where public school authorities refuse to protect gay kids from harassment and even violence, LCR points out that vouchers can empower parents to take their gay children out of schools where they are at risk. Similarly gay parents of straight kids can have more choice in placing their children in non-homophobic environments. Not exactly the most important argument for vouchers, but a sign that the gay movement is maturing and deepening ideologically. Next up: gays for guns. Instead of hate-crime laws, why not encourage gay men to defend themselves with weapons if attacked by gay-bashers? That’ll teach the thugs a lesson the thought police never will.