GOD’S GIFT TO REPUBLICANS

The pledge ruling won’t last. But it’s a great political issue for Republicans. Notice how the most liberal judges are the oldest. Notice also how Tom Daschle immediately ran for cover. This is the issue Bush’s dad rode to the White House. His son must be loving it.

EUROPEAN ANTI-SEMITISM: Abe Foxman is a bit of a hysteric, but this time he might be onto something. A survey of European attitudes toward Jews found some uncomfortable data:

Among the 2,500 people polled in late May and early June as part of our survey, 45 percent admitted to their perception that Jews are more loyal to Israel than their own country, while 30 percent agreed with the statement that Jews have too much power in the business world. Perhaps most telling, 62 percent said they believe the outbreak of anti-Semitic violence in Europe is the result of anti-Israel sentiment, not anti-Jewish feeling. The contrariness of their own attitudes suggests that Europeans are loath to admit that hatred of Jews is making a comeback.

Foxman is too blithe in dismissing the notion that disdain for Israel is the real reason for these attitudes. But he’s right to suspect that the extreme aversion to Israel is difficult to explain fully without assuming some anti-Semitic prejudice. More interesting, I’m beginning to pick up signs that American disdain at European anti-Semitism is provoking yet another backlash in the old continent. Each view may help reinforce the other, as Europeans assume that American support for Israel is a function of the Jewish lobby and Americans see that view as yet another sign of anti-Semitism. Not a virtuous cycle.

HOW STRAIGHT IS YOUR BANANA?: Yes, the European Union is interested. Terrorism is ok, but make sure your cucumbers curve correctly, or Brussels will be knocking at the door.

LUNCH AT FRED’S: Had lunch yesterday with Peter Kaplan, an old friend and editor of the New York Observer. We ate at Fred’s on top of Barney’s. What a scene. Almost the reverse of this website: 85 percent female. The table next to us – three twentysomething women over vast bowls of salad – could have been straight out of “Clueless.” Then there were the faces. This is something you see in New York more than elsewhere: older women with faces that, despite obvious surgery, still look mature, but with haircuts that come straight from Mademoiselle magazine. They all look like Madeleine Albright with Paula Zahn’s locks. The contrast is not a good one. A wig might be better. Or some kind of fashionable hair-styling that isn’t so, well, adolescent. Okay, I know this sounds a little catty, but it still strikes me that aging gracefully makes you look a lot younger than the alternative. The male equivalent is cutting balding hair really short. It’s reverse psychology: but making less of less hair makes it look as if you have more. Or maybe I’m just deluding myself.

HOW PHILISTINE IS JOE CONASON?: It used to be that conservatives reveled in being known as the Stupid Party. But here comes Conason with a sentence like this: “But testing credulity to the utmost, [Bush’s] aides boldly mentioned Aristotle’s The Nicomachean Ethics, a long disquisition on virtue as dull as any book by William Bennett…” Let’s put this nicely. William Bennett is no Aristotle. And Joe Conason is no William Bennett.

PERSONAL ADS? Here’s an email suggesting a possible revenue stream:

As a single, female, hetero, center-right, DC-resident, post-grad degree (2), 31-35, visits site more than once a day (also actively proselytizes), I think your reader survey spells selective personals gold mine. Where the NY Review of Books classifieds inevitably disappoint, you could come through.

Hmmm.

BUSH HELPS GAY PARTNERS: In the first ever federal acknowledgment of gay married couples, president Bush approved death benefits for the spouses of firefighters and cops killed in the WTC massacre. Quietly and undemonstrably, the Bush administration has shown that it is not hostile to the dignity of gay people and their relationships. It’s particularly appropriate that the bill is named after Father Mychal Judge. I wish Bush would do more, but most of the current decisions – on marriage rights, for example – are in the hands of the states. The one political master-stroke Bush has not so far supported is endorsement of ENDA, the Employment Non-Discrimination Act, a law that would simply add gays to the list of people (including Christians and Muslims) protected from being fired from their jobs for the fact of their orientation alone. I’m not a big fan of these non-discrimination laws, and I don’t think they’re anywhere near as important as marriage rights. But the anomaly of only gays being exempted from such federal protection is a completely incoherent one. Why should Jews be protected and gays not? Well over 80 percent of the public support such a law. And Bush could frame it simply as a tolerance issue – winning huge numbers of votes from gays, their families and supporters, as well as showing suburbanites that he really is a compassionate conservative. If Bush did this, he would decimate the dominance that Democrats now have over the gay vote. That’s why the far left and far right are queasy about such a possibility. And that’s partly why Bush should seize this opportunity if it comes down the pike.

WHAT IF ARAFAT IS ELECTED?

So what? The point is that as a simple mobster, he has only his henchmen to answer to. As a mobster with an actual democratic base, he’ll have other pressures that can only lead to good. I’m an optimist on democracy. Even if the elected leader is a thug, he has legitimacy, he can be dealt with, we can negotiate. All this handwringing from the usual suspects is overblown. Democracy works. And may always surprise us. Remember what some thought would happen in Nicaragua under free elections? Besides, by demanding elections, Bush puts the US back on a clear pro-democracy path. That will help with Iran. And China.

SIGN OF THE TIMES: An email from a Jewish Democrat:

Boy how about that Bush speech? A lot of People in the Arab World probably needed a few crates of Rolaids. Bush is the man and at my family’s barbeque on Sunday, we Jewish Democrats were pretty glad to have a Republican Pres. on deck after 9/11 and the Mid East mess, especially crazy ass Rumsfeld and Cheney(G-d Bless ‘Em). Who would have thought that?

Well I had an inkling, buddy.

WOW

I guess I should know by now that you guys are an intrepid bunch, but in a little less than 24 hours, no less than 8,000 of you have answered our reader survey (that’s as I write this at around 12.30 am EST). I’m incredibly grateful. It’s also really really interesting and at times surprising. In keeping with the general principle of blog transparency, here’s a link to the page that gives you the full results so far – constantly updated. Of course, this isn’t a random sample, but the size of it (slightly less than a half of our regular daily visitors) means it’s telling us something. Check out the filter on the site to see the fascinating intersections of various variables. Here’s what I found striking at first blush: Half of you are under 40 and only 20 percent are over 50 – with our biggest age group being 31 – 35. This is a really young group – much younger than the usual readers of political magazines and newspapers. Despite the youth of the sample, over half of you have post-graduate degrees. 60 percent of you visit at least once a day. You’re also overwhelmingly male (85 percent) and heterosexual (87 percent). This will drive Richard Goldstein and others nuts – but what it means to me is that most of you couldn’t care less what my sexual orientation is, you’re just interested in the content of the site. To my mind, that’s a huge cultural milestone – a model of a future in which sexual orientation becomes a non-issue.

THE POLITICS: The political spectrum is skewed right, as you’d expect, but 40 percent are independent, moderate, center-left or liberal. I realize I stupdily left out ‘libertarian’ in this category, thus ensuring that the touchiest group of individualists alive have bombarded me with emails. I’m sorry, guys. I’m very sympathetic, as you know. My mistake. I was also struck by the fact that California is our biggest state; and that we’re very blue-state heavy. I guess the site attracts blue-state dissidents or simple skeptics, or it reflects the often ignored fact that large numbers of people in the blue states are not knee-jerk liberals. There are many permutations I haven’t yet worked out: Are the gays wealthier than the straights? Are the women more liberal than the men? Are the married people more conservative? But you can figure all this out for yourself if you feel like finding out more about your fellow readers by clicking here. Given this enormous early response, we’re going to keep the survey running for just one more day so that we’re not too skewed toward our more loyal readers. Let me know if you find any more interesting nuggets in the data analysis. Given all the post-graduate degrees out there, you’re probably better at it than I am. It’s also revealing, it seems to me, as a snapshot of what the broader blogger readership is made up of (hint: way smart and clued in, Howell), and should lead to some interesting questions and debates. But that’s for the future. For now, once again: THANKS. With these demographics, there surely must be a sponsor out there willing to fund the site. And if you haven’t participated yet, you have 24 hours. Here’s the link for the survey itself.

THE TOBACCO LAWSUIT SCAM: What a wonderful merry-go-round is going on in North Carolina. Can we say unintended consequences of the punitive nanny-state?

THE NEW SCHOOL DEBATE: Norah Vincent and I will be dragged before the New School politburo on Thursday night to face socialist writer Richard Goldstein and professional far-left activist Carmen Vasquez. It’s at 8 pm at the Tishman auditorium at the New School at 66, W 12th Street in New York City. The “moderator” is the woman who runs the Gay Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation, Joan Garry. Garry’s group, GLAAD, is credited in the acknowledgments of Goldstein’s book for helping him with ‘research,’ research that has now been shown to be simply wrong and (ironically enough) defamatory. Still, this is the left’s turf and it’s a little naive to expect neutrality. Wish us luck. And show up if you feel like it.

AND NOW … A SURVEY!

Every time my partner Robert Cameron and I get close to getting a sponsor to make this site a going concern, we get asked about our readers. I relate the fact that you are among the smartest readers on the planet and yet for some reason a condescending smile comes over the marketing guy’s face. So here’s a request: click on this link and answer the handful of questions we’ve put together. It’s the usual male/female/income/location stuff and we hope it’ll give us the extra oomph to get a sponsor (we can’t promise though). Just out of curiosity, we’ve added a question about politics to find out where on the scale of right to left andrewsulllivan.com readers are. To make things more interesting, we’ll post the full results on the site by the end of next week. You’ll find out who your fellows are, mean income, geography, marital status, and so on. It should also be a pretty good test of who the people are who read blogs in general, something we know extremely little about. Don’t worry: no one will ask your email address, it’s totally confidential, and we’ll do nothing with the info but post it for your curiosity and use it to lure potential sponsors/advertizers. If you haven’t managed to contribute to the site and feel guilty, here’s a great way to be absolved while spending not a cent. Contributors, please take part as well. For anyone, it’s a completely free way to help support the site. So give it a go. Results to follow …

THE SPEECH: The key passage:

Today, Palestinian authorities are encouraging, not opposing terrorism. This is unacceptable. And the United States will not support the establishment of a Palestinian state until its leaders engage in a sustained fight against the terrorists and dismantle their infrastructure.

And the key message is that Israel must have a viable partner, a democratic partner, if peace is to be secured. It cannot be secured while today’s psychotic Palestinian culture and chaotic polity remains in place. And the 1967 borders – give or take a little – are the obvious future contours of the Jewish state. The president was right to appeal to innocent Palestinians over the heads of their corrupt leaders; and he is right to stress hope. I’m sorry to say, however, that seasoned hands will see precious little reason for any.

THE LEFT DISCOVERS ANTI-SEMITISM: A wonderfully clarifying piece by Todd Gitlin in Mother Jones. Better late then never. “The German socialist August Bebel once said that anti-Semitism was ‘the socialism of fools,'” Gitlin writes. “What we witness now is the progressivism of fools. It is a recrudescence of everything that costs the left its moral edge.” Maybe Gitlin hasn’t noticed, but thaht moral edge is looking mighty blunt these days.

LIBERALS DISCOVER I.Q.: Good point noted by UPI’s Steve Sailer. It’s an article of faith among many liberals that I.Q. has no meaning, it’s culturally constructed, and should never be used to judge people’s intellectual ability. But suddenly, when I.Q. is the means by which to rescue retarded criminals on death row, I.Q. is just fine, thank you very much. For the record, I agree with forbidding executions of the mentally retarded. But then I believe in I.Q. as an important and often reliable guage of intelligence. By the way: did anyone think to call former president Bill Clinton up to get his comments on the Supreme Court decision? He signed the execution warrant of a retarded man – as a critical part of his election campaign. Any second thoughts on that one, Bill?

SONTAG AWARD NOMINEE: “On Sept. 11, Americans were confronted by people ready to die as an expression of their profound moral commitments. Their willingness to die stands in stark contrast to a politics that asks of its members in response to Sept. 11 to shop.” – Stanley Hauerwas, Duke University theologian, as quoted in a fawning profile in the National Catholic Reporter. The piece also notes: “Americans are, for the most part, good, decent and hardworking people, Hauerwas says, but ‘so were the people that supported the Nazis.'”

GET YOUR FLASHLIGHTS READY

Hard to believe I’m reading this Washington Post editorial. Harder to believe I agree with every word. No wonder Americans are pondering the endtimes.

WHAT CIVIL RIGHTS NOW MEAN: My jaw dropped reading this piece on Saturday from the Boston Globe. The Boston Police Department has for a while now been administering random drug tests to their officers. They use a sensitive state-of-the-art test using hair. The tests have follow-ups and the threshhold for detection is high. The Globe quotes a police department attorney thus: “The way our hair testing is done, there is an amount of cocaine that has to be present, and it has to be over a certain level.” To reach that level requires “repeated use of cocaine over a period of time. You cannot consume enough cocaine in one sitting to test positive. You would die of a heart attack first.” The problem is that black cops have a higher rate of testing positive than white cops. There are some quibbles about whether black hair absorbs more drug than blond hair (only experiments on rats bear this out), but the threshhold is so high there can be little questions that the positives are not false ones. Nevertheless, the NAACP sees bias. Here’s my quote of the week from the head of Boston’s NAACP: “It just does not make sense that black people have more of a drug problem than white people.” Notice that he doesn’t point out that 96 percent of minority cops passed the test; and notice that the mere existence of any imbalance inevitably means prejudice. This is what the civil rights movement now means in large part: if minority success exists, ignore it; if minority failure exists, blame it on someone else.

WHAT CIVIL RIGHTS SHOULD MEAN: Score one for Bob Reich. He’s one of the first national politicians to say what needs to be said about equal marriage rights: this is a classic civil rights issue and it’s time to stop the mealy-mouthed talk about civil unions as some sort of option for homosexual citizens. There are things on which I disagree with Reich, but not this one. Notice that marriage rights cost no-one anything; they urge responsibility from a minority group; they come in a completely separate category from many of the other “special treatment” laws that the current civil rights debate focuses on. For this reason alone, it seems to me voters in Massachusetts should vote for Reich. And it’s telling that it was a 20 year-old openly gay football player who talked him into it. This is an issue which the younger generation sees as a no-brainer. Good for Reich for seeing this too.

PRE-COG AMERICA: I wonder what historians will one day say about the American mood in the summer of 2002. It’s a weird, strained, emotionally unstable time. The war is not over, but it seems in a lull. Americans have victories but no victory. Al Qaeda lives. Saddam’s race for weapons of mass destruction continues. The shock of September 11 has become a kind of intermittent anxiety rather than emotional catharsis. And it hasn’t been supplanted in the public consciousness by anything else… Continued here.

HOW EMBARRASSING IS BOB HERBERT? He’s now made a whole column out of Timothy Egan’s tendentious story last week about rising temperatures in Alaska. Guess what? Herbert’s against global warming! Something must be done. And can we please stop racism as well while we’re at it? Why oh why doesn’t the Bush administration do something about these things? Meanwhile the following uncharitable thought flickers unbidden into consciousness. When was the last time Herbert actually encountered an opposing argument and reasoned against it?

PADILLA AND HABEAS CORPUS: “It is not being stressed enough that Padilla not only has the right to a habeas review, he should also have the right to speak freely to a (possibly court-specified) attorney. No American citizen, even an alleged enemy combatant, ought to be held incommunicado, but I have heard reports that Padilla is being so held. If he cannot talk to his lawyer to provide appropriate information, any habeas petition will be fatally handicapped. Finally, when does this “war” end? What is to stop a President from detaining someone he doesn’t like indefinitely? Nixon might have used the kind of power Bush and Ashcroft are asserting to lock up anti-Vietnam-War political dissidents who had visited communist countries, by declaring them enemy combatants and not having to prove it. In the case of Vietnam they would have been released by 1974 or 1975, but today, Padilla’s attorney could NEVER make a case that “the war is over” so he is left to rot forever. I am very wary of giving a power to Bush, who won’t abuse it, that will accrue to a successor who might. Johnson, Nixon, and Clinton would have had few scruples about abusing this kind of power.” This, the case against “Islamikazes,” the gay left and Al Sharpton, all on the Letters Page, edited by Reihan Salam.

ISLAMIKAZES AND VIRTUE: Following up from Susan Sontag, Matthew Parris has an article in Saturday’s Times of London that gives you a sense of where even mainstream conservative commentary now is in Europe. His column is about sacrifice, and he argues that the suicide bombers in Israel and the West Bank are the inheritors of Samson, Vietnamese Buddhist monks and other mythological types willing to endure death for the sake of their cause. He concedes that murdering others changes the moral balance somewhat; but he basically sides with Cherie Blair in believing that all Israelis are somehow legitimate targets because of their country’s occupation of the West Bank:

I do not think that in his heart an Israeli would deny that, if your enemy has taken land that is rightfully yours and occupied it, then not just your enems army but his wife and son and daughter and servants and all who, under his protection, come to live and make their living on the stolen land, are aggressors. By their presence they aid and abet the occupation.

As with most European discussions of this issue, there is no historical analysis of how the West Bank came to be occupied, no account of the attempts of the Israelis to come to some sort of peace under Rabin and Barak, in fact, no historical understanding at all of how we come to be where we are. In fact, there’s almost an equation of non-violent acts of passive resistance with the murderous fanatics of 9/11 and a subtle implication that Israel itself is actually land that is “rightfully theirs.” Parris even evokes Christ in his litany of precedents for the Islamikazes! That’s how far we’ve come from the days of last September, when moral clarity about terrorism was sharpest. It seems to me that his argument has only a shred of credibility if it is assumed that the Palestinian people have had no opportunities to win large amounts of territory through negotiation, if their suicides are not in fact primarily means to murder disproportionate numbers of civilians, and if their purpose was to express desperation rather than to affirm a death-cult imbued with Nazi-like anti-Semitism. But you won’t hear these caveats in Western Europe – or indeed throughout much of the rest of the world. There seems to me little doubt that Israel and, by implication, America is losing this battle of ideas. Since it is the most important battle since the Cold War, we need to think far more ambitiously about how to wage it.

BJORN COMES THROUGH: After several weeks of bugging him, Bjorn Lomborg has finally responded to the final questions posed to him by Book Club members. The questions and answers can be found on the Book Club Page. Here’s a sample from one of them:

Question: Lomborg puts his main emphasis on human prosperity and human well-being and seems to share with Julian Simon the view that humans are a resource rather than a burden. He explains why, and much of his argumentation throughout the book is built upon this principle. But many environmentalists do not share that perspective (which no doubt they would call “humanocentric”). How does he respond to those who reject the premise upon which he built much of his case?

Lomborg: I actually deal with this in the first chapter. Basically, I am focusing on the needs and desires of humankind. This does not mean that plants and animals do not also have rights but that the focus will always be on the human evaluation. This describes both my ethical conception of the world – and on that account the reader can naturally disagree with me – but also a realistic conception of the world: people debate and participate in decision-making processes, whereas penguins and pine trees do not. So the extent to which penguins and pine trees are considered depends in the final instance on some (in democracies more than half of all) individuals being prepared to act on their behalf. When we are to evaluate a project, therefore, it depends on the assessment by people. And while some of these people will definitely choose to value animals and plants very highly, these plants and animals cannot to any great extent be given particular rights.

This is naturally an approach that is basically selfish on the part of human beings. But in addition to being the most realistic description of the present form of decision-making it seems to me to be the only defensible one. Because what alternative do we have? Should penguins have the right to vote? If not, who should be allowed to speak on their behalf? (And how should these representatives be selected?)

Check out the remaining dialogue here. Because of this last entry from the last book, we’ll kick off your emails about “My Dog Tulip” next week. Send in your reflections, dog stories, whatever.

GAY RIGHTS AND CAPITALISM: For Richard Goldstein and other lingering Marxists, homosexuality is indelibly associated with leftist bohemianism, communism, and socialism. Like many American leftists, he ignores the hideous Soviet and Cuban policies toward gays; and the suppression of free speech in socialist countries that penalized gays as much as anyone. With that in mind, a friend forwards me an email from someone in Russia today, about a recent cultural event. His correspondent writes:

The Russian musical duet “Guests from the Future” is now a classical duet of a gay man and a lesbian, a so-called family that represents “capitalistic tomorrow”, where man loves men, woman loves women and both live happily together as a family. Eva, the woman who sings solo in the group, appears alone or with girlfriends in movies. The audience likes it very much.

Quite. Capitalism, as the economic system most conducive to actual liberty, is intrinsically connected to gay liberation. Russians get this. Why can’t tired old Western socialists?

MEMORIAL DAY: A letter responds to my recent post on my HIV anniversary:

Straight, 2 kids, happy and remembering. My great friend David was diagnosed four years, more or less to the day, earlier than you. He’s been gone, no longer holding down a chair at the corner of a bar waiting to talk about the little theatre company we had somehow begun. A year or two later he might have been celebrating his own anniversary. We do go on. But we are diminished, sometimes lost, always bereft.

JUNE 23

Tomorrow is my anniversary. Funny how it sneaks up on me. I mean the anniversary of testing HIV-positive. It’s been nine years now, and on the surface I should be jubilant. I remember thinking way back then that I’d probably start to get really sick by the millennium, and that I’d be on disability by now. Instead, here I am, in a beautiful place with a great beagle and boyfriend, running a website, writing furiously, feeling great. My bloodwork just came back again from the doc and showed that my CD4 cell count (the rough measure of the health of my immune system) is actually higher than it was nine years ago. And I’ve been off medications for a whole year! It seems as if my own immune system is managing to keep the virus at bay on its own. It probably won’t last for ever, but it’s a huge blessing not to be on those debilitating, disfiguring drugs. At times it feels as if that whole era is a strange part of near history. The last friend who died was seven years ago. Here in Provincetown, once a war zone, you can feel life returning in full. And yet I always succumb to depression at this time. It’s totally unconscious. I have no conscious reason to feel blue. It’s as if my body remembers the impact of that awful news received at a time when it really felt like a death sentence, and today shudders at the memory. But perhaps my depression is about the guilt of surviving when so many didn’t, and in other parts of the world, aren’t. I can close my eyes now and see the faces of my young friends who died – forever young and hopeful. Their ghosts hover in this town – on the beach at sunset, in corners of bars, as the sunlight rises on shingles. My close friend, Patrick, died at 31. What conceivable justice is there in my having eight more years than he ever had? Man, I still miss him so much. And so, in some ways, I’m proud of my unconscious remembering. I might have careened on obliviously without that psychic, physical memory, sending me into melancholy, withdrawal, sleep. And it serves to remind me why the struggle for the dignity for gay men and women is in large part fueled by the bequest of these lost ones. They urge us forward as we look wistfully back. And then I realize this isn’t depression I feel. It’s just sadness. Sadness that they are not here any more, edged only by the faith that one day I will be with them once more. Until then,

Day draws near.
Another one.
Do what you can.

COMING TO THE WEST SOON

James Bennet’s horrifying story on the banalization of Islamikaze murderers in Israel contains the following quote: “The bottleneck on the Palestinian side is not the suicide attacker,” said a senior Israeli security official. “It’s the bomb.” We are on the verge of having an entire society acting psychotically. And they’re coming here next. That’s why our emphasis on the weapons supply – Iran and Iraq – is exactly the right one. And that’s also why we don’t have all the time in the world.

KINSLEY ON MEDIA BIAS: I think he’s completely right (as he often is). Honest bias can be a form of fairness. Bias dressed up as objectivity – Rainesism – is just irritating beyond belief. The following paragraph is a classic of good sense:

Fox News is a brilliant experiment in overt, honest bias – the broadcast equivalent of its owner Rupert Murdoch’s flagship right-wing tabloid newspaper, the New York Post. It has stripped a whole layer of artifice from TV news. What almost ruins everything is the network’s comically dishonest insistence that it is not what it obviously is. I would love to know what Hume is thinking when he repeats with apparent sincerity the Fox News mantra, “Fair and balanced as always.” Fox is usually fair but rarely balanced. In fact it is a good example of how you can be the one without the other.

LOWRY ON PADILLA: Excellent skewering of civil liberties hysteria in the case of Jose Padilla by Rich Lowry in NRO. Much of this debate rests, methinks, on the deeper question of whether we really are at war. If we are, then detaining enemy combatants, even American citizens, is constitutional. If not, what on earth is that big hole in the ground in Manhattan?

THE IRISH PRECEDENT: When a sexual abuse scandal hit Ireland’s church a decade ago, many thought the Church’s attempt simply to reform its abuse procedures would resolve the issue. Nuh-huh. The church’s credibility suffered so great a blow that it never recovered. These days, the moral authority of the Church in that deeply Catholic country is a shadow of its former self, its pews are emptier and emptier, its faithful far more likely to rely upon their own conscience rather than pulpit pronouncements. Here’s a devastating account of what happened. I think it will happen here – unless the Church changes its doctrines on sexual morality.

THE ENGLISH FLAG: You may have noticed it in the World Cup. Here’s a pic. It’s not the Union Jack, but a cleaner, purer red cross on a simple white background. St George’s flag – resurrected by the disintegration of Britain as a single sovereign unit is now the emblem the English rally behind. Even the Guardian has something thoughtful to say about it. As I write this, England is about to face Brazil in the World Cup. Here we go. Here we go. Here we go.

THE MAINSTREAM ADVANCES: According to Richard Goldstein and other members of the reactionary left, most gays are radical “queers,” they have no interest in joining the mainstream, and the “homocons,” i.e. those gay writers who dissent from leftist orthodoxy, only have an audience because they are propped up by a homophobic liberal media establishment. I wonder what Goldstein would make of the story in yesterday’s New York Times about the decline of gay bookstores. More and more, gay men and women do not identify themselves solely as gay, let alone interpret being gay as pure marginalization, and see themselves as part of the broader culture. So they want to see gay-themed books in mainstream bookstores, they want to be included in the family, in marriage, in professional life, in mainstream media. This is not some fantasy concocted by gay conservatives; it’s the reality of the last ten years. This integration will accelerate. In some ways, the disappearance of gay bookstores is a huge achievement for the gay movement. It certainly signifies no collapse of gay-themed or gay-authored novels, polemics, poems, or journalism. Yes, I hope some gay bookstores survive. They can be a real resource. But the goal of the gay movement, as I’ve said before, is to make itself extinct. When full civil equality is gained -in marriage and military service – we can get back to our real lives: not being gay but being human, not being “queer” but being equal citizens.

COUNTER-ATTACK OF THE HOMOCONS: Check out this brilliant and moving email on Matt Welch’s site from a gay guy who does not follow the far gay left line either. He nails it: the breath-taking condescension of people like Goldstein, Kushner, and the like toward other gay men and women who have the temerity to think for themselves, make up their own minds about politics, religion, culture and so on, who do not see why being emotionally and sexually attracted to other men entails buying an entire political agenda from “queer socialists.” Here’s my favorite bit:

When I first self-identified as being gay and joining the “gay movement” (whatever that is), there was a clear unified message to the rest of America, that “We are everywhere” — this was post-Stonewall, pre-Anita Bryant. When did that message change to “We are everywhere, except there, cuz if’n you’re there, you must be a self-loathing hypocrite”?… And besides, if you’re of the opinion (I’m not) that there’s something noble in defining yourself as not mainstream — reveling in finding community in being ex-cepted rather than ac-cepted, then wouldn’t Sullivan’s exceptionalisticness make him even nobler in your eyes, and therefore a welcome member of that excluded, but inclusive-seeking community, who wants to exclude him?

The reverse of this point is just as telling: why does a philosophy that celebrates marginalization and exclusion want acceptance from the broader society at all? If being queer and oppressed is such a fabulous experience, why would the gay left want to do anything to combat it? Why don’t they actually oppose equal marriage rights, oppose workplace discrimination, oppose military access? Wouldn’t that help keep “queer culture” more pure and intact? Their internal contradictions are legion, which is why they are largely irrelevant to the debate about gay equality in this country. Writers like Goldstein do nothing but keep this irrelevance alive.

ISLAMIKAZES

How’s that for a new name for suicide bombers? A reader suggested it. Meanwhile, in the Toronto Star, a gripping piece explaining why the Islamikaze is a coward. In most Islamikaze massacres, the perpetrator is instantly vaporized – a painless death before he greets his beloved Allah. For his victims, the following:

A person sitting nearby would feel, momentarily, a shock wave slamming into his or her body, with an “overpressure” of 300,000 pounds. Such a blast would crush the chest, rupture liver, spleen, heart and lungs, melt eyes, pull organs away from surrounding tissue, separate hands from arms and feet from legs. Bodies would fly through the air or be impaled on the jagged edges of crumpled metal and broken glass.

What I fear is that the sheer number of these atrocities is numbing us to their evil. These young Islamikazes and their disgusting mob bosses are evil personified. There is nothing noble, despairing or admirable about them. Somehow we have to resist the insidious way in which they are normalizing barbarism.

SELF-PARODY DEPT: A new survey says Canadians prefer politics to sex. Only one percent say that sex is their favorite activity.

ISRAEL’S “RETALIATION”: Good catch from a reader about the New York Times’ coverage of Israel’s latest wounds today:

Like a piano note played in the wrong key, a single word in a New York Times story today made me gnash my teeth. The story starts out: “Israel’s forces moved into four Palestinian areas of the West Bank today as part of its policy of taking back land in retaliation for terror attacks.” What’s with this “retaliation”? I had assumed the operation’s military purpose was self-defense not retaliation; Israel obviously wants to foreclose the bombings by clamping down on the towns that are the source of the bombings. Indeed, the article later states, [t]he Israeli Army said troops were carrying out searches and making arrests, with curfews in effect. ‘Forces will stay in the cities until they achieve their operational aims,’ it said in a statement, which did not mention a time frame.” Are we to disbelieve the Israeli Army then? Because when I hear the word retaliation, I think of an act of violence for its own sake: you punch me, I punch you back, as opposed to: you punch me, I handcuff you so that you can’t punch me anymore. The choice of the word “retaliation” seems meant to reinforce the NY Times’ position — its editorial opinion –that Israeli self-defense is merely part of a meaningless “cycle of violence.” Errgg (that’s teeth gnashing). At least they didn’t say Israeli tanks cause global warming.