ET TU, DICK?

I’m trying hard not to feel immense disappointment in the administration for reverting so feebly and so quickly to the flim-flam propagated by various Arab satrapies about the urgency of the Palestinian-Israeli issue. The only reason for the vice-president to be in the Middle East right now is to prepare the way for ending the chemical, nuclear and biological threat from Saddam Hussein’s Iraq. Period. The idea that yet another administration is going to try yet again to ‘solve’ an insoluble conflict, and to prove yet again that Palestinian terrorism works, is too dismaying for words. Worse, these other Arab dictators Cheney is now stroking are helping Saddam gain his coveted weapons by delaying our ability to stop him. In other words, it is quite possible that this administration is allowing the terrorist threat against this country to worsen and intensify. It has already lost the momentum from victory in Afghanistan. Now it looks as if it has lost its sense of clarity and direction altogether. Perhaps this round of negotiations is only designed to help smoothe the path for action against Iraq. That’s the public front anyway. And it’s the one hope that keeps me from panic. But it’s an increasingly thin reed on which to base any confidence in this administration’s recent actions in the Middle East. The notion that the Arab ‘street’ would rise up if we target Iraq before we appease the murderous thugs of the PLO has been heard time and time again and has always, always been revealed as a sham. So why on earth is the Bush administration, like Charlie Brown and the football, going to try and kick this one again? If terrorists strike while Bush diddles, if Iraq gains a nuclear and chemical capacity by the time we come around to strike, then president Bush will be held responsible, and should be held responsible, and he will not be forgiven. Please say it ain’t so, Dubya. Say it ain’t so.

HOLY GAFFES: Interesting column in the National Catholic Reporter on papal spokesman Navarro-Valls’ track record. His recent outburst against gay priests – celibate or not – is not the first time he’s goofed.

EPEHEBOPHILIA AT NATIONAL REVIEW: Well, not quite, and we are talking about legal sex. But ogling a 19 year-old’s breasts is just fine if you’re John Derbyshire. Just make sure they’re female breasts and Rod Dreher won’t be on your case:

The best reason to watch this latest version of The Time Machine is 19-year-old Zambian-Irish (no kidding) pop-tart Samantha Mumba, who is exceptionally easy on the eye. I am speaking of her physical attributes only; she can’t act. The long years in drama school – she started at age three – have left little trace, proving that talent is born, not made. Her accent lurches unpredictably from Dublin to South London to Los Angeles. I thought I detected a flicker of anxiety when she was about to be eaten by Morlocks, but her expression remains otherwise locked in a sort of vapid half-smile. She is, however, really good to look at. Her breasts are particularly fine.

About as fine as National Review’s double standards.

BLECH

As a reminder, I guess, that there’s a human being behind this website, I can’t dish tonight because I ate a bad tuna sandwich this afternoon and can barely function, let alone think. After a few more stomach evacuations, I should be fine tomorrow, and hope to post new items by the afternoon. So check back in later. Meanwhile, I’m posting my recent piece on Bush as a substitute. I’m sorry, but what can you do (except Pepto-Bismol)?

THE RELUCTANT PRESIDENT

Despite the mounds of ink expended on the current president of the United States, he’s still in many ways a mystery. Before September 11, he was widely ridiculed in the press – especially abroad – as a know-nothing, word-mangling, privileged hick who barely won the election. After September 11, his measured and calm response to the attack, his handling of the international crisis, his oratorical skills, and his deft management of the military have given an altogether different impression. In a matter of months, the conventional image of Bush has been effectively whip-lashed. And now that we have a little distance from the alleged turning point of last September, the result is unnervingly incoherent. Who, after all, is the real Bush? The jokester or the statesman? The bumbler or the war leader? The cipher or the captain?

A terrific, if modest, little book, “Ambling Into History,” has just attempted an answer to that question and it has Washington chatting. It’s by the New York Times’ political reporter, Frank Bruni, who covered Bush during the election campaign. Bruni’s no conservative; in fact, he’s a moderately liberal man working for a left-liberal paper. But he’s a good reporter and, because he wrote fair columns on Bush throughout the campaign, became a favorite of the president-to-be. Dubya called him “Panchito” – a diminutive, Spanish version of Frank. He’d pinch Panchito’s cheeks, hug him from time to time, and tease him about his bosses. “At least twice, on the campaign plane,” Bruni writes, “I felt someone’s hands closing tight on my throat and turned around to see the outstretched arms of the future president of the United States, a devilish and delighted gleam in his eyes. He once even put his index fingers in my ears to illustrate that a comment he was about to make would be off the record. On another occasion, he grabbed the sides of my head with his hands, pressed his forehead against mine and made a sound not unlike that of a moderately exasperated pooch.”

This is the goofy Bush, the man who allegedly started waving at Stevie Wonder at a recent Washington concert, only to realize his stupidity and crack up at the whole interaction. This is the Bush who started a “stickball” team at college and christened it “the Nads,” so as to ensure that the chants from the stands would be “Go Nads! Go Nads!” This is the Bush who does a mean Dr. Evil impression from Austin Powers (one of his favorite movies), who “when he ate French fries, dipped them into puddles of ketchup deeper and broader than anyone over the age of twelve typically amasses,” and who, when asked what he had in common with Tony Blair ventured Colgate toothpaste. One of his favorite gags was going up to bald friends and colleagues, laying his bare palms on their heads and intoning like Billy Graham, “Heal!” Like most jokes, these are all a matter of taste. But if, like me, your most treasured videos are Animal House, Monty Python and the Holy Grail and Airplane!, you might get along with the current occupant of the White House quite well.

But does this make Bush unserious or somehow dumb? On the latter question, few but hardcore Democratic partisans in Washington still dispute the man’s sharp intelligence. He has mangled words, but he has hardly mangled his politics. From beating a popular incumbent governor of Texas to winning a landslide second term as governor, he kept turning his opponents into political puree. Against an incumbent vice-president who should have won in a landslide, Bush eked out a victory and, with shrewd tactics, played the post-election recount game better than Gore. Before September 11, he barely dipped below 57 percent approval ratings, and since he has barely hovered below 80 percent. This record is not that of a stupid person. And, of course, on a simple level, there was never any evidence that he was the moron he was made out to be. Bush got better marks in college than Gore or John McCain. He’s a graduate of Yale and Harvard. As Bruni points out, the current president is also “a pretty steady consumer of books.” Bruni admits his early dismissal of Bush’s book-smarts was more prejudice than reality.

The truth is that Bush is both serious and unserious. He larks about but he also concentrates. He started prepping for his campaign debates with Gore months before they happened, and beat Gore handily in all three. His sometimes hilarious locutions are not a function of stupidity or dyslexia. They are a kind of genetic defect. His father was far worse. But no-one accused the father of stupidity. Dubya’s occasional recitation of stock phrases is also not because he can’t think of anything else, or doesn’t know anything else. They’re part of his famous ability to maintain message discipline, even at the expense of making himself look stupid. To understand his hesitancy to go off the cuff, you have to put yourself in the shoes of someone whose every word is recorded and every mistake read back to him. What’s amazing in retrospect is not that he hasn’t screwed up verbally plenty of times – but how few occasions there have been in which it really mattered. And then there are the simple urban legends. He is renowned for having said, for example, “Is our children learning?” One Democratic party hack even published an anti-Bush book with that as the title. What Bush actually said was, “Is … are children learning?” He started to say one thing and then said another. By making ‘are’ ‘our,’ his opponents thought they had located his obvious weakness.

They didn’t. As Bruni realized, Bush’s simplicity, his gaffes, his colloquialisms, his goofing around, actually turned into a political advantage. ‘I always got the sense,” Bruni writes, “that his antics were in part an acknowledgement or assertion that a well-adjusted person could not approach all of the obligatory appearances, grandiose pageantry and forced gallantry toward the news media with a totally straight face. It made him likable. It made him real.” Compared to the straight-laced, humorless, pious Gore, Bush was a godsend to the country’s culture – a bit like electing Rory Bremner to succeed Tony Blair.

But the other side to Bruni’s portrait is an underlying gravity that keeps the lightness anchored. Like many deeply religious men, Bush engages the world with a certain detachment, and that detachment can sometimes be expressed in frivolity, irony, fun, or self-mockery. There is a very bearable lightness about being Bush. But he can only be so playful because he is so anchored. He is connected to faith but also to a profound love of his country and its destiny. This connection is, like all patriotism, rooted not in the head but the heart. At one point in a summer lull in the campaign, Bush spoke with Bruni on the campaign plane and inexplicably got teary-eyed. Looking back on his campaign, he was asked about his feelings if Gore were to win. “Seriously, I would respect that. I’m not going to like it. But this is democracy,” he said. He went on: “I love the system and I love the country. I love what America stands for. I don’t want to sound Pollyanna-ish about it, but I do… I am so honored to be one of two coming down the stretch. I am.” He meant it. And tears welled up.

One of his most memorable moments in the days after September 11 was when tears came again. He was in the Oval Office and he was asked how these events had affected him. “Well,” Bush said, “I don’t think about myself right now. I think about the families, the children. I am a loving guy.” And his voice cracked. That’s when the country bonded. And only from the depths of such sorrow can come the iron determination to see the crisis through, to ensure to the best of his ability that it would never happen again. His emotional core is connected to his lightness of spirit. He is secure in what he loves. And the very simplicity and depth of his patriotism is more in tune with most Americans than with some other members of the media or political elite. That’s why the bond is so strong. And that’s why it will last.

But perhaps the most striking thing about Bruni’s account is its picture of an essentially reluctant president. It took Bush a long time to be reconciled to the huge sacrifices – of privacy, leisure, routine, family – that becoming president would entail. In the campaign, he’d long to get back home; he missed his children; he brought his own pillow at all times to remind him of the familiar. Even now, he loves being on his Texas ranch, he carves out immovable personal time, he is religious about his workouts, he leaves work early. This isn’t merely management style. It’s a statement of what’s important. It’s about not losing yourself, or your familiar landmarks and habits, while you enter truly unknown and terrifying territory. At an almost ridiculous level, you can see this entirely in one simple incident. One on particularly grueling campaign flight, Bush “glanced in horror at the slivers of sushi that we had been served during the flight and held his peanut butter and jelly sandwich high like a chalice. ‘This is heaven, right here,’ he proclaimed.”

You can and probably should make fun of this. But at a deeper level, it’s also revealing. Bush knows what he knows. He knows who he is. He likes who he is. And this small piece of wisdom is doubtless what keeps him sane. He has an instinctive understanding of limits, of what can and cannot be done, of the human scale by which all political achievements must be measured. It’s redolent of a natural, temperamental conservatism that prefers, in Michael Oakeshott’s words, “the familiar to the unknown, the tried to the untried, fact to mystery, the actual to the possible, the limited to the unbounded, the near to the distant, the sufficient to the superabundant, the convenient to the perfect, present laughter to utopian bliss.” That doesn’t mean that such an instinctively conservative person like Bush cannot be energetic, or wage war. In fact, I think Bush’s rage at the disruption to the meaning of America on September 11 is the fuel for his ruthless determination to fight back and win. So lightness begets seriousness, detachment begets engagement, and a natural conservatism begets a determined and adventurous war. These are just some of the more interesting paradoxes of this man once dismissed as a bumbling moron. And he’s only a little over a year into his first term.

HOME NEWS

Thanks entirely to you, we’ve now paid off all our start-up costs, redesign costs and retroactive server costs. I’ve even been able to pay two interns (a pittance) to help me keep up with the thousands of emails we get on a weekly basis. Soon now, I may even get a small payment myself – the first actual salary I’ve yet made. We still need your help, though. Server costs are growing with our traffic and we have to pay them each month. It will also make a huge difference to the long-term viability of the site if I can make a small salary for all the work involved – around three or four hours a day right now. The book-club, if it keeps up a decent participation rate, will also make a big difference. So will your contributions, which you can make by clicking on the Tipping Point button on the top left of your screen or here. If you’re a regular reader, please consider a nominal amount. If you’re a devotee please consider more. If you feel like buying something from Amazon or our other affiliates, please add one more click to your efforts and visit them through our site. That way, we get a small commission, and they all add up. As to traffic, we’ve seen no drop off since the peak of the war and are still growing solidly. We’ve had some problems on our stats server so the following numbers are only roughly accurate, but we’re getting around 20,000 unique visitors for a total of around 36,000 unique visits a day. Our monthly visit numbers are around 800,000 and page-views are around 1.2 million. When we make one million visits a month, I’ll take a short break with a large case of Jagermeister.

AND NOW FOR SOMETHING COMPLETELY DIFFERENT: On a personal note, I’ve taken a short leave from The New Republic and my free-lance gigs to do something that might seem a little crazy. A while back, I was emailed by a director for the Washington Shakespeare Company, asking if I’d audition for an upcoming play. I used to do a lot of acting in college and grad school, so, after getting over the surprise, I gave it a shot. To my surprise, he cast me. I decided a week or so ago to give it a go, and I’m throwing my routine up in the air for a while to do something completely different. Ever since I turned 30 and thought I’d never turn 40, I’ve taken the view that you should say yes to things. Life’s short. You might as well enjoy it. (Don’t worry. The Dish will keep coming.) The play is Shakespeare’s “Much Ado About Nothing,” and I’m playing Benedick, one of my favorite characters in Shakespeare’s repertoire. The play opens April 23, Shakespeare’s birthday, and runs through May. I’ll post details when the show approaches. So far, I’ve been rehearsing three hours most days and having a blast. My only condition for doing it was not wearing tights. I will, however, have a pair of black leather pants. That should pack them in.

WHAT’S UP

Pickering goes down; Rosie comes out; Powell puts the boot in; Russia backs Bush.

CAN THERE BE A DECENT LEFT?: Michael Walzer asks some truly hard and penetrating questions in an essay in the upcoming Dissent. The essay reminds me of Hannah Arendt’s contributions to that journal many moons ago. If you do nothing else today, read this piece. It has an honesty and seriousness that could make it a pivotal argument in the future of American liberalism with regard to international politics and the burdens and challenges of living in a super-power. He concludes:

The world (and this includes the third world) is too full of hatred, cruelty, and corruption for any left, even the American left, to suspend its judgement about what’s going on. It’s not the case that because we are privileged, we should turn inward and focus our criticism only on ourselves. In fact, inwardness is one of our privileges; it is often a form of political self-indulgence. Yes, we are entitled to blame the others whenever they are blameworthy; in fact, it is only when we do that, when we denounce, say, the authoritarianism of third world governments, that we will find our true comrades–the local opponents of the maximal leaders and military juntas, who are often waiting for our recognition and support. If we value democracy, we have to be prepared to defend it, at home, of course, but not only there. I would once have said that we were well along: the American left has an honorable history, and we have certainly gotten some things right, above all, our opposition to domestic and global inequalities. But what the aftermath of September 11 suggests is that we have not advanced very far–and not always in the right direction. The left needs to begin again.

The times they are a’ changing.

WHAT THE SAUDIS REALLY BELIEVE: I wonder if Tom Friedman could ask his Saudi friends why their government publishes the following column in its official newspaper, al Riyadh:

I chose to [speak] about the Jewish holiday of Purim, because it is connected to the month of March. This holiday has some dangerous customs that will, no doubt, horrify you, and I apologize if any reader is harmed because of this. During this holiday, the Jew must prepare very special pastries, the filling of which is not only costly and rare – it cannot be found at all on the local and international markets. Unfortunately, this filling cannot be left out, or substituted with any alternative serving the same purpose. For this holiday, the Jewish people must obtain human blood so that their clerics can prepare the holiday pastries. In other words, the practice cannot be carried out as required if human blood is not spilled!!

You can read the full horrifying text at MEMRI.org, Number 354. And we think these people want to make peace with Israel? I think it’s about as likely as Hitler doing so.

THE ‘BORN-FREES’ REVOLT: The best analysis of the recent Zimbabwean election is this piece by Sasha Polakow-Suransky in the American Prospect. Robert Mugabe is clearly one of the most ruthless tyrants on the blighted continent of Africa. And the travesty of this election – and its precursors – proves it.

YOUR TURN: Dissent flourishes on this site at least. On the letters page, orthodox Catholics back Rod Dreher, straight soldiers back gay soldiers and the current policy, and other readers defend the Bush administration’s new pressure on Israel. Just don’t say we don’t air the issues here.

THE PRO-AMERICAN BRITISH LEFT: Well, there are three of them at least. And what they lack in numbers, they make up for in quality. Funny that Hitchens, Amis and Rushdie all now live here. That might account for their lacking the ignorance and prejudice of some of their confreres back home in the Guardian’s editorial offices.

THE RIGHT AND GAYS

“You seem to think we, as a society, are well on our way to a utopia where homosexuality is a non-issue. You are quite wrong. The proof is the way the Right jumps on the pedophilia issue and tries to smear the entire gay community at every opportunity. It is insulting, unfair, and painful and I hate them for it.” This and a pro-war liberal poo-poos Kuttner on the Letters Page.

COULTER ON BRUNI

“Whatever Bruni’s style and political predilections, he is an honest and perceptive reporter.” That’s Ann Coulter’s rave review of Frank Bruni’s book on FrontPage magazine. Coulter plugging a New York Times reporter’s book? Doesn’t that make you curious? There’s still time to get the book in time for next Wednesday’s discussion. What are you waiting for?

WHAT’S UP

Cheney chugs along; Bush ratchets up warning on Iraq; Congress backs gas-guzzlers; Mugabe says Mugabe won; the “Virgil of TV Guides” – he dead.

BUSH VERSUS ISRAEL: So Arafat wins, after all. He quit Camp David because he believed he could get a better deal by ramping up the violence. He is now one of many terrorist leaders waging a sustained war on Israel, a war that Israel, even unhindered, would have a hard time winning. He has now spectacularly proven his point that terrorism works, that a small democracy like Israel has no right to defend itself adequately, and that eventually a great power like the United States will intervene to rein in the Israelis when Arafat wants. It has worked like magic. The only desperately depressing news is that president George W. Bush has enabled Arafat to do this. It’s okay for us to fight terror, apparently. It isn’t okay for Israel. The difference, according to the president, is that there is a structure for peace in Israel (a structure Bush kept referring to as Tenet or Mitchell in his press conference yesterday, a beltway abbreviation that made me immediately think of his dad). Here’s W’s quote: “Unlike our war against al Qaeda, there is a series of agreements in place that will lead to peace. And, therefore, we’re going to work hard to see if we can’t, as they say, get into Tenet and eventually Mitchell.” What on earth does that mean? Agreements mean nothing when you are dealing with terrorists. The best interpretation is that Bush is being tactical. In order to deal with Iraq, we need to say these things to keep the Arab world (however duplicitously) part of the coalition. Once we have dealt with Iraq, we can let the Israelis deal more firmly with Arafat, Hamas, and Hezbollah. But I don’t buy it. What we need to be saying now more than ever is that terrorism will not be tolerated – anywhere, by anyone. There’s a whiff of James Baker about all this wobbling. If I were an Israeli fighting for my country, I’d be truly afraid of what lies ahead.

REBELS?: “Listening to NPR this morning, I was struck how they kept referring to the Al Qaeda troops hiding out in the caves as “Al Qaeda rebels.” Just what are they rebelling against?” Continued on today’s Letters Page, along with Oscar reminiscences and a candid homily at mass.

STOP SEXISM NOW!: It would take a dozen books, endless studies and mounds of arguments to even make a dent on some of the silliness that now passes, alas, for feminism in some quarters. But the Onion makes its case against denying nature in one inspired little article.

THE PURGE CONTINUES: The reactionaries want to hound gays out of the priesthood. Perhaps their model should be the army. Gay soldiers are being harassed and thrown out at record rates. At the camp where one gay soldier was recently held down and beaten to death by his comrades with a baseball bat, harassment, far from declining, has soared and discharges have gone through the roof. It’s essentially a camp where gay-bashing is a sport. Here’s the money-quote:

Kanellis and Col. Tom Begines, chief of Army media relations, attributed the large number of gay discharges at Fort Campbell, home of the 101st Airborne Division, to a policy decision made after Winchell’s murder to expedite the processing of gay discharges for the safety of gay service members. “The increase should be viewed as preventative rather than punitive,” Begines said. “All of that, I think, is to the Army’s credit.”

Get that? In order to prevent another murder by its own soldiers, the army brass don’t discipline or train the potential culprits, they throw out the potential victims. And they want credit for their actions! I was once hopeful that some kind of modus vivendi could be achieved on this issue, as in almost every other civilized military in the world, from Britain to Israel. No longer. I always knew that the U.S. military was designed to threaten people with violence. I never realized the rationale applied to its own soldiers as well.

SPARING ROD: How to respond to Rod Dreher’s latest attempt to blame all the Church’s current troubles on homosexuals? I should begin by saying I think bringing my sexual life – or Rod’s sexual life – into this discussion is highly unhelpful. I have no desire to know whether Rod is “sexually active” in ways the church doesn’t approve – whether he uses contraception, for example, or has ever masturbated or had pre-marital sex. It’s none of my business and is irrelevant to the discussion. So is my sex life. That said, he homes in on a couple of difficult issues. The first is whether the Church has a single unchanging doctrine on every matter of morals which every Catholic is obliged to assent to and practice at all times. This is a common view among pre-Vatican II Catholics, ex-Catholics and non-Catholics. It’s wrong. The Church is not a democracy, but neither is it a Vatican dictatorship. The Second Vatican Council specifically carved out a larger area for the laity to discuss, reflect upon and debate matters of morals, of the application of broad principles to particular issues, and so on. We – not just the Pope – are also the Church. For example, most Catholics find the complete bar on any birth control to be, not to put too fine a point on it, bizarre. When the Church imposes something by diktat that the faithful cannot square with their own moral sense, experience and prayerful reflection, two things happen. The laity ignores it; and the hierarchy loses credibility. To a lesser extent, the Church’s teachings on re-marriage, the role of women, celibacy, and homosexuality are also so theologically muddled and troubling upon inspection that they have generated considerable debate. Bottom line: I don’t think such debate is faithless or un-Catholic. In fact, I think we have a duty to question our faith in order to understand and fully believe it. Those of us who have stayed in the Church despite finding its teachings about our lives incoherent, cruel and unpersuasive are no less faithful than others. And that goes for the many, good, pastoral priests who when faced with real human beings make accommodations that no distant prelate in Rome can or should second-guess.

ONE SWISH TOO FAR: I’m as troubled as Rod by the notion that there may be some cliques of gay priests acting out or up or whatever. They need to be reined in, but also to get real – not phony – help, from a hierarchy that can barely manage to acknowledge their existence let alone find ways to understand their unique challenges and difficulties. Unfortunately, the closet that Rod supports makes such help extremely difficult and intensifies the problem. That’s why I want more gay priests to come out – not just for their sakes but
for the Church’s. You cannot deal with a problem until you have faced it. And in order for these priests to come out, the Church must stop its systematic discrimination and institutional panic around them. It really is a two-way street. My objection to Rod’s tirades is that they conflate all these issues into one easy demon – gay/pedophile/ephebophile/liberal/faithless priests. There are, in fact, three separate issues here: sex abuse in the clergy, which has far more to do with abuse of power than anyone’s sexual orientation; heterodox priests; and gay priests. I’m for firm treatment of the first; mild tolerance of the second, as long as they don’t openly disrespect Church authority; and acceptance of the third, as long as celibacy is both enforced and enabled by greater counseling and support. The reason I take umbrage at some of Rod’s tone is that the conflation of homosexuality and child or minor abuse is so deeply rooted in the public consciousness and so false that it constitutes a permanent libel against which gay men and women have to contend with every day. Guess what? I object to having my sexual and emotional orientation reduced to child-abuse. Wouldn’t you?

SMEAR-JOB: But let’s say most of the priest sex abuse cases are same-sex. Doesn’t that imply some homosexual connection? Well, try another analogy. At Tailhook, all the sexual abuse was opposite sex. Does that mean that heterosexual soldiers are the problem? Or try another. Much incest is committed by fathers against daughters. Does that make fatherhood suspect? Or another. The vast majority of sexual harassment cases in the workplace are of subordinate women by superior men. Does that make male heterosexuality the real problem? In these cases, the answer is obvious: of course not. We distinguish between individuals who do evil things and individuals who do not. The attempt to conflate the two, especially with regard to a tiny and long-persecuted minority, is simply wrong. And the Church’s authentic teaching with regard to same-sex sexual abuse is equally emphatic: of course there is no intrinsic connection between it and homosexual orientation. And the attempt to say so – to target homosexuality as the key problem behind the recent scandals – is an appalling smear-job, designed to deflect attention from the real problem. It works because it manages to press certain buttons in the public mind, buttons that have led to the persecution of gays for centuries. But smearing a whole group of people, peddling stereotypes like “swishy priests” or “lavender mafias” or “effete” clerics is not only unworthy of Rod. It is far more immoral than any non-abusive sexual failing could ever be.

SO PROUD OF ROSIE

I’ve just read Matt Drudge’s scoop on the Rosie O’Donnell interview. This strikes me as a big story. O’Donnell has gone the whole way – explaining in moving, honest, accessible ways how gay people exist, how they threaten no-one, how they want to live lives of dignity and respect, care for their loved ones, bring up their kids with security, and be a full and equal part of society. It’s a big story because she insists, as she should, that being gay isn’t all that she is, but is a central part of who she is. And it’s big because her audience – of middle and lower-middle class women and men – love her and respect her. They will now see a gay person as someone normal, sane, funny, and occasionally dumb. That’s way better than a scary abstraction. I must say I feel bad for having prodded O’Donnell to do this before she was ready. She picked her time and made her case. Perhaps some of the irrational fear and loathing that so many have to deal with even before they get to the starting line in life will now dissipate a little further. I certainly hope so. Now all we need are a few more openly gay men to add to the ranks. It’s lonely out here, guys. How about it?