Sep. 8th, 2007

chrishansenhome: (Default)
There have been rants lately in some places saying that it's hypocritical for gay men or lesbians to tap-dance on Sen. Craig's political grave (couldn't resist). Let me try to explain why I don't believe it is.

The basis of the contract between constituents and their representatives is trust. We elect people whom we then trust to be honest and act in all our interests. Now we know that in fact most representatives are slaves of the special interests and only pay lip service to their constituents when this conflicts with their obligations to the big money people who help them get re-elected. However, being consistent and honest in one's private life and one's public life is all-important. If, for example, a senator who has large investments in oil and gas development then votes for legislation that would increase his or her own investment worth, this is not honest and creates a conflict. In practice, nowadays representatives put investments in a blind trust and only get income from it, without knowing what investments his or her trustees have chosen.

Senator Craig voted consistently for legislation that limited lesbian and gay rights. At the same time, he was (according to reports) tap-tap-tapping at the stall doors of many public conveniences. Now the question as to why he denies he's gay ("men-who-have-sex-with-men" or MSMs often do) is not something I'd care to get into. But it shows a disconnection between the Senator and the truth. In one fundamental area of his life, he does not perceive activities that his family, friends, and the general public would see as homosexual acts to be so. The cognitive dissonance, the interior conflict between what he does and how he votes and what he believes, creates quite a bit of stress and tension, I am certain. On a personal level, this is not conducive to mental balance. On a political level, reasoned debate goes out the window when people do not vote as they act. The religious corollary to this is the Church of England priest who preaches faithfulness within marriage but who is also having an affair with the verger, or the Ted Haggard who preaches against sodomites but who happily pokes his butt in the air for his rentboys to plow.

I suggest that this cognitive dissonance, rather than his MSMness or homosexuality, is what disqualifies him for office.

The question of entrapment is also an interesting one. Did Senator McWidestance commit a crime in the Minneapolis-St. Paul airport? No, he did not. Was the policeman justified in charging him with a crime, judging from what he did? No, he was not. Did the end justify the means? Well, a senator who has difficulties with his own psychological makeup and who votes against his own interests certainly needs to consider his or her position, and that's exactly what he did.

I believe that Sen. Craig voted to convict Bill Clinton of impeachment for lying about his sexual activities with Monica Lewinsky. Is it stretching a point if we were to say that that is exactly what Sen. Craig has been doing for years? Why would President Clinton (on the one hand) be a criminal for doing something that Sen. Craig is doing (lying about his sexual activities)?

So, even though Sen. McWidestance did not commit a crime (in my opinion) in Minneapolis, his entire mode of life and his conduct bring into question his fitness for office. The other two closeted senators of whom I'm aware (both of whom are Republicans), one of whom is in high office in the Senate, will do all they can to ensure that Sen. McWidestance holds to his previous intention and resigns, since his continued presence in public life will threaten to shed light on their own unsavoury activities.

As the Republicans have more seats to defend in 2008 than the Democrats do, it's likely that some of them will lose and the current precarious Democratic control of the Senate will become less so.

Oh, and if a Democratic politician were to be exposed as a closeted gay man or lesbian but his/her voting record were consonant with his/her sexuality, I would be quite a bit less likely to think that s/he should resign. No cognitive dissonance! However, if s/he voted as the homophobes do, out with him/her! And the only openly-gay Republican in the House of Representatives has a good voting record on lesbian and gay issues and I have no problem with him (other than the fact that he should really be a Democrat).

The consequence of the closet is death to the soul, and sometimes the end of a political career.
chrishansenhome: (Default)
Lately it's become clear that those who were born in the 1950's have come centre stage in the world, and are bound to dominate politics for the next ten or fifteen years.

I discovered that General Petraeus, who is going to be reporting on how well the Surge in Iraq is faring, was born one day before me. The profiles of businesspeople and politicians in the newspapers more and more often list people who were born in the 1950's.

I feel glad that, at last, those who were born in my decade are coming into their own in politics and the highest ranks of business.

However, as I race wildly on toward the age of 55 (in November), I'm constantly aware of approaching infirmity and worse. Oh well, I suppose the alternative is worse.
chrishansenhome: (Default)
I have been using LochJournal for posting to my LJ for donkey's years now. The difficulty came when I changed my screen resolution and realised that the front window of LochJournal had a major but in it: it can't be resized. Thus, the right hand side of the window is cut off, with no scroll bar or Maximise button to use to see what's over there. The window also gets a bit weird-looking when the screen resolution is changed.

So I'm currently trying Semagic, which is another front-end editor for LJ. So far, it seems to work OK, and I suppose that I will just change. I have considered moving to blogging from my web page, but will need to consider exactly how to do that--I've not tried it and the LJ instructions aren't the clearest.

Update: I forgot to say, you can add tags at the same time as you post, although the tag list you get is a drop-down that only shows the first letter of a tag unless there is only one existing tag with that letter, thus it's hard to scroll through and select a previous tag unless you're very familiar with your tags. In addition, you can edit the last entry through the Semagic front end. Neither of these things is possible with LochJournal.
chrishansenhome: (Default)
He has 499 days left in office, plus a few hours (as of this writing).
chrishansenhome: (Default)
When I was a kid, the library was where you went to borrow books and look up things in big reference books. Nowadays, people use it for many different things.
chrishansenhome: (Default)
There is nothing like a mother's love, as this monkey knows.

October 2019

S M T W T F S
  123 45
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Aug. 12th, 2025 01:43 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios