Following up on my "Disappointing" post below, I absolutely loved this press release from the NGLTF (h/t to Andy at Towleroad):
While it may be delicious to watch our opponents twist and squirm after honoring and embracing a larger-than-life gay porn star, I don't see any hypocrisy in U.S. Marine reservist Matt Sanchez's actions. As is his right, he spoke out against what he believed was bad treatment by Columbia's "radical anti-military students" (Sanchez's words). Right-wing pundits and organizations pounced on the handsome Latino Marine and showered him with praise and media exposure. Now, they're scrambling for cover.Porn--gay or straight--has no ideology. Porn stars and porn consumers are Republicans and Democrats, liberals and conservatives, atheists and evangelicals. There's no inherent contradiction between Matt Sanchez being pro-military and being part of the "adult film" industry. The real hypocrisy expresses itself in two different and important ways. First, the failed "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" law requires Matt Sanchez and thousands of other loyal Americans to hide their sexual orientation to serve their country in the military. Second, Ann Coulter and her ilk lift a man to hero and spokesperson status until--gasp!--he is found out to be a "faggot" (Coulter’s word).
The important 11 inches in this story? That is the approximate distance between berths on U.S. naval submarines, so defamatorily measured in front of TV cameras by then-Sen. Sam Nunn in 1993, who immorally intimated that openly gay service members could not be permitted to bunk next to straight service members. From that shameful episode, Nunn led Congress to adopt the "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" law, which should now be repealed. Let's be done with officially enforced closets.
Hear, hear.
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