Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,504,174 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

New taboos: same sex what?


Joseph Sobran Joseph Sobran (b. February 23 1946, Ypsilanti, Michigan) is an American journalist and writer, formerly with National Review and currently a syndicated columnist. Academic and professional career , a regular contributor to the American weekly The American Weekly was a supplement to the Sunday newspapers published by the Hearst Corporation. It was published from 1 November 1896 to 1963. The publication featured popular illustrators on its cover, including the work of Edmund Dulac, Will Pogany and Jose Segrelles.  The Wanderer (from which this column is reprinted), points out that the cultural liberals who are scornful of old taboos are really establishing new taboos concerning homosexuality. Criticism of acts normally regarded as disgusting, and of homosexual "marriages," is regarded as evidence of "homophobia" -- which basically means "not sufficiently progressive." There is much warning against "homophobia" but we need to heed Sobran's warning that propaganda in favour of same-sex marriages means overturning not merely tradition but common sense

Washington, D.C. -- Charles Peguy, the French Catholic poet, made what may be the most prophetic remark of the early 20th century: "We shall never know how many acts of cowardice Cowardice
See also Boastfulness, Timidity.

Acres, Bob

a swaggerer lacking in courage. [Br. Lit.: The Rivals]

Bobadill, Captain

vainglorious braggart, vaunts achievements while rationalizing faintheartedness. [Br. Lit.
 have been motivated by the fear of appearing not sufficiently progressive."

That insight explains the faddishness of so much liberal thought. One might have thought the idea of "same-sex marriage" was a joke, a reductio ad absurdum [Latin, Reduction to absurdity.] In logic, a method employed to disprove an argument by illustrating how it leads to an absurd consequence.  of the continuing campaign to obliterate o·blit·er·ate
v.
1. To remove an organ or another body part completely, as by surgery, disease, or radiation.

2. To blot out, especially through filling of a natural space by fibrosis or inflammation.
 the idea of the normal. (As in "Who is to say what is `normal' for everyone?") Yet it has become a seriously debated "issue," and even some conservatives are afraid to argue against it.

Meanwhile, a single judge in the middle of the Pacific Ocean has overturned the consensus of Western civilization: Hawaii is now on the verge On the Verge (or The Geography of Yearning) is a play written by Eric Overmyer. It makes extensive use of esoteric language and pop culture references from the late nineteenth century to 1955.  of recognizing "marriages" between members of the same sex. You got a problem with that?

Cultural liberals are scornful of "old taboos," but they're always eager to establish and enforce new taboos. Disapproval of homosexuality is rapidly becoming one of the new once. If you say it's a perversion Perversion
See also Bestiality.

bondage and domination (B & D)

practices with whips, chains, etc. for sexual pleasure. [Western Cult.: Misc.
, you will be accused of "hate," as if you were targeting people rather than evaluating practices. Liberals never acknowledge their own hatred of Western traditions; they merely ascribe their hostility to their "idealism," a motive their self-congratulation won't allow them to ascribe to conservatives. (They also claim to be on the side of science, while holding that science is "value-free").

So, as usual when liberals control the discussion, the debate quickly turns into a test of motives. If your motives are generous, you will approve of same-sex marriage; if you withhold approval, your motives must be nasty, and the difference between you and the Ku Klux Klan Ku Klux Klan (k' klŭks klăn), designation mainly given to two distinct secret societies that played a part in American history, although other less important groups have also used  is only a matter of degree.

This isn't debate; it's accusation and intimidation. You can't have a real debate when one side is stigmatized in advance as bigoted big·ot·ed  
adj.
Being or characteristic of a bigot: a bigoted person; an outrageously bigoted viewpoint.



big
 and, Heaven help us, "homophobic" -- a suitably perverse coinage, which basically means "not sufficiently progressive."

In the case of same-sex marriage, conservatives are also under special inhibitions. They believe in public reticence about sex and excretion, so they are accordingly reluctant to discuss rather obvious clinical distinctions -- reproductive, sanitary, and olfactory olfactory /ol·fac·to·ry/ (ol-fak´ter-e) pertaining to the sense of smell.

ol·fac·to·ry
adj.
Of, relating to, or contributing to the sense of smell.
 -- between orifices. The best comment I have heard on same-sex marriages can't be printed in a family newspaper (and I guess I wouldn't want it to be).

Liberals, for their own reasons, want to discuss same-sex marriage as a civil-rights issue, without reference to details of copulation copulation /cop·u·la·tion/ (kop?u-la´shun) sexual union; the transfer of the sperm from male to female; usually applied to the mating process in nonhuman animals.

cop·u·la·tion
n.
1.
 that are central to the definition of marriage. So the question is discussed in euphemisms and pale abstractions, just as abortion is. The details of abortion violate liberal canons of good taste; we are expected to approve it without saying exactly what it is. Otherwise we are "not sufficiently progressive." As a result, our public debates, at critical junctures, are not only value-free, but pretty much fact-free.

A few years ago liberalism's bulletin-board orthodoxy (it changes weekly) held, under the sway of feminism, that marriage was an evil, outmoded, patriarchal institution. Besides, what did a "piece of paper" have to do with love?

Now, it seems, marriage is such a vital institution that it's cruel to exclude anyone from its joys. And you exclude people merely by declining to redefine this ancient institution to suit their tastes. The "right" to marry means the right to overturn not only tradition, but common sense.

This position is not just wrong; it's also -- and this is what makes it somewhat awkward to argue with -- stunningly whimsical. You hardly know whether to refute it or just wait it out, hoping it will blow over, giving place to the next morally imperative fad.

Waiting quietly for it to blow over may spare you liberal censure in the short run. If you keep your mouth shut, nobody will call you names. But in the meantime Adv. 1. in the meantime - during the intervening time; "meanwhile I will not think about the problem"; "meantime he was attentive to his other interests"; "in the meantime the police were notified"
meantime, meanwhile
 you can't be sure that the judiciary won't do one of its creative exegetical ex·e·get·ic   also ex·e·get·i·cal
adj.
Of or relating to exegesis; critically explanatory.



ex
 jobs, discovering same-sex marriage lurking in the penumbras of our living constitution.

So far, it has only been discovered in the Hawaiian constitution. But it may be coming soon to your neighbourhood.

Joe Sobran is a syndicated columnist. Reprinted with permission.
COPYRIGHT 1997 Catholic Insight
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1997, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Sobran, Joe
Publication:Catholic Insight
Date:Mar 1, 1997
Words:785
Previous Article:Attack on NFLD priest (Dermot O'Keefe).
Next Article:Priestly celibacy.
Topics:



Related Articles
Last Night in Paradise: Sex and Morals at the Century's End.
Japan sees its first sex change.
From the Archives of The Advocate.(homosexuality and the entertainment industry)(Brief Article)
The Dutch say "I do".(same sex marriage law approved)(Brief Article)
Same-sex samurai.(Review)
Powell, "Safe Sex," and Condoms. (Insider Report).(Colin Powell, cabinet member, on health issues concerning unprotected sex)(Brief Article)
Challenging the Namibian perception of sexuality.(Book Review)
Frontier wedding: a photograph survives the years to bear witness to the love of a cowboy and his two-spirit bride.(art)(Brief Article)
Tommy boys, lesbian men and ancestral wives: Female same sex practices in Africa: Ruth Morgan and Saskia Wieringa.

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles