The newest attack on the lives of homosexual men and women is not in a Third World nation, an unenlightened educational backwater where local superstitions supercede science. No, it is in Russia, a culturally, scientifically, and intellectually rich nation.
Moscow is now proposing legislation that would bad the "promotion" of a gay lifestyle, UK Gay News reports:
The New Yorker published an essay on the subject:
Interestingly enough, this didn't get much media coverage here in the US. Mugabe's ravings about homosexuals, the criminalisation of any homosexual act - or even of being gay, no acts necessary - that got news. Why? We can afford to criticise Zimbabwe. The only thing I've ever seen with a "Made in Zimbabwe" logo on it was a t-shirt from The Gap. Once. A long time ago. Oh sure, let them be crazy down there in Africa, but in Europe? No, we won't report on that.
I am angered at the Russian legislation; I am disgusted with the American media. Even the State Department made a statement about the goings-on in St. Petersburg, not that you heard about it.
From the AFP:
Thank you, Hillary. Nice to know that somebody in Washington, D.C. still has some balls.
Moscow is now proposing legislation that would bad the "promotion" of a gay lifestyle, UK Gay News reports:
The move comes less than 48 hours after the legislature in Russia’s ‘second city’, St. Petersburg, passed the first of three readings by a 27-1 (with one abstention) margin of their measure, ‘The Promotion of Homosexuality, Lesbianism, and Transgenderism to Minors.
"Yes, we plan to adoption of this law in Moscow and now [are] just working on its development,” chairman of the Moscow City Council Committee on Health Care and Public Health, Lyudmila Stebenkova told the newspaper, adding that the committee “commends the Legislative Assembly of St. Petersburg”.
The New Yorker published an essay on the subject:
The sponsor of the bill—it still has to go through two more votes to become law—is Vitaly Milonov, from the ruling United Party. He explained the legislation by saying, “children have to be protected from destructive information.” What that meant was subject to interpretation. According to Milonov, this information could be found in sex-education classes where such values were “advertised,” as well as in the works of that gay cabal—show business. This was not in any way meant to be an intrusion into the personal lives of Petersburgers, Milonov added, but what could he do when his city is drowning under “a wave popularizing sexual perversion”?
Milonov’s colleagues chimed in, lumping sexual assault of a child in with consensual gay sex. “Children maimed by pedophiles jump out of windows, they take their own lives. Pedophilia is an attempt on a child’s life!” one of them said, adding that spreading such propaganda should be a criminal offense. Another deputy, Elena Babich, from the nationalist-crazypants Liberal Democratic party, agreed that the proposed penalties were too light. “What is a three-thousand ruble fine to a pedophile when they are supported by an international community?” (Did she mean show business?)
The legislation, which was rushed through the local parliament, is not unique. A similar law was passed this summer in the northern city of Arkhangelsk, where legislators expressed concern about the effect of gays on the city’s already low birthrates, and in the Ryazan region. But those were the provinces.
St. Petersburg, long Russia’s window to Europe and its bastion of high culture, is both a strange and logical place to pass such a law. For one thing, it was the first place with an L.G.B.T. organization: Kryl’ya (or “wings”) was founded in October 1991, having fought for its creation in the Soviet courts at a time when homosexuality was still criminalized and punishable by five years of hard labor. (That provision, the notorious Article 121, was repealed two years later, in 1993.) Moscow used to have a mayor, Yuri Luzhkov, who denounced homosexuality as “satanic.” St. Petersburg, in contrast, was in some ways the center of organized gay life in Russia: the Russian branch of the I.L.G.A., the international L.G.B.T. rights organization is run out of St. Petersburg; pride parades, long the subject of violent battles with the Moscow authorities (who won’t allow them), have passed through this city peacefully, until this year. Imagine passing an anti-gay law in San Francisco.
Interestingly enough, this didn't get much media coverage here in the US. Mugabe's ravings about homosexuals, the criminalisation of any homosexual act - or even of being gay, no acts necessary - that got news. Why? We can afford to criticise Zimbabwe. The only thing I've ever seen with a "Made in Zimbabwe" logo on it was a t-shirt from The Gap. Once. A long time ago. Oh sure, let them be crazy down there in Africa, but in Europe? No, we won't report on that.
I am angered at the Russian legislation; I am disgusted with the American media. Even the State Department made a statement about the goings-on in St. Petersburg, not that you heard about it.
From the AFP:
"Gay rights are human rights and human rights are gay rights," the State Department said, repeating a declaration by top US diplomat Hillary Clinton.
"We have called on Russian officials to safeguard these freedoms, and to foster an environment which promotes respect for the rights of all citizens."
Thank you, Hillary. Nice to know that somebody in Washington, D.C. still has some balls.
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