Senator Craig and the homosexual paradox

As Congress gets back into business and the White House fudge factory strives to make cotton candy out of what is bound to be a lot of sauerkraut in the forthcoming report of General Petraeus, perhaps the national Republican politicos will find something more worthwhile to focus upon than the sexual sins of poor Senator Larry Craig.  Given the fundamentalist view of homosexuality to which the Republican Old Guard contributed, it is just as well they whisked him out of sight as quickly as possible. But I can't help feeling sorry for the Idaho senator and his family as well as for the country in which this standard prevails.

 I am reminded sadly of an event when I was editor of the editorial page of The Washington Post. I had been working late when a member of Congress from a western state came to the office to ask my help. He had been caught in a similar police sting in a public restroom and wanted me to keep a report of the incident out of the paper. I explained that I had no authority over the news columns and he left dejected. Shortly afterward he shot himself.

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Should I have done more to try to prevent this tragedy? I believe that it is part of the watchdog role of newspapers to report what police are doing, and to try to intervene on  behalf of one person and not others, even if I could have done so, would have been grossly unfair. Still, for police to tempt suspected closet homosexuals in a public restroom in an unfocused search for “pervertsâ€� is a dirty business indeed. It is a kind of entrapment that seems to me a flagrant violation of civil liberties.

Nationally we have made progress in recent years in recognizing that homosexuality is far more the result of genetic predisposition than a matter of choice. Homosexuals have been encouraged to accept and acknowledge their sexuality. There are more than a few openly gay members of Congress, although the policy of the armed forces remains an unsatisfactory compromise. The rights of homosexuals have been recognized in employment and civil unions, but there remains a lot of social and political discrimination.

The possibility that degenerates may prey upon children in public restrooms is similar to the problem with child molesters generally. Most homosexuals want nothing to do with such practices. Openness is still the best means to combat prejudice.

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The influence of prevailing attitudes is very much the subject of a pamphlet sent to me by Louise Dunn of Cornwall. Published by the Cornwall Historical Society, it reprints a study by Prof. John Andrew of Franklin Marshall College about the controversy that destroyed the Cornwall Mission School some 180 years ago. I have written several times about the uproar over the marriage in 1826 of a member of a prominent Cornwall family, Harriet Gold, to a Cherokee Indian lad who had taken the name of Elias Boudinot.

The fracas led the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions to conclude after a decade that bringing civilized Indians into a white man's environment was less effective as a means of promoting Christianity than missionary work among the Indians in their tribal locations. In fact, prejudice triumphed over idealism, and not for the last time. Cornwall has come a long way, but there is still work for all of us to do.

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“Now we remain in Iraq as a check on Iran's nuclear ambition,â€� President Bush said in a speech in Reno,  Nev., the other day. A new excuse every week for what may be the biggest blunder in our history.

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Steve Owens, Dr. Stephen E. Owens, was perhaps the most habitually upbeat person I have ever known. His sudden death last week cast a pall on all who came under his spell, not only where he practiced healing arts in the Tri-State corner and West Hartford, but also in his native Naugatuck and in Washington, D.C., where he was recognized as a promoter of  integrative medicine.

By training a chiropractor, he also was a builder of community institutions and had infectious passion for music. In the HousaTonics Barbershop Chorus in which he sang tenor, Steve was known as the “semi-conductor� for substituting when the regular director was absent. For years he led the community Christmas carol sing.He was a long-term president of the Salisbury Rotary Club and sponsored numerous civic projects including the mobile bandstand that serves several communities. He built an office building in downtown Lakeville and purchased other familiar properties. He was an investor in the Lakeville Journal Company, where his influence was always constructive.

With his sprightly bow tie, Steve always had a quip or good story that would brighten your day. Golly, how we miss him!

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Steve would have taken especial delight in the performances of “Iolanthe� last weekend by the Light Opera Company of Salisbury. This had to be among the very best of the Gilbert & Sullivan productions revived after the late Georgia McEver sponsored LOCOS 10 years ago. It had a very satisfying mixture of local and professional talent, starting with a bevy of young fairies, and the costuming was gorgeous. Let's hope that Harriet and Paul Tomasko will continue their interest after their formal retirement.

Fall is briskly upon us, but what a satisfying summer in terms of local culture this has been. What a place to live! 

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