The anti-gay marriage crowd went bonkers once again last week when Perez Hilton, an openly gay B-list celebrity and social commentator asked a Miss America contestant whether or not other states should follow Vermont by leagalizing same-sex marriaige. The contestant, Carrie Prejean, answered,
“Well, I think it’s great that Americans are able to choose one or the other. We live in a land where you can choose same-sex marriage or opposite marriage. And you know what, in my country, in my family, I think that I believe that a marriage should be between a man and a woman. No offense to anyone out there, but that’s how I was raised, and that’s how I think it should be between a man and a woman.”
Mr. Hilton voted against her, she came in second to Miss North Carolina, and the right went ballistic once more about the homosexual agenda, political correctness, “gay totalitarians,” and attacks on traditional values, whatever those are.
It should surprise no one that this answer, which favored a reactionary religious stance without regard to the nuances of the issue or any discusson of the idea that this debate really does have two sides, cost this woman competition points. The purpose of questions like this in beauty pageants is to uphold the pretense that the woman’s brain is at least as important as her appearance in skimpy outfits, the size of her boobs, or the silkiness of her hair. The fact that Miss Prejean could offer no informed opinion on why she thought states should not legalize homosexual marriage beyond her own family tradition is what cost her the crown, not the actual opinion she expressed.
Of course, conservatives want to generate outrage over this, since they have no real answer to the discrimiation argument in support of gay marriage. So they blame phantom agendas and totalitarians for Miss Prejean’s loss, and scream bloody murder about this newest example of how Hollywood liberals and gays are destroying the American way of life. This probablygives them some satisfaction, but if they want to know why their popularity continues to slip they should look in the mirror at the angry people they have become.
Most of what you see on the blogs linked above–not only on this subject–is anger, rage, and reactive foot stomping over percieved criticism of or insults to America or Christianity. They offer very little policy discussion except assertions that traditional ways are better because they are so…traditional. Very little discussion of how to adapt conservative principles to modern society can be found here. Instead, they want to stop time and preserve traditional gender roles, traditional market rules, and traditional goverment power without defending any of these policies on social utility grounds. “We’ve always done it this way” is all they have.
This is a losing strategy because no one listens to the angry guy. People dismiss angry ranting, however righteous its basis, because it offers no solutions. Americans instinctively understand that the most outraged guy in the room usually has the least justification for his rage.
The gay marriage debate is the perfect example: homosexuals face real discrimination with regard to inheritance, power of attorney, the right to contract, and protection of partnership assets–the State treats them differently than it treats straight people. This is a simple fact that cannot be dismissed with “but gay men have the same right to marry women as straight men do.” But instead of seeking or proposing sensible ways of ending this discrimination, such as separating the religious consecration of sexual unions from state sanction, conservatives rant about the meaning of “marriage” and loudly make the ridiculous claim that the “marriage” of two gay men somehow affects the rights or privilege of heterosexuals to marry. For most people, this only sets them up for ridicule.
A lot of Americans, from the faithful to environmentalists to anti-globalists would like to see a managed social progress that protects those who want to hold on to traditional ways of life while allowing others to move forward and establish new traditions. Wingnuts don’t help their cause with strident rage over non-insults. “You kids get off my lawn” isn’t working.