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On Parade
townhall.com
Put
'Coming Out Week' back in the closet October 15, 2003
It's the most wonderful week of the year. If you're gay. And
annoying. It's "Coming Out Week" at universities all across the fruited
plains. Throughout the country, students are sharing their queer
sexual proclivities. Colleges sponsor gay rallies. They put out
"pro-tolerance" fliers. They hang gigantic banners over major
boulevards in honor of those who are brave enough to tell us which
set of genitals they prefer. Here's a piece of news for proponents of Coming Out Week: None of
the rest of us care. We don't care whether you play for the other
team. You can parade around in drag as much as you please. You can
hold as many "gay marriages" as you want. You can wear shirts
reading "Rear Entrance Only" and "We're Here, We're Queer." You can
wear a rainbow sticker on your backpack. Just don't expect us to
care. What do you expect? That we're going to sprint to the altar of
political correctness and offer sacrifices to the god of sodomy?
That we're going to hoot, holler and send checks to GLAAD? That
we're going to sell our houses, leave our spouses, move to San
Francisco and buy little yapping dogs? Don't pretend that you're trying to "heighten awareness" by
shoving your sexual appetites in our faces. We're already aware of
you. You have several support groups on each campus. You have
thousands of our tuition dollars to coax kids out of the closet. We
can't turn on the television without seeing two guys or two girls
smooching. We can't open the newspapers without seeing gay unions in
the weddings section. Believe you us, we know you exist. So if you're not here to heighten awareness, then you're here to
cope with your own insecurities. We're constantly hearing that if
people are anti-homosexuality, deep down they're homosexual. Well,
if you're repeatedly proclaiming how proud you are to be gay, isn't
it just possible you might be a little insecure about your own
homosexuality? The most secure gay people I know aren't militant
about it. They do what they want to do and don't bother the rest of
us with it. Which is how "Coming Out Week" should really work. If you want to
make a big deal out of your "sexual identity," go ahead. Do it
within your own community. Have "wedding showers" for whichever
woman or man you decide is the wife. Hand out condoms at parties to
ensure that no one goes home with HIV. Have gay events, gay parties,
gay ceremonies. If you want to treat homosexuality like a religion,
that's your business. But when I celebrate Jewish holidays, I don't
march down Santa Monica Boulevard, holding up traffic, waving my
ceremonial fringes in the air and chanting: "I'm here! I'm Jewish!
Get used to it!" You don't want your privacy invaded? Then don't tell us what you
do behind closed doors. I'm a very tolerant guy when the gay agenda
isn't being forced down my throat. But when I'm sitting in class and
I open the UCLA Daily Bruin to read about public gay marriages in
Bruin Plaza, I get angry. I don't think I'm alone in this respect. Most Americans believe
that homosexuality is sinful. They're not going to break down your
doors looking for pink feather boas, but they're not going to sit
idly by when you tell their children that men can marry men. We accept you. You are human beings. But we do not approve of
you. No matter how many gay parades you hold, we will not approve of
you. No matter how many rainbow stickers we see, we will not approve
of you. So don't push us too far. When you tell us that we are secretly
homosexual if we oppose your agenda, we get angry. When you tell us
we are bigots for upholding God's definition of marriage, we get
angry. When you tell us that "gay relationships are just as good and
the same" as straight relationships, as UCLA Queer Alliance Co-Chair
Kian Boloori did last week, we get angry. Do what you want. Just don't tell us about it or expect us to
care.
Ben Shapiro
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