Khrushchev in love


Adorno: gay

I’ve been meaning to write this for a while, and have decided that maybe it was time to really articulate my thoughts on why I really, really hate Adorno’s work. It had something to do with his posturing toward homosexuality, and something to do with what I sensed as a certain kind of awful elitism. It is also connected with the alarming number of gay Adorno fanboy apologists I’ve run into over the last while. So I went to the library and picked up Minima Moralia, which I hadn’t actually read before (and still haven’t gotten far into).The opening line of the dedication reads :

The melancholy science from which I make this offering to my friend relates to a region that from time immemorial was regarded as the true field of philosophy, but which, since the latter’s conversion into method, has lapsed into intellectual neglect, sententious whimsy and finally oblivion: the teaching of the good life.

An astute student or, I guess, professor maybe, who wrote all over the library’s copy of this book (I actually often enjoy what other people write in books) had written, in pencil, above the word ‘melancholy’, gay. And of course, yes: In this first sentence of a dedication, Adorno takes a stance toward Nietzsche. His “melancholy science” (die traurige Wissenschaft) is in direct opposition to Nietzsche’s gay science (die fröliche Wissenschaft). Of course Adorno isn’t articulating a simple opposition here – both Adorno and Nietzsche are engaged in similar projects, “the teaching of the good life”. Rather, for Adorno, something fundamental about the world had changed since Nietzsche: Fascism had reared its artificially beblondened head.

Rather than focus directly on fascism here, though, I’d like to spend some time articulating that astute student’s one-word note: gay. As Kauffmann notes in his introduction to The Gay Science, it is “no accident that the homosexuals as well as Nietzsche opted for ‘gay’ rather than ‘cheerful’” because it “has overtones of a light-hearted defiance of convention; it suggests Nietzsche’s ‘immoralism’ and his ‘revaluation of values.’” Gay, then, I think forms one axis of a possible analysis of Adorno’s work, which lays out vertically as an opposition between Nietzsche’s joyful, light-hearted revaluation of all values and Adorno’s “melancholy science”, and horizontally as an opposition between homosexuality in its Western, twentieth-century guise with its light-hearted defiance of conventions, on the one hand, and heterosexuality and the status quo on the other.

Adorno is – the astute student was correct – gay.  Where Nietzsche took to delight, Adorno took to despair.  Where Nietzsche undermined, Adorno reinforced.  One of the things that bugs me about Adorno, which I think this introductory sentence makes clear, is that Adorno is not aiming at a Nietzschean revaluation of all values, not even the values of those systems that he claimed so ardently to oppose.  His melancholy science is one for the perpetuation of a system of values – which could be defined in several ways (Adorno’s own, fascist, bourgeois, anti-working-class, racist, homophobic) – that already exist in the world.  Where Nietzsche looked (or at least claimed to look) forward, Adorno looked back.

Though it certainly isn’t clear that Adorno looked to the golden past with an eye toward a return – he didn’t seem to think such a return was possible – it was nevertheless in the past that “technical virtuosity, at least, was demanded of singing stars”, that melody had not come “to mean eight-beat symmetrical treble melody”, that there was at least a difference in terms of reaction to Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony and a bikini.  The past, on Adorno’s analysis, was one in which fetishism had not yet come to dominate the musical (and, indeed, cultural) scene.

It is at the site of the fetish where Adorno most strongly attempts to rhetorically establish links between homosexuality, or sexual deviance more generally, and fascism.  Musical fascism, one can only surmise given Adorno’s peculiar language, becomes embodied as the homosexual rapist.  As the first part of a key to Adorno’s aggressively homophobic rhetorical construction here, I will turn to Benjamin’s “The Work of Art in the Age of its Technical Reproducibility”, a work which Adorno openly stated radically influenced his “On the Fetish-Character in Music and the Regression of Listening”.  Benjamin, late in the essay, announces that “The violation of the masses, whom Fascism, with its Führer cult, forces to their knees, has its counterpart in the violation of an apparatus which is pressed into the production of ritual values.”  This apparatus (camera or phallus?), which artificially reproduces a process that has at least come to be natural to humankind, now (re)produces reality, substituting “a space consciously explored by man” with “an unconsciously penetrated space”, opening up “a different nature”, the process of which can, apparently, only mimic that “violation of the masses” at the hand of the Führer.

Adorno puts it more clearly: “Totalitarianism and homosexuality belong together.”  Gorky had already stated it yet more clearly in 1934:

In the land where the proletariat governs courageously and successfully, homosexuality, with its corrupting effect on the young, is considered a social crime punishable under the law.  By contrast, in the “cultivated land” of the great philosophers, scholars and musicians, it is practiced freely and with impunity.  There is already a sarcastic saying: “Destroy homosexuality and fascism will disappear.”

Marxism, in this mode of analysis, acts as the cure for both homosexuality and for fascism.  For Gorky, this was no doubt due to a presumed direct relationship between the means of production and the superstructural effect of sexual expression.  For Adorno, the mysterious relationship between fascism and homosexuality expressed the structure of much, if not all, of contemporary society.  Despite his near-continual analyses of this or that phenomenon as homosexual/fascist, Adorno never quite gets to analyzing this relationship (he would later, possibly having developed a more sympathetic eye toward gay men and women, analyze this relationship in terms of repressed homosexuality (and, as the old chestnut goes, necessarily homophobia) and tendencies toward fascism, but as far as I can tell this is a turn for Adorno, something new).  Benjamin, though, is fairly more explicit: In a discussion of Futurism, he suggests that “[i]f the natural utilization of productive forces is impeded by the property system, the increase in technical devices, in speed, and in the sources of energy will press for an unnatural utilization, and this is found in war. … Instead of draining rivers, society directs a human stream into a bed of trenches; instead of dropping seeds from airplanes, it drops incendiary bombs over citites; and through gas warfare the aura is abolished in a new way.”  There is, here, a “natural utilization” for “productive forces” (and, I suggest, Benjamin was saying that this was true for all (re)productive forces) which, could be, in unnatural circumstances, pressed “for an unnatural utilization”.  The words “human stream”, “bed of trenches”, “seeds”, “bombs” underline the stakes here: This is a life or death struggle.  Not simply a struggle against the forces of death, but a choice between life – the “human stream” or “seeds” (that is, semen) – or death, first in the form of an unnatural destination for the “human stream”, and second as an unnatural replacement of that “seed” being “dropped” with “bombs”.

This theme, first mobilized around the cluster of homosexuality and fascism and, now, the military, and second around the axis of life/death is repeated in Adorno’s Minima Morlia, in the section titled “Tough Baby”.  The argument developed here, one I myself saw repeated many times while in high school, takes the form “I’m not the fag, you are!”  Adorno, apparently upset that intellectuals – and he seemed to value intellectuals as the only possible saviors for humankind – were viewed as effeminate, analyzes the cigarette-smoking, whisky-drinking “tough guy” image in terms of a presumed masochism and hidden homosexuality (like fascism and homosexuality, intimately and mysteriously connected).  Adorno, the intellectual, is gay.  It is, rather, the masochistic tough guy who is “revealed” to have homosexual impulses.  Adorno, the anti-Nietzsche, is also gay.  It is, here, the “tough guy” who attempts a nearly Nietzschean mastery of the body, of which Adorno is maybe (or likely) jealous.

Here is the cluster Adorno has, with the help of Benjamin, developed so far: homosexuality, fascism, masculinity (to which Adorno opposed a “true” – his – masculinity), the military, war, death.  It is with the fetish (which, as with Adorno’s brand of theory itself, is both Freudian and Marxist, both sexual and economic) that pop culture, and with it all culture, gets thrown in the mix.  In “On the Fetish-Character in Music”, Adorno introduces a cast of characters: the “radio ham”, who “is shy and inhibited, perhaps has no luck with girls”, “‘occupies’ himself with music in the quiet of his bedroom” and “insert[s] himself, with his private equipment, into the public mechanism”; the “listening expert” who, like a secret masturbator, “must practice the piano for hours in secret” “in nimble subordination to what the instrument demands of him”, in “agreement with everything dominant”, and “produc[ing] no resistance” to the demands of authority; and, finally, the jitterbugg(er)er, the “infantile listener” (the influence of Freudian theory of homosexuality, that homosexuality is the result of a failure to develop properly, is a clear mark here) whose “ecstasy”, which “takes possession of its object”, “is without content”, who imitate “the gestures of the sensual”, “copy[ing] the stages of sexual excitement only to make fun of them”.  The imitation here, of “true” (heterosexual) sensuality, maps both onto “false” (homosexual) imitations of sensuality and the false imitations of sensuality produced via the jitterbug.  The result is the production of “the masses”, almost always in Adorno accompanied by the adjective “passive”, who, as mentioned earlier, according to Benjamin, await their “violation” at the hands of the Führer.

Assuming for a minute that I’m right here, that Adorno’s analysis is motivated by a peculiar homophobia, a fear of the Führer-rapist’s sodomizing authority, so what?  Why care?  Other than the fun of queering texts, why bother?

  1. Adorno in particular continues to be wildly influential in cultural theory.
  2. The presumed connection between homosexuality and fascism, despite fascist atrocities against gay people, gay men particularly, continues to this day.  McCarthy, during a period where Soviet communism was presumably nearly identical with fascism in the United States, made this connection both openly and clearly when he said, “If you want to be against McCarthy, boys, you’ve got to be a Communist or a cocksucker.”  This certainly isn’t new to Adorno (Adorno wasn’t an original thinker, I think, though he was a brilliant synthesizer), and certainly not peculiar to Adorno.  Indeed, it is most readily found in fairly recent feminist theory, as Eve Sedgwick points out in her book Tendencies.
  3. To me at least, it is disturbing that, despite his openly antagonistic stance toward homosexuality (don’t forget, “Totalitarianism and homosexuality belong together.”), Adorno’s theory remains fairly popular among gay men.  While this is understandable – anyone who grew up gay in the high schools of the 1990s would likely sympathize with Adorno’s outsider position with respect to contemporary culture, as well as have an affinity with his fantasy of the tough-guy-as-closet-homosexual – it is also deeply disturbing.


Oregon Senate Bill 2 or what’s all the fuss?

Concerned Oregonians seem to be, well, concerned (warning: Obnoxiously enough, their concerns are only expressed on a pdf, not in the web’s standard html format…) about Oregon’s Senate Bill 2, which creates protections against discrimination based on a person’s sexuality. They claim that “[t]his legislation creates a new “protected class” of persons to be protected from discrimination, defines this new category, authorizes enforcement of its provisions through various state agencies and courts; adds other provisions regarding real estate transactions, religious institutions, schools; and prevents dress codes under most circumstances.”

The bill (also a pdf, but that’s standard for the publication of bills and proposed bills) defines sexual orientation, the basis of the new “protected class”, as “an individual’s actual or perceived heterosexuality, homosexuality, bisexuality or gender identity, regardless of whether the individual’s gender identity, appearance, expression or behavior differs from that traditionally associated with the individual’s sex at birth.” Now, this is a particularly broad “protected class” to claim, as Vision Action America has apparently done in a mass email, that “[i]f we [conservative Christians] fail to submit sufficient signatures, both this bill [Oregon House Bill 2007 (again, a pdf), which grants civil unions to same-sex couples with all the rights, privileges, and benefits granted by marriage, which, by the way, I also oppose, though on a technicality] and a bill to grant special rights, privileges and protections to homosexuals, lesbians, bisexuals, transgendereds and the gender confused, will become law on January 1, 2008.” Note, also, that they fail to mention that the bill in question also protects heterosexuals from denial of jobs or housing, etc.

Concerned Oregonians takes particular issue with the bill’s use of the word ‘perceived’. Now, when I read the bill, I took it to mean that if some straight guy is denied a job because an employer thinks that he is gay, he is just as protected as someone who is actually gay, which seems a reasonable enough clause. Concerned Oregonians reads this in the opposite way, assuming that ‘perceived’ refers to an individual’s own perceptions of his or her own sexuality or gender, and issues the following warning: “There is no provision that there must be any continuity to this stated ‘perceived sexual orientation’ is; that is it may change as often as a person wishes or states it to.” They later claim that this will lead to an absurd case where “a witness in court, under oath denies he is a man capable of rape because on that day, he perceives himself to be female”. Ignoring for a second their backward interpretation of the word ‘perceived’ here, their flat-out denial of the possibility of a woman committing rape is alarming.

I used to subscribe to similar, though more liberally-oriented “action alerts”. I stopped in part because of tactics like this, which I know are used by conservative groups and suspect are also used by liberal groups (I haven’t seriously looked into the claims of liberal action groups mostly because, admittedly, I agree with their goals even if not perhaps their methods), tactics which either include outright lies or subtle manipulations of speeches, legislation, etc. Tactics such as Vision Action America’s exclusion of the bill’s explicit mention of heterosexuality or Concerned Oregonians’ twisting of the word ‘perceived’. These tactics always rely on mobilizing a particular group based on their prejudices and ignorance, on the hope that no one will actually bother to read the bill or speech in question. My advice to anyone who does receive this sort of email, whether you’re conservative or liberal: Read the bill before you decide. It may not be as bad as you think.



Geek confessions: Me too.
August 27, 2007, 1:39 pm
Filed under: Morrowind, Oblivion, Ultima, heteronormativity, homosexuality, prostitution, video games

I’m also annoyed when video game creators feel that it is necessary to compel players to enter into heterosexual relationships in the game. I haven’t played the game the blogger linked to above is reviewing, but I’ve played plenty where this is the case. Two fairly recent entries to the list include the extensively moddable Morrowind and Oblivion, both of which only include, as optional quests, those which establish heterosexual relationships, a couple of which allow your character to play matchmaker. The first mod made for Morrowind which allows the character to enter into relationships with NPCs (and the number of social mods for this game is really surprisingly high, given that it is not an online game) included only heterosexual relationships (though the author was, at least at some point, planning on adding support for homosexual relationships – this has taken long enough that another modder modded the original mod toward this end), even though that actually takes more work on the programmer’s part, since he or she has to base an NPC’s response on the PC’s gender, rather than ignoring it entirely (though a more interesting solution would include programming preferences into individual NPCs).

What’s weird is that this is a fairly recent phenomenon. The first game I played in which I was aware of having to choose a PC’s gender was one of the later entries in the Ultima series, and the only in-game relationships possible were with prostitutes, both male and female, and the programmers specifically added support, evidenced by different responses based on a PC’s gender relative to that of the prostitute, for homosexual relationships, and this was back in 1990! It seems to me strange that, as tolerance for homosexuality has increased, video game makers have seen fit to write code which enforces compulsory heterosexuality rather than simply leave all options open or, like their predecessors, add code which supports in-game homosexual relationships, which is the easier route code-wise.



The Joy of Gay Sex: a list.
July 25, 2007, 9:45 pm
Filed under: homosexuality, lists, literature

According to librarything’s unsuggester, people who enjoyed The Joy of Gay Sex disliked the following books. It may be the most unexpected list I’ve ever seen.

Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte (expected 29.3, found 0)
The time traveler’s wife by Audrey Niffenegger (expected 28.5, found 0)
The kite runner by Khaled Hosseini (expected 26.4, found 0)
Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell by Susanna Clarke (expected 24.1, found 0)
Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy (expected 21.8, found 0)
On the road by Jack Kerouac (expected 21.4, found 0)
The golden compass by Philip Pullman (expected 20.8, found 0)
The grapes of wrath by John Steinbeck (expected 19.6, found 0)
The poisonwood Bible : a novel
by Barbara Kingsolver (expected 18.3, found 0)
The brothers Karamazov
by Fyodor Dostoevsky (expected 18, found 0)
The ultimate hitchhiker’s guide by Douglas Adams (expected 17.1, found 0)
The secret life of bees by Sue Monk Kidd (expected 16.9, found 0)
Cryptonomicon by Neal Stephenson (expected 16.9, found 0)
Snow crash by Neal Stephenson (expected 16.8, found 0)
The unbearable lightness of being by Milan Kundera (expected 16.7, found 0)
The subtle knife by Philip Pullman (expected 16.6, found 0)
The prince by Niccolo Machiavelli (expected 16.1, found 0)
The alchemist by Paulo Coelho (expected 16, found 0)
The historian : a novel by Elizabeth Kostova (expected 16, found 0)
Mere Christianity : a revised and amplified edition, with a new introduction, of the three books, Broadcast talks, Chris by C. S. Lewis (expected 15.8, found 0)
The amber spyglass by Philip Pullman (expected 15.8, found 0)
Persuasion by Jane Austen (expected 15.4, found 0)
Atlas shrugged by Ayn Rand (expected 15.2, found 0)
High fidelity by Nick Hornby (expected 15.2, found 0)
The princess bride: S. Morgenstern’s classic tale of true love and high adventure: the “good parts” version abridged by William Goldman (expected 14.9, found 0)
Blink : the power of thinking without thinking by Malcolm Gladwell (expected 14.8, found 0)
Dubliners by James Joyce (expected 14.4, found 0)
Eragon by Christopher Paolini (expected 14.4, found 0)
Zen and the art of motorcycle maintenance : an inquiry into values by Robert M. Pirsig (expected 14.4, found 0)
Night. Foreword by François Mauriac. Translated from the French by Stella Rodway by Elie Wiesel (expected 14.3, found 0)
Beloved : a novel by Toni Morrison (expected 14.3, found 0)
Stardust by Neil Gaiman (expected 14.3, found 0)
The god of small things by Arundhati Roy (expected 14.3, found 0)
Atonement : a novel by Ian McEwan (expected 13.8, found 0)
The restaurant at the end of the universe by Douglas Adams (expected 13.7, found 0)
Fight Club : a novel by Chuck Palahniuk (expected 13.7, found 0)
Sophie’s world : a novel about the history of philosophy by Jostein Gaarder (expected 13.5, found 0)
The Screwtape letters by C. S. Lewis (expected 13.4, found 0)
The sound and the fury by William Faulkner (expected 13.2, found 0)
The Eyre affair by Jasper Fforde (expected 13.1, found 0)
A farewell to arms by Ernest Hemingway (expected 13.1, found 0)
Digital fortress by Dan Brown (expected 13, found 0)
The Republic of Plato by Plato (expected 12.9, found 0)
Girl with a pearl earring by Tracy Chevalier (expected 12.9, found 0)
A game of thrones by George R.R. Martin (expected 12.9, found 0)
Deception point
by Dan Brown (expected 12.8, found 0)
The giver by Lois Lowry (expected 12.7, found 0)
The red tent by Anita Diamant (expected 12.7, found 0)
Gulliver’s travels by Jonathan Swift (expected 12.3, found 0)
Charlotte’s web by E. B. White (expected 12.2, found 0)
The Aeneid by Virgil (expected 12.2, found 0)
The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan (expected 12.1, found 0)
The trial by Franz Kafka (expected 12.1, found 0)
Coraline by Neil Gaiman (expected 12.1, found 0)
Tess of the D’Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy (expected 12.1, found 0)
The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas (expected 11.9, found 0)
The wind-up bird chronicle by Haruki Murakami (expected 11.9, found 0)
The adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain (expected 11.8, found 0)
White teeth by Zadie Smith (expected 11.8, found 0)
Reading Lolita in Tehran : a memoir in books by Azar Nafisi (expected 11.7, found 0)
Speaker for the dead by Orson Scott Card (expected 11.7, found 0)
The horse and his boy by C. S. Lewis (expected 11.7, found 0)
Life, the universe, and everything by Douglas Adams (expected 11.6, found 0)
Jurassic Park : a novel by Michael Crichton (expected 11.6, found 0)
She’s come undone by Wally Lamb (expected 11.4, found 0)
Gone with the wind by Margaret Mitchell (expected 11.4, found 0)
The voyage of the Dawn Treader by C. S. Lewis (expected 11.4, found 0)
The shadow of the wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafon (expected 11.4, found 0)
Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montgomery (expected 11.3, found 0)
Quicksilver by Neal Stephenson (expected 11.2, found 0)
Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency by Douglas Adams (expected 11.2, found 0)
Possession : a romance by A.S. Byatt (expected 11.1, found 0)
The silver chair by C. S. Lewis (expected 11, found 0)
Things fall apart by Chinua Achebe (expected 10.9, found 0)
Fear and loathing in Las Vegas : a savage journey to the heart of the American dream by Hunter S. Thompson (expected 10.9, found 0)

Really? Plato’s Republic?



The war against foreskin. Why feminists, gay rights activists, and anti-globalization activists should work together and think critically.
July 23, 2007, 11:34 am
Filed under: AIDS, HIV, circumcision, feminism, homosexuality, imperialism

This article, about an unnamed HIV/AIDS-related conference in Sydney, brings up the now old story that male circumcision reduces the risk of HIV infection among men.  The article claims that circumcising men reduces their risk of HIV infection by 60%, referring to this statistic as “encouraging”.  I wonder, though, how encouraging it really is (in addition, I wonder how legit the statistic really is).  While having 40% the chance of uncircumcised men to become infected is certainly better odds, it is worrisome that the focus is on men performing heterosexual acts, not on women, and not on men engaging in same-sex  sex, and especially (especially worrisome, but even more especially not the focus of the study) not on men who are bottoms.  It is also worrisome that the focus is on men in Africa and not on Europe, or the United States.  What kind of program could this statistic lead to?  Forced circumcisions?  Circumcision “education” in Africa?  I don’t really see any other options.

The latter option is highly problematic in that education often enough does not transmit understanding even as well as it transmits information, which is unreliable enough.  A 60% reduction in one’s chance of becoming infected with HIV does not guarantee that a particular man will not become infected during a particular sexual encounter.  It does not affect one’s chance of becoming infected due to intravenous drug use.  It does not affect one’s chance of becoming infected as the male receptive partner during guy on guy anal sex (except insofar as it could potentially reduce the number of insertive partners infected with HIV).  It also does not protect women.  And yet any education campaign focusing on circumcision would almost certainly have to downplay these problems in order to be effective.  Which is especially troubling given that we already have a non-disfiguring technology which is much more effective, condoms.

The first option shares the problems of the second, and in addition, whether force occurs at gunpoint or at the end of economic sanctions, denies agency in a harmful way to those people it affects (and no education campaign is entirely divorced from a campaign involving force).  Moreover, insofar as such a program would almost certainly be one engaged in by Americans and Europeans against Africans, Russians, or Chinese, it would necessarily be imperialist, insisting that “we” have got it right, and “they” need to change, epistemologically and physically.

My concern here, ultimately, isn’t about potential circumcision campaigns but about the way this study rose to popularity, as if we saw it and thought, “finally!  Some good news!” when in fact it doesn’t make sense in application; when it doesn’t address entire populations, but only specific subsets; when it offers a sense of hope without any real possibility of change.  And with how it is still uncritically being touted as “encouraging”.

Feminists, gay rights activists, and anti-globalization activists all at least claim to represent the unrepresented, those on whom power is enacted.  Elsewhere too, but especially here is a situation where all three groups should carefully examine the discourse, both popular and official, which is circulating regarding HIV/AIDS, gender, sexuality, wealth, and national status.  We should, together, note the groups this discourse describes, and doesn’t, the curious ways in which a lack of description in one area hides mechanisms of power and in others glosses over the health of individuals.  We should, finally, note the ways in which this discourse structures certain groups as those on whom we act and other as the actors.



Family groups, homosexual groups.
July 11, 2007, 6:43 pm
Filed under: Family Research Council, family, fisting, gay rights, homosexuality

What?  The Gay Man’s Chorus of San Diego sang the national anthem at a Padres game?  That’s so disrespectful, like burning the flag.  After using it as a glove for fisting.  And in front of children, who were invited, as members of families, to the event, no less!

Seriously, though, there is something that bugs me about the Family Research Council’s either taken for granted or carefully planned opposition between family and homosexuality, between “supporters of the family” and “homosexual groups”.  As if they are opposed; as if “homosexual groups” threaten “the family” in some way; as if there’s one way that the family is, was, and always has been; as if “the homosexual” (who is simultaneously new and, like the family, as he [because the threatening homosexual is a man, because the sign 'homosexual' always points to anal sex, as in statements about homosexuality as a high risk group, homosexuals that "prey on children", etc.] has always been) cannot have a family, cannot be family.  Perhaps more problematic is the way in which this sort of rhetoric legitimates “the family” as always good, as always already (heh) redeemed, as something-more-than-an-institution whose value is never in question.  As if abusive families either cannot exist or somehow don’t count as families.



Gay parade in Russia gets violent. Politics ensue.
May 28, 2007, 12:34 pm
Filed under: Russia, babushki, gay rights, heteronormativity, homosexuality

It has happened again. A group of people planned a gay rights-related march in Russia, and it turned violent. Orthodox clergy, neo-fascists, and old women turned out on the streets, protected by OMON officers, to keep Russia safe from the new blue menace. These four groups are starting to look like Russia’s sex police, on the scene at any outbreak of gayness.

This blog rightly links politics and sex, violence and foreign pressures, but undoubtedly in the wrong way, arguing that the foreign pressures on Russia to clean up its act regarding gay people represent foreign profit interests (though I’m sure those interests will be served, I doubt the organizers were their pawns, willing or not). The coincidental timing of a group of people raising a legitimate issue with Russia’s government does not a grand conspiracy make. And it is not the fault of that group of people that Russia’s officials and police so shamefully acted, physically assaulting those they couldn’t silence, and effectively maintaining an invisible, extralegal, police force by allowing the assaulters to go free. It is these actions, not those of the gay paraders, that will look bad at the G8 summit, and the Russian administration has only itself to blame if these events tarnish their already tarnished reputations.

If any political maneuvering is going on here, I’d look to the unusual configuration of counter-protesters for a clue. Which one of these things is not like the other: babushki, neo-fascists, OMON officers, or the Orthodox clergy? Which group is driven into poverty by the policies of the Russian government, forced to sell their possessions on the street for food money? And which three groups seem to be in line with the policies of the Russian government? Who here, once again, is being blinded to their real suffering and asked to sacrifice themselves, and for what? So that a few gay people stay off Moscow’s streets?