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R E C E N T L Y

The glory of female curvature
(03/03/98)

The uses and abuses of Chelsea Clinton
(02/17/98)

Why feminists are co-dependent with philandering Bill
(02/03/98)

The sexual symbolism of Ted Kaczynski's crimes
(01/20/98)

Deconstructing the Kennedys
(01/06/98)

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A L S O

About Camille Paglia
Ask Camille archives

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C O L U M N I S T S

Sexpert Opinion
By Susie Bright
This shameless hussy ballbuster takes on "feminism" and the Clinton scandals
(03/13/97)

Bestseller Hell
By Jon Carroll
"Cat & Mouse"
(02/17/98)

Remember Halabja
By Christopher Hitchens
(03/02/97)

Right On!
By David Horowitz
It's "only sex"? Tell that to Cmdr. Stumpf.
(03/09/98)

Word by Word
By Anne Lamott
Traveling mercies
(12/18/97)

Under the Covers
By James Poniewozik
Funny money
(03/04/98)

Hollywoodland
By Catherine Seipp
And the loser is ...
(03/06/98)

Second Thoughts
By Sallie Tisdale
Totally wasted
(03/04/98)

Sound Salvation
By Sarah Vowell
Marilyn Hanson
(03/06/98)

Unzipped
By Courtney Weaver
Commitaphobe's comeuppance
(03/11/98)

The Awful Truth
By Cintra Wilson
Of cock rock kings and other dinosaurs
(03/10/98)




Salon Columnists

A S K_C A M I L L E +|+ C A M I L L E+P A G L I A
--- Online advice for the culturally disgruntled ---

Illustration by Zach Trenholm


Giving homosexuality a bad name. Plus: Madonna's star rises again








Dear Camille:

What do you think of David Brock's apology to President Clinton in the new Esquire? He was the reporter who exposed the "Troopergate" story in the American Spectator, which kicked off the whole Paula Jones fiasco. Now he says the troopers were slimy and his own get-Clinton vendetta helped create a media Frankenstein. What do you make of Brock's twists and turns?

Dizzy in D.C.



Dear Dizzy:

"Twists and turns" certainly says it. Behold, the writhing snake pit of amoral media ambition! I haven't been so revolted since -- well, since the first news flash that the president of the United States may have been foolishly monkeying around with a big-busted, juicy-lipped intern.

I am personally furious with David Brock's recent "slimy" behavior -- to apply to him the word he now uses for the working-class Arkansas state troopers he once touted as sources -- because I went out of my way to defend his solidly researched 1994 book, "The Real Anita Hill." It was then under vicious attack by those cozy media insiders, Jane Mayer and Jill Abramson, whose own 1994 book, "Strange Justice: The Selling of Clarence Thomas," was in my view a shallow piece of PC crap, grossly overpraised by reviewers and commentators in thrall to the feminist establishment, for whom Hill was a reincarnation of Mary, Mother of Jesus.

Indeed, on my book tour for "Vamps & Tramps" that year, I stormed out of Spago restaurant in Los Angeles after a huge scene with a book editor of the Los Angeles Times, when he blithely insisted there was no ethical problem in the Times having assigned its review of the Mayer-Abramson book to Nina Totenberg -- who as a National Public Radio reporter was an early, active principal in the entire Anita Hill affair on Capitol Hill. This was, I loudly maintained, an excellent example of the cronyism and corruption that distort book reviewing in the United States.

As a reform feminist, I have struggled to bring the totalitarian excesses of sexual harassment regulations before the American public, whose schools and workplaces have been invaded by the nightmarish sexual delusions of Catharine MacKinnon and Andrea Dworkin. (See my article on sexual harassment, "A Call for Lustiness," in the March 23 Time.) Hill's charges against Supreme Court nominee Thomas were grotesquely overblown, and I protested them from the very start.

Unjustly vilified by Mayer and Abramson, the conservative Brock should have been concerned only with patiently proving his professionalism and ethics as a journalist over the long haul. As a libertarian Democrat, I respect anyone whose thinking is genuinely systematic and principled -- which is why I continue to admire conservative talk-radio host and political satirist Rush Limbaugh (despite his soft spot for the narcissistic Newt Gingrich).

Brock's lurid, wickedly entertaining exposés of the Clintons for the right-wing American Spectator, which were based on his own investigations in Little Rock, helped break the hammerlock that the liberal major media then had on political discourse in this country. Since many of Brock's findings were paralleled by those of the Los Angeles Times (which sat on the story for months), his current mea culpas ring a bit hollow.

Brock's desire for mainstream media respectability -- or rather for acceptance among the socialites and schmoozers whose cocktail parties and soirees are the incestuous meeting ground for the Washington-Manhattan power elite -- became clear in his wooden 1996 book, "The Seduction of Hillary Rodham," which reportedly made him persona non grata at the conservative high table. Brock's nicey-nice treatment of Hillary Clinton -- utterly devoid of psychological insight and truly dumb about the political scene in the late 1960s and early 1970s at Yale University (where the Clintons and I were separately doing graduate work) -- was just as putrid with covert self-interest as the Mayer-Abramson screed that canonized Hill.

Brock's PR stunts -- posing as a semi-nude St. Joan in Esquire; offering a fulsome "apology" to the president in the same glossy lifestyle magazine -- are hardly going to help him win journalistic credibility. A sincere person would have published a reserved, factual article in a serious, issues-oriented periodical, without these effete, maudlin gestures. Brock's recantation has all the moral gravity of a gin fizz.

Watching Brock make his slippery, unctuous, Stephanopolous-like talk-show rounds last week (Geraldo Rivera stomach-churningly called him "a brave man"), I thought: This pomaded little creep, like Osric the sycophantic courtier in "Hamlet," is now the leading out-of-the-closet gay in the media, after the whiny Ellen DeGeneres and her birdbrained gal pal.

Oxygen, please!

Dear Camille:

I am a black, conservative female. I am proud to say that you are one of my heroes. I would like your opinion of the following press release, which I am forwarding to you. It's regarding the Gay Youth Pride Day. Now, according to some, I may have no right to have an opinion about this, because of my heterosexuality. However, I think some in the so-called "gay community" take this pride thing a bit too far. As a 19-year-old, openly straight female, I really don't understand the need for the self-anointed leaders of the gay rights movement to draw gay youngsters into their self-indulgent politics. Am I misguided or insensitive in my approach to the "young gay dilemma"?

Your conservative admirer in Va.



Dear Conservative:

The psychological turmoil of adolescents at sexual awakening cannot be underestimated. Everything is in flux -- impulses, fears, dreams, with simultaneous longings for independence and for protection by adults. What I dislike about the push of organized gay activism into high schools is that it imposes a rigid political paradigm on a stage of life that is in rapid, painful transition for everyone, gay or straight.

As an equity feminist, as well as an open lesbian, I oppose special protections for any group, including my own. Teachers and administrators should obviously not permit physical harassment of any kind on school property, but verbal epithets, however offensive or hurtful, have First Amendment protection. The PC thought police, having been defeated on college campuses after the court-ordered banning of the fascist speech codes, are now oozing their way into high schools. "Hate" cannot be stopped by authoritarian manipulation but by slow social change, which may take generations.

The Internet has been a boon to lonely gay teens in geographically remote areas -- but, of course, computers still remain largely a white middle-class luxury. I find very suspicious the statistics about teen suicides with which gay activists badger the media. If gay teens are indeed attempting suicide at a higher rate than straight teens, perhaps more questions need to be asked about the genesis of homosexuality. The intolerable sense of isolation may precede the homosexuality, rather than vice versa.

I have written repeatedly about my theory that homosexuality is an adaptation, rather than an innate trait, and that it is reinforced by habit. With its cant terms of "oppression" and "bigotry," gay activism, encouraged by the scientific illiteracy of academic postmodernism, wants to deny that there is a heterosexual norm. This is madness. We need more art and history and less politics in primary education. Art gives the young the psychological and spiritual tools for authentic self-discovery. And art is where sexual dissenters have contributed the most to the human record.

In short, I agree with your concern about the Trojan Horse of gay activism, which is being dragged into high schools under the false flag of compassion. Young people who oppose homosexuality for any reason have a constitutional right to express their views, in or out of the classroom. Whatever they may privately believe as individuals, educators have a professional obligation to remain ideologically neutral in their treatment of students.



N E X T_P A G E | Madonna's ravishingly beautiful "Ray of Light"


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