the six beer theory, and more

In a short post about the fluidity of male sexuality, where he references the legendary six beer theory, Welshcake evokes the media’s latest tizzy over the supposed ascendancy of the gay aesthetic, commenting:

Metrosexual? Heteroflexible? Whatever. As my late friend, Richard, was fond of saying, “Ah, they all help out when we’re busy..!”


exactly six beers each [uncoolcentral.com]

all this makes me dizzy


Ole von Beust
Rex Wochner reported two days ago:

The mayor of Hamburg, Germany, Ole von Beust, came out Aug. 19 after firing the city-state’s interior minister, Ronald Schill, for allegedly trying to blackmail him.
. . . .
Von Beust’s coming out means Germany’s two biggest cities now have openly gay mayors. Berlin Mayor Klaus Wowereit also is gay.


Klaus Wowereit
[photo of Beust from Landesseniorenbereit Hamburg/ photo of Wolvereit from Der Bundesrat]

it takes two sides to lose an election

The Republicans. They really are stupid, but maybe there’s a shiny lining for us in that empty cloud.
Am I hopeful? Look at all the headlines these days. Bush and his handlers are dead. Traditional Republicans used to be able to survive their incompetence, because they never really did anything. I suppose that was part of what made them conservatives.
Today’s Republicans are radical activists in every aspect of domestic and foreign policy, and they are making a very big mess, as many of us expected they would. They are totally incompetent, and they will not be able to extricate themselves or the nation from the disasters they have created. The world, including even the simplest Americans, now suspects that truth.
They’ve clearly already lost the 2004 election, but it takes two sides to win office. My fear, and it’s a reasonable one, considering what we have seen so far, is that the Democrats will not do their part, and some 14 months from now the incumbent regime will be able to snatch victory from certain defeat.
If that happens, the republic is gone forever.

“but then I remember John”

Jogged by current arguments over New York’s Harvey Milk High School, and a recent postcard from his own school, bj has written an honest, beautiful piece about an ugly memory, one whose counterpart I share shamefully, as I’m sure do many others. An excerpt:

John I love You
I actually started thinking a lot about my high school days during the first bits of current “controversey” over the Harvey Milk School’s expansion this fall when that postcard arrived. No, I don’t have horrible stories about constant harrassment from fellow students (but you can imagine in an all-male high school); yes, harrassment took place, and yes, I managed to survive it. And no, the Harvey Milk School wouldn’t have been a good alternative for me. But then I remember John.
See, back then, I would get only the occasional taunts – the name-calling, the teasing. I remember one horrible day just after Christmas. My parents had bought me a leather/vinyl shoulder bag for my books – very 70’s, very nice. But the day I brought it to school, the taunting began immediately. Guys grabbed it, put in over their shoulder and “minced” around, lisping words pretending to immitate me. They passed the bag around, wouldn’t let me have it back. I tried to ignore them, and eventually got it back. But the day continued like that, name-calling, joking, tugging at the bag, laughing at my expense. When I got home, I walked straight down to the basement, put it on a shelf with all the abandoned toys and games of childhood, and left it there, never touching it again. Oddly, my parents never asked about it (it wasn’t cheap, and we didn’t have much money), and of course I never mentioned that horrible day to them, I was ashamed. Maybe they knew, and didn’t know what to say or do.
But John. He was the “obvious” one. He had the pronounced lisp, limp-wrists, effeminate manner. He got it every day, all day. I don’t know the real extent to what happened to him, I kept my distance. And it makes me feel very sad, and ashamed. Not once did I ever consider befriending him, and not ’til my senior year did I ever raise my voice to defend him, or tell the other guys to knock it off (By then I was into drugs, so that “coolness” aspect trumped my suspected homosexuality.) I remember once, sitting in the assistant principle’s office, trying to get a class changed, and John was in the waiting room; our eyes met, a moment of sadness from him, then a determined resolve toughened him up, and he looked away. The assistant principle looked in John’s direction, breathed a heavy sigh, and mumbled something like “not him again, won’t he ever learn?” I said nothing, but was deeply disappointed in this ‘educator’. John never got into trouble, he was no doubt there to complain about whatever latest incident happened to him.
Then I went to my next class, attendance was called, and when John’s name came up, some tittering from the students, and I said “Oh, he’s in with the assistant principle.” The art teacher, who we all assumed was gay, then said “Jeez! What’s wrong with him, he brings it on himself, he just needs to stop acting that way.” You have no idea how clearly that is set in my memory, 25 years later, as vivid as if it happened yesterday. No, I didn’t say anything, but I felt even sadder, more disappointment with the adults, and much, much more isolated. And I must say, I must’ve secretly been feeling “thank god John’s here, otherwise it would be me.”

Don’t miss the music clip in his headline.

worshipping a graven image in Montgomery


Ten Commandments Cultists pray in Montgomery, Alabama.
Atrios says it:

300 bigots and lunatics protesting around a carved rock, worthy of nonstop coverage. 100,000 people protesting a war, worthy of brief snide commentary.

In fact, there were 3 to 10 times that number in New York City alone on one day. One comment on his post is deliciously, wickedly on:

It’s fundie flypaper. Anyone who wants to chain himself to a rock in Birmingham [sic] deserves our buying him free manacles.

[AFP-Getty Images/File/Gary Tramontina, via Yahoo News Photos]

ice pop goes ’round the world!


Maple Ave (Digimon)/ Meredith Allen
Meredith Allen now has a full-page image in this week’s New Yorker and a website as well. [Don’t miss the “kiddie rides.”]
We love Meredith!
And we love her work! Obviously the magazine does too, since they use a full-page color image to illustrate a Dave Eggers story. Now people around the world will know why.
See Bloggy for her cute host/webmaster’s take on these events.

“Millions Stand Behind Me”


Illustration by John Heartfield on cover of Arbeiter-Internationale-Zeitung (Workers International Newspaper), October 1932.
There is no war on terror; there is only the terror of war. One of the top stories on Reuters at this minute:

“Our war on terror continues,” Bush told about 600 supporters at a lunch in Minnesota that raised $1.2 million for his 2004 re-election bid.

‘Nuff said.
____________________
Translation of the Heartfield text:
Der Sinn des Hitlergrusses
The real meaning of the Hitler salute
Kleiner Mann bittet um grosse Gaben
The little man asks for big gifts
Millionen stehen hinter mir!
I’ve got millions standing behind me