AIDS hysteria II: incitement to violence?

The witch hunt has begun in earnest, and we won’t be the only ones hunting. The most insidious aspect of what is already taking on the appearance of a coordinated media campaign is the fact that it will be so difficult to fight back. The victims of ignorance and fear are put into a position where almost any response looks like it’s merely a defense of the right to use recreational drugs, fuck like rabbits and murder the innocent.
Obviously responding to the media’s recent hysterics over the first, sketchy report of a more virulent form of the AIDS virus, linked invariably with stories about promiscuous gays, Richard Cohen writes today in the Washington Post [I shouldn’t be too surprised, since this is a paper which also thought the Iraq war would be a good thing] that the buggerers must be condemned.

For too long now heterosexuals have kept out of this debate. Many of us have been protective of gays, seeing them primarily as victims of discrimination.
. . .
But while gays clearly have their enemies, that should not mean they are immune from criticism. The fact remains that a portion of the gay population — maybe 20 percent, [Charles] Kaiser estimates — conducts itself in ways that are not only reckless but just plain disgusting. Unprotected, promiscuous sex in bathhouses and at parties and using drugs such as crystal meth to prolong both desire and performance are practices that should be no more acceptable for gays than for heterosexuals. Gays don’t get some sort of pass just because they’re gay.
. . .
They are entitled to their own sexuality, but not to behavior that endangers others, costs us all plenty and, too often, entails a determined self-destruction that too many heterosexuals overlook.
. . .
Back in the 1970s William Ryan of Boston College popularized the term “blaming the victim.” It gave voice to a needed concept, but it also silenced critics who saw that sometimes the victim needed to be blamed. This is the case now with gays when their behavior is both stupid and reckless. When they’re victims of discrimination, they need to be defended. When they’re victims of their own behavior, they need to be condemned.

Why was this piece written? What’s his purpose, since he gives no helpful advice, offers no proposals? While I have no reason to think it’s not his intention, Cohen’s venomous piece sounds to me like an incitement to violence.
Finally, and this isn’t a rhetorical question at all: If the “carriers” are just gay men, why are he and his straight colleagues so worried about our health? I don’t have a good answer.

AIDS hysteria

AIDS and (recreational) drugs. It’s a dangerous mix, but the danger is not just that described by the media lately; the danger lies also in our media’s obsession with drugs and the impact that obsesssion has on all of our society.
The latest wave of hysteria over what is still presented as “the gays’ AIDS” was inspired by the tentative discovery in one person of what may be a drug-resistant strain of HIV. Regardless of whether fears of a new mutation turn out to be justified, we should be asking some questions about the report itself and the public’s reaction to it.
Today’s NYTimes features a very frightening (although for reasons other than the paper intended) story in the center of the front page with the headline: “Gays Debate Radical Steps to Curb Unsafe Sex; Fear of a Severe AIDS Strain stirs talk of Intervention”

[Gay activists and AIDS prevention workers say] They want to track down those who knowingly engage in risky behavior and try to stop them before they can infect others.
It is a radical idea, born of desperation, that has been gaining ground in recent months as a growing number of gay men become infected despite warnings about unsafe sex.
Although gay advocates and health care workers are just beginning to talk about how this might be done, it could involve showing up at places where impromptu sex parties happen and confronting the participants. Or it might mean infiltrating Web sites that promote gay hookups and thwarting liaisons involving crystal meth.
Other ideas include collaborating with health officials in tracking down the partners of those newly infected with H.I.V. At the very least, these advocates say, gay men must start taking responsibility for their own, before a resurgent epidemic draws government officials who could use even more aggressive tactics.

Scared yet? That’s the agenda. But actually, in addition to the weakness of its basic premises, there’s a problem with most of the documentation used by the Times writer, Andrew Jacobs.
The piece discusses AIDS as if it were identified solely with the (American, male) gay “community,” and every measure discussed for fighting its spread is directed to those “others” who supposedly comprise that community. Moreover, as usual this paper enlists the support of some of gaydom’s more conservative “spokespersons.” The result is some pretty scary stuff for the eyes of an activist who has survived the first 25 years of the epidemic (every one of them as a person with HIV disease) without succumbing to the hysteria of our “drug” laws.
Historian Charles Kaiser: “A person who is H.I.V.-positive has no more right to unprotected intercourse than he has the right to put a bullet through another person’s head.”
GMHC‘s executive director, Ana Oliveira: “It makes a community stronger when we take care of ourselves, and if that means that we have to be much more present and intervene [my italics] with people who are doing this to themselves and others, then so be it.”
Treatment advocate David Evans: [who thinks gays are safe today] “You have to remember that was the era when Jesse Helms and others were saying that gay people got what they deserved, and that the government shouldn’t spend any money to help them. There was a time when people thought, ‘Oh my god, they’re going to put us in camps.’ ”
POZ editor Walter Armstrong: [playing much less loose with our rights and with common sense, would leave the policing to gay organizations, but he thinks they should use widespread screening and a partner-notification effort to track users of crystal meth who have been infected] “I think there are ways to do interventions [again, my italics] ethically, sensitively and compassionately. There’s a huge window of opportunity between criminalization and empty prevention messages.” recently


BUT IT’S STILL A WITCH HUNT IF WE ARE THE HUNTERS

The most reasonable voice included is that of author and clinical psychologist Walt Odets:

He and others said it would be more effective to try to identify the underlying causes of drug abuse and self-destructive behavior, including the difficulty of living in a society that rejects committed gay relationships while condemning homosexuals for having sex outside those relationships. Gay men, he said, are using methamphetamines as an anti-depressant.

Finally, at the bottom of the article we hear a reassuringly calm announcement from New York City’s Department of Health and Mental Hygiene about plans for

a more vigorous return to conventional H.I.V. prevention. Deputy commissioner Isaac Weisfuse says that his agency is planning to place information banners on gay Web sites and devote more money to hard-hitting ads about methamphetamine use.
And, he noted, the free condom has largely disappeared from public places. “Unfortunately, condom use has fallen off the radar screen,” he said. “We need to do something we did well 20 years ago, which is to get condoms in every place people socialize or have sex.”

In the end it’s still about knowledge and condoms – for everyone, not the totally discriminate use of “screening” procedures, prohibitions against sex, drugs (always the drugs the establishment doesn’t admit to), on line hookups, medical records or whatever they may come up with tomorrow.

“Defenders of the Unpopular Feel Less Popular”

This is not a good thing for America, regardless of the court arguments.
Lynne Stewart, whom the NYTimes accurately describes as “an outspoken lawyer known for representing a long list of unpopular defendants,” has been found guilty of all charges levelled against her by Justice Department prosecutors. The headline on the Times site for a story dealing with reaction within the legal defense community to her conviction is shown above. It’s a little cute, but the reality is definitely not.

“I don’t think that there’s a political lawyer in this country who doesn’t believe that the government has a plan to target the lawyers who do what we do and to silence us,” said Stanley L. Cohen, one of the country’s best-known defenders of militants, terror suspects and other unpopular clients.
. . .
Roger L. Stavis, who worked alongside Ms. Stewart representing another defendant in the case that led to Mr. Abdel Rahman’s conviction [it was the lawyer/client relationship of Stewart and Rahman which was the subject of the government’s ire – Ed.], said it was regrettable that a lawyer could be convicted of a crime “for her zealous representation of a particularly odious client.”

But wait, good people, maybe this isn’t such a big problem after all. This regime just sweeps up any number of folks around the earth whom it brands as terrorists, throws them into concentration camps, again anywhere in this Pax America world, and possibly for life, by the admission of its own spokespersons. There they are never charged with any crime, yet they are routinely tortured and denied access to legal counsel. We don’t even know who they are or where they are; no list is ever furnished; and the gang in Washington may itself not know about the existence of most of them or the nature of their alleged wrongdoing. The victims’ friends and family are normally no better informed about their disappearance than the rest of us.
In the current scheme of things, concerns about legal representation for an accused terrorist may have become irrelevant. Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman was seized and tried long before 9/11, when we are told “everything changed.” There have been virtually no trials for real terrorism since, and zero convictions. This government doesn’t believe in trials when they can get away with avoiding public airings of its incompetence and evil purposes.
Lynne F. Stewart’s trial mave have been the exception which proves the rule.

“we are concerned about how we use the people’s money”

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inside historic, if somewhat seedy, City Council Chambers, an easy camaraderie prevailed in the midst of testimony which will supposedly decide the fate of the Jets stadium proposal

Crowds of construction union workers, most of whom typically live in the outer boroughs or even the suburbs (including New Jersey), crowded New York City Hall today to reinforce Mayor Bloomberg and his powerful friends in pushing for the building of a monstrous thing the city doesn’t need as the only way to urban economic health. But remember, this project is supposed to be very much about jobs and affordable housing for people who live in New York City – or at least that’s how it’s being sold to us by the wealthy owners of the Jets. It’s certainly not about tailgate parties on the platforms of subway cars.
The words in the headline above are those of Council Member Bill Perkins [on the far left in the picture] as he began questioning the principal Hudson Yards/Jets Stadium backers during today’s combined public hearing of the Finance, Transportation and Economic Development Committees. His words get right to the heart of the matter, but unfortunately in the end the decision will be made by people who have lots of money of their own, but want ours too.
The trio of guests (an impressive entwining of corporate and goverment power) gathered almost as one before the combined Committees while I was in Chambers today were Daniel L. Doctoroff, Deputy Mayor for Economic Development and Rebuilding for the City of New York and founder of NYC2012, the organization behind New York City’s Olympic bid; Mark Page, director of the New York City Office of Management and Budget and a member of the MTA Board; and Jay Cross, President of the New York Jets. What a tangled web they have woven. Have they no shame? And a Manhattan football stadium as New York City’s last, best hope?
I was there only for some of their testimony, and while most of it was devoted to financing issues, at least one commitee member brought up the subject of traffic congestion. I didn’t hear anything about how we were to deal with the consequences of an enormous football stadium being dropped into the middle of a Manhattan already at a traffic standstill evenings and weekends, but one of the high-powered boondogglers repeatedly used the phrase “traffic mitigation” in his testimony, as if he were talking about condolences.
Actually I was unable to get into the room until very late in the morning. I arrived after 9:30, when the hearing was scheduled to begin. At that time I couldn’t even get inside the park surrounding City Hall (locked behind gates now , but it once belonged to the people, two Republican mayors back), to say nothing of getting near the building itself.
I waited with a small dedicated group of anti-stadium people outside on the sidewalk in the cold, beyond the tank traps and metal detectors, for most of the morning. The construction trade unions had sent huge numbers of their members to pack the floor of the hearing and I was told that there had been only a few rows of seats available in the rear for those who weren’t on their bandwagon. It’s sad to see trade unions manipulated by corporations intent on destroying working-class neighborhoods for their own huge short-term gains.
Bloomberg and his corporate allies are trying to rush through an approval of the stadium project so it can be displayed with the city’s proposal for the 2012 Olympics. The International Olympic Committee will be in New York for four days beginning February 21 as part of its round of formal visits to contending cities. But where is Bloomberg’s head? If New York’s bid ever had a chance after the beginning of Bush’s “war on terror,” it finally died when the Mayor’s party decided to invade Iraq.

Interestingly, this photograph shows how the current City Council makeup pretty much reflects the demographics of New York, if not of much of the entire world, although here it does look like an entirely male world. The image is very misleading however. I was sitting in the second row and had to point my camera between two large suited gentlemen in front of me, so I didn’t have much choice in deciding what was in the viewfinder. In fact, Council members Quinn, Sears, Gonzales and James, arguably some of the strongest and most articulate members, were seated on the dais just to the left and the right of the men pictured here.
If I can now be forgiven for going even further off-message, I want to admit that I’m finding myself compelled to keep looking back at the photograph above. I really, really like the gold needlepoint star with its red field on the back of the Speaker’s chair; I now remember that even while I was sitting before a fairly animated group of committee members I was staring at the empty chair much of the time. I think everyone should have a chair with a star.

torture? it’s apparently no problem for US

The Democrats have decided they’ll let Gonzales become the chief law-enforcement officer of the world’s only superpower rogue state.
If, after the November 2004 election, there might still have been any doubts around the world about how many Americans actually support the regime which has reinvented their homeland as a dangerous rogue nation, this will finally squelch them. The only “opposition party” in the country says it’s pretty cool with the guy who was largely responsible for legitimizing our use of torture anywhere in the world as a device for protecting our very exclusive national security.
What are these privileged politicos waiting for? Where will they take a stand? I think we know the answer already.
But maybe this torturing rogue state thing is actually okay, even estimable, because, like Gonzales’s own tale, it’s such a great immigrant success story, the U.S. having come from such a humble background to finally emerge the most powerful and most violent nation on earth.
So perhaps you should give us a big hand and a warm pat on the back, world, although you’d better have a smile on your face.

the honest George

Juan Cole has written a speech George Bush could have actually delivered in the fall of 2002, but only to his real base (most interestingly, it’s actually an outline of the administration’s entire domestic agenda as much as it’s about one ruinous war).
The rest of us would never hear these words from his lips, but there’s nothing new there for those with eyes, ears, ordinary intelligence and perhaps some love for this world. Very sorry, America; most of you don’t make that cut, but unfortunately we will all continue to pay for your fear and stupidity.

Meanwhile, although the Bushites want to continue to undo the New Deal, will they do an FDR in one area and go for a third term, or more? And it may be no problem, since amending the Constitution seems to be no big deal for this crowd.
nothirdterm.jpg

[thanks to George Carter for the Juan Cole post tip; image of anti-FDR button from authentichistory.com]

the bumper sticker’s still good

limitstofreedom.jpg
I just spotted this reassuring headline in the “Reuters: Top Stories” section of the MY YAHOO! home page on my browser:

“Bush Freedom Speech Not Sign of Policy Shift – Aide”

Goodness! That’s a relief. For a while there I was pretty nervous about the fact that Bush’s inauguration address seemed to suggest he intended to go off in some wacky new direction during his second term.

I’m copying the first few paragraphs of the Reuters story here, but only for their entertainment value; they read something like a Saturday Night Live “Weekend Update” segment.

Bush Freedom Speech Not Sign of Policy Shift – Aide

By Caren Bohan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – President Bush’s inaugural vow to spread freedom and stand with the oppressed against tyranny was not meant to signal a shift in U.S. foreign policy but to elaborate on a long-term goal, a senior U.S. official said on Saturday.
Bush’s second inaugural address on Thursday raised questions around the world about what measures he might use to bring about his vision of freedom.
Some analysts wondered if it signaled a new, more aggressive policy toward countries like Iran and also if it would lead to strains with nondemocratic allies like Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan.
“The speech builds upon our policy,” said a senior administration official, who spoke on condition of anonymity. “It states very clearly the long-term goal we should always be working to achieve.”
The official said there was a recognition not all countries would be ready to embrace freedom right away and that the means for trying to further the goal would in many cases involve quiet diplomacy.

[image of bumper sticker is from Irregular Goods; for text documentation see the Washington Post]

WORST EVER

Bushlimoprotestors.jpg
the president, his tank, his guards, his people

Seems like we’re just spitting in the wind now, as an activist friend said the day before the republic’s formal obsequies. Still, it was good to see these noble souls lining the path of the funeral cortege yesterday.
Bless ’em. May we all live to fight another day.

[image from Reuters]

Alberto Gonzales

Gonzales.jpg
I AM NOT A TORTURER!

Contact your senator now! We deserve a top law enforcement officer with a better resume.
For those who have a senator on the Judiciary Committee itself, which began hearings on the nomination this morning, here’s a link to the roster, with access links within it. To email the committee leaders, and for a message form, see this “Action Alert” site from The Nation.

[image from AP by Susan Walsh]]

I guess this explains a lot

RockCtrWisdom.jpg

A lot has changed in 65 years. The country which built this great skyscraper now seems to have decided it can do so much better without wisdom or knowledge; we’re in for a very bumpy ride.

I took the photograph at dusk, while walking across town on Monday. The image is of Lee Lawrie’s sculpture relief above the front entrance of the RCA Building (today sometimes thoughtlessly referred to as the GE Building) on Rockefeller Plaza. According to the Rockefeller Center Visitor’s Guide, the William Blake-inspired figure represents Wisdom, who rules over man’s knowledge and interprets the laws of nature. The compass points to the light and sound waves of the cast glass screen below. The inscription is based on Isaiah 33:6