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Youre Likable Enough, Gay People
By FRANK RICH
Published: December 27, 2008
IN his first press conference after his re-election in 2004, President Bush memorably declared, I earned capital in the campaign, political capital, and now I intend to spend it. We all know how that turned out.Barack Obama has little in common with George W. Bush, thank God, his obsessive workouts and message control notwithstanding. At a time when very few Americans feel very good about very much, Obama is generating huge hopes even before he takes office. So much so that his name and face, affixed to any product, may be the last commodity left in the marketplace that can still move Americans to shop.
I share these high hopes. But for the first time a faint tinge of Bush crept into my Obama reveries this month.
As we saw during primary season, our president-elect is not free of his own brand of hubris and arrogance, and sometimes it comes before a fall: Youre likable enough, Hillary was the prelude to his defeat in New Hampshire. He has hit this same note again by assigning the invocation at his inauguration to the Rev. Rick Warren, the Orange County, Calif., megachurch preacher who has likened committed gay relationships to incest, polygamy and an older guy marrying a child. Bestowing this honor on Warren was a conscious and glib decision by Obama to spend political capital. It was made with the certitude that a leader with a mandate can do no wrong.
In this case, the capital spent is small change. Most Americans who have an opinion about Warren like him and his best-selling self-help tome, The Purpose Driven Life. His good deeds are plentiful on issues like human suffering in Africa, poverty and climate change. He is opposed to same-sex marriage, but so is almost every top-tier national politician, including Obama. Unlike such family-values ayatollahs as James Dobson and Tony Perkins, Warren is not obsessed with homosexuality and abortion. He was vociferously attacked by the Phyllis Schlafly gang when he invited Obama to speak about AIDS at his Saddleback Church two years ago.
Theres no reason why Obama shouldnt return the favor by inviting him to Washington. But theres a difference between including Warren among the cacophony of voices weighing in on policy and anointing him as the inaugurals de facto pope. You cant blame V. Gene Robinson of New Hampshire, the first openly gay Episcopal bishop and an early Obama booster, for feeling as if hed been slapped in the face. Im all for Rick Warren being at the table, he told The Times, but were talking about putting someone up front and center at what will be the most-watched inauguration in history, and asking his blessing on the nation. And the God that hes praying to is not the God that I know.
Warren, whose ego is no less than Obamas, likes to advertise his commitment to model civility in America. But as Rachel Maddow of MSNBC reminded her audience, comparing gay relationships to child abuse is a strange model of civility. Less strange but equally hard to take is Warrens defensive insistence that some of his best friends are the gays: His boasts of having eaten dinner in gay homes and loving Melissa Etheridge records will not protect any gay families civil rights.
Equally lame is the argument mounted by an Obama spokeswoman, Linda Douglass, who talks of how Warren has fought for people who have H.I.V./AIDS. Shouldnt that be the default position of any religious leader? Fighting AIDS is not a get-out-of-homophobia-free card. That Bush finally joined Bono in doing the right thing about AIDS in Africa does not mitigate the gay-baiting of his 2004 campaign, let alone his silence and utter inaction when the epidemic was killing Texans by the thousands, many of them gay men, during his term as governor.
Unlike Bush, Obama has been the vocal advocate of gay civil rights he claims to be. It is over the top to assert, as a gay writer at Time did, that the president-elect is a very tolerant, very rational-sounding sort of bigot. Much more to the point is the astute criticism leveled by the gay Democratic congressman Barney Frank, who, in dissenting from the Warren choice, said of Obama, I think he overestimates his ability to get people to put aside fundamental differences. Thats a polite way of describing the Obama cockiness. It will take more than the force of the new presidents personality and eloquence to turn our nation into the United States of America he and we all want it to be.
Obama may not only overestimate his ability to bridge some of our fundamental differences but also underestimate how persistent some of those differences are. The exhilaration of his decisive election victory and the deserved applause that has greeted his mostly glitch-free transition cant entirely mask the tensions underneath. Before there is profound social change, there is always high anxiety.
The success of Proposition 8 in California was a serious shock to gay Americans and to all the rest of us who believe that all marriages should be equal under the law. The roles played by African-Americans (who voted 70 percent in favor of Proposition 8) and by white Mormons (who were accused of bankrolling the anti-same-sex-marriage campaign) only added to the morning-after recriminations. And that was in blue California. In Arkansas, voters went so far as to approve a measure forbidding gay couples to adopt.
There is comparable anger and fear on the right. David Brody, a political correspondent with the Christian Broadcasting Network, was flooded with e-mails from religious conservatives chastising Warren for accepting the invitation to the inaugural. They vilified Obama as pro-death and worse because of his support for abortion rights.
Stoking this rage, no doubt, is the dawning realization that the old religious right is crumbling in part because Warrens new generation of leaders departs from the Falwell-Robertson brand of zealots who have had a stranglehold on the G.O.P. Its a sign of the old establishments panic that the Rev. Richard Cizik, known for his leadership in addressing global warming, was pushed out of his executive post at the National Association of Evangelicals this month. Ciziks sin was to tell Terry Gross of NPR that he was starting to shift in favor of civil unions for gay couples.
Ciziks ouster wont halt the new wave he represents. As he also told Gross, young evangelicals care less and less about the old wedge issues and arent as likely to base their votes on them. On gay rights in particular, polls show that young evangelicals are moving in Ciziks (and the countrys) direction and away from what John McCain once rightly called the agents of intolerance. Its not a coincidence that Dobsons Focus on the Family, which spent more than $500,000 promoting Proposition 8, has now had to lay off 20 percent of its work force in Colorado Springs.
But were not there yet. Warrens defamation of gay people illustrates why, as does our president-elects rationalization of it. When Obama defends Warrens words by calling them an example of the wide range of viewpoints in a diverse and noisy and opinionated America, he is being too cute by half. He knows full well that a viewpoint defaming any minority group by linking it to sexual crimes like pedophilia is unacceptable.
It is even more toxic in a year when that group has been marginalized and stripped of its rights by ballot initiatives fomenting precisely such fears. Youve got to give them hope was the refrain of the pioneering 1970s gay politician Harvey Milk, so stunningly brought back to life by Sean Penn on screen this winter. Milk reminds us that hope has to mean action, not just words.
By the historical standards of presidential hubris, Obamas disingenuous defense of his tone-deaf invitation to Warren is nonetheless a relatively tiny infraction. Its no Bay of Pigs. But it does add an asterisk to the joyous inaugural of our first black president. Its bizarre that Obama, of all people, would allow himself to be on the wrong side of this history.
Since hes not about to rescind the invitation, what happens next? For perspective, I asked Timothy McCarthy, a historian who teaches at Harvards Kennedy School of Government and an unabashed Obama enthusiast who served on his campaigns National Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Leadership Council. He responded via e-mail on Christmas Eve.
After noting that Warrens role at the inauguration is, in the end, symbolic, McCarthy concluded that its now time to move from symbol to substance. This means Warren should recant his previous statements about gays and lesbians, and start acting like a Christian.
McCarthy added that its also time for President-elect Obama to start acting on the promises he made to the LGBT community during his campaign so that he doesnt go down in history as another Bill Clinton, a sweet-talking swindler who would throw us under the bus for the sake of political expediency. And for LGBT folks to choose their battles wisely, to judge Obama on the content of his policy-making, not on the character of his ministers.
Amen. Heres to humility and equanimity everywhere in America, starting at the top, as we negotiate the fierce rapids of change awaiting us in the New Year.
Copyright 2008 The New York Times Company
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about this articleRick Warren's Forum:
How to Trick Candidates Into
Giving Themselves a Religious TestSeptember 6, 2008
Katherine YuricaOn August 16, 2008, Rick Warren, the affable pastor
of the 83,000 member Saddleback Church in Southern
California made history by setting up a sequential debate
between Barack Obama and John McCain at his church.
What's the Matter With Rick Warren?
By Sarah PosnerDecember 17, 2008
Now it has officially gone too far: Democrats, in their zeal
to appear friendly to evangelical voters, have chosen
celebrity preacher and best-selling author Rick Warren
to deliver the invocation at Barack Obama's inauguration.
Pastor Interview Under Scrutiny
August 18, 2008 - 21:00 ET
Larry King LiveLARRY KING, HOST: Tonight, Pastor Rick Warren --
his civil forum with Obama and McCain sparks a nasty
backstage controversy. Did the man some call America's
most powerful religious leader know this was false
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