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Less
Fun All The Time
AIDS in the Mind of America
National
Review, July 18, 1986
Copyright 1986 by National Review

As
a cultural phenomenon, AIDS has
clearly arrived. But even after
countless newspaper and magazine
headlines, and now the apparent
beginning of the deluge of
television shows, we have yet to
get a good, comprehensive book on
the subject. AIDS in the Mind
of America doesn't quite fit
the bill, but it is nonetheless
far superior to most of the
sensationalist trash being churned
out on the subject, and it
provides valuable insight into the
reaction of the culture most
affected by AIDS: the homosexual
community.
For
Dennis Altman, one of the most
prominent authors on homosexual
culture, this latest work is a
natural addition to a series of
five books that had proceeded from
Homosexual: Oppression and
Liberation through The
Homosexualization of America.
Indeed, AIDS in the Mind of
America could well have been
subtitled The Dehomosexualization
of America. Altman traces the
epidemic from its discovery when
the Center for Disease Control
(CDC) in Atlanta noticed a sharp
increase in requests for drugs to
treat such theretofore rare
diseases as pneumocystis carinii
and severe anal herpes. From here
he explores the political, social,
and psychological ramifications of
the illness.
At times he plays Creighton the
historian, at others Camus the
philosopher (although curiously he
avoids reference to Camus in favor
of quoting the pop philosophy of
Susan Sontag). The press, he
argues, has abdicated its
responsibility to provide health
information in favor of "Gay
Bug Kills Gran"
sensationalism. Likewise,
politicians have delayed funding
for AIDS, and even then
underfunded it, because of their
personal revulsion toward
homosexuality
("homophobia," to use
Altman's term - one which he uses
with slightly less frequency than
"a" and
"the"). Altman writes:
"How perverted the rhetoric
of interest-group politics becomes
when research undertaken to
understand and control an epidemic
disease can be seen as a response
to 'special interests' and the
encouragement of unpopular
lifestyles." Beyond that,
however, Altman declines to take
hard positions, preferring to
relay the reaction of prominent
members of the homosexual
community, with occasional
statements of agreement or
disapproval.
Since
Altman himself is a homosexual
male, he is able to provide a
personal testament to the
epidemic, giving us a view that
most of us can be thankful we
don't have.
Within
the gay world AIDS is becoming
omnipresent; gay men stand in bars
talking earnestly about T-cell
counts and retroviruses; on the
ferry between Fire Island and the
Long Island shore I overhear a
man, ten years younger than me sic
though he looks older, describing
the chemotherapy that made his
hair drop out; in Honolulu, where
I stopped on my return to the
States in the spring of 1984, a
man in an outdoor bar tells me he
has left San Francisco because he
cannot live any longer surrounded
by dying friends.
The
media have capitalized on AIDS,
and even normally respectable
publications have splashed
headlines across their covers
distinguishable from those of the New
York Post only by their
length. Life's July 1985
cover ("Now No One Is Safe
from AIDS") epitomized this,
preying upon the fear that AIDS
would "break out" into
the general population. In fact,
as the managing editor wrote in an
introduction, "no one is
safe" doesn't mean that now
you can get AIDS from a toilet
seat; it means that society as a
whole is being affected in some
way or another. Even sensible
articles are often undercut by
sensational titles.
The
funding controversy is far more
subjective, since we have no
standard by which to measure how
much the government should spend
on killer epidemics that prey on
readily definable minorities. If
cancer is the yardstick, it must
be noted that cancer kills far
more persons than AIDS, is less
preventable, and causes much more
of a drain on society's resources.
But the incidence of cancer isn't
doubling every 11 months, either.
It does no good to say that if
AIDS were affecting the general
population to the same extent it
affects homosexuals there would be
far more funding for research than
there is now. Of course there
would, and there would be far more
funding still if it affected only
lawmakers. So what?
Perhaps
the most valuable aspect of this
work is the insight it
inadvertently gives into the
paradoxical reaction to AIDS by
the homosexual community. In any
given copy of the Washington
Blade, New York Native,
or other homosexual papers, most
of the articles and letters to the
editor concern AIDS. There might
also be a picture of a young man
with a caption reading, simply,
"In Memoriam." You don't
have to be told how he died. Yet
flip over a few pages and you'll
come to the personals section,
which will contain such ads as
"Gay white male ISO in search
of men anytime." At the end
of the personals you'll find a
listing of "prime boys"
(prostitutes, as they're known in
the heterosexual world). What's
going on here? Altman writes:
The
central dilemma that faces gay
men as the epidemic spreads is
how to develop "safe sex?
without feeding the traditional
moralism that condemns both
homosexuality and sex outside a
committed relationship and so
easily feeds into the heightened
homophobia unleashed by AIDS.
If
that doesn't sound like a solid
plan for action, it's not. Many
homosexuals don't want to be told
they can't have their cake and eat
it without worrying about Kaposi's
sarcoma. And Altman, at least in
any straight-forward way, isn't
going to be the one to tell them.
Consider a personal ad Altman
reprints in which the placer tells
the respondents to his "AIDS
CONSCIOUS, SO AM I" ad that
"the 157 responses I received
are more than one guy can
handle." Altman says this
"reflects the new
caution," without asking why
persons so concerned about
contracting a sexual disease would
pick their partners through a
newspaper ad.
Personal
ads, often for anonymous sex, have
become a respected part of the
homosexual courting ritual.
Bathhouses, so much more in the
public eye, are fair game for
commentary and criticism, but the
personals are inviolable. To
Altman's credit, he does let
others speak more strongly than he
will allow himself to, quoting on
several occasions the two AIDS
victims who wrote the landmark
"We Know Who We Are"
article for the New York Native,
declaring that they had sentenced
themselves to death through
incredible promiscuity.
Throughout
the book altman finds it necessary
to resist the characterization of
AIDS as a homosexual disease,
calling the characterization a
creation of the media and the
Reagan Administration. "From
available evidence it appears that
the Administration, particularly
the White House, has collaborated
in fostering the idea that AIDS
should be seen as a gay issue
rather than a health emergency
which should transcend the
characteristics of those
involved." Altman argues that
"AIDS is American and
homosexual only in the sense that
the first group in which the
disease was discovered was
American homosexuals." He
later states, "AIDS is
intrinsically no more gay or
American than Legionnaires'
disease is an illness of
ex-soldiers or than rubella
('German measles') is inherently
German."
The
comparison is ludicrous: Germans
do not account for 73 per cent of
all rubella victims. Nor did the
more than 13,000 homosexuals to
date who have contracted AIDS all
just happen to be in the wrong
hotel at the wrong time. It is the
homosexuals' proclivity toward sex
acts that cause tissue to tear and
the virus to enter the
bloodstream, multiplied by their
relative promiscuity, that has
earned for them their ignoble
status as plague carriers.
Most
important, indeed, is the carrier
status. Even among the 27 per cent
of AIDS victims who are not
classified as homosexual (and many
in fact are, being members of more
than one high-risk group) the key
to the disease's spread is
homosexuals. If AIDS is the Plague
of the Eighties, then homosexuals
are the rats. The "gran"
who died of AIDS and the young
hemophiliac who is barred from
school for having contracted it
both probably received the virus
from a homosexual blood donor who
contracted it from engaging in
consensual sexual intercourse.
It's a terrible responsibility to
bear and naturally homosexuals
resist it.
Yet
they do so even as they reinforce
it by insisting on the maintenance
of "gay rights." The
closing of the bathhouses is
portrayed by militant homosexuals
as the first step toward pink
triangles (which is ironic,
considering that Hitler ordered
homosexuals into the death houses,
while today's militant homosexuals
fight for the right to march in),
and even the test to detect the
HTLV III virus in carriers was
fought. Altman notes that several
homosexual groups urged people not
to take the test except for
research purposes, and a group
called the Lambda Legal Defense
sought an injunction on the
grounds that the test had a high
error rate.
Altman
asks, but cannot bring himself to
answer, the fundamental question
of whether AIDS can be
successfully fought without
sacrificing the
"advances" made by the
homosexual-rights movement. To the
"homophobes" among us,
of course, the answer is simple.
To those who felt they had finally
achieved "the
homosexualization of
America," however, it's a
bitter choice. The only thing that
is certain is that being
"gay" is becoming less
fun all the time.
Read
Michael Fumento’s additional
work on AIDS
and on the
media. Read an excerpt from
his book, The Myth of
Heterosexual AIDS, Exploding
Myths (National Review,
December 13, 1993).
Michael
Fumento is a health and science
writer who has authored four
books, including The
Fat of the Land: Our Health Crisis
and How Overweight Americans Can
Help Themselves
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