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By: CHRIS CRAIN COMMENTS
She got her start as Bathhouse Betty, back in the days when gay men treated “the
tubs” as all-around social clubs, and not just as places to — you
know — become better acquainted.
So it came as an unpleasant shock to many in her legions of gay fans when
Bette Midler, asked by Larry King this week her views on gay marriage, didn’t
offer up a politically correct answer about equal rights long overdue.
Instead, Bathhouse Betty thought about the flesh-and-blood gay guys she knows
and loves, and questioned whether marriage was such a
good idea.
“Many of the homosexual men that I know — you know, they like
to move around,” said Midler. “They like to have — you know,
they’re — that’s
part of it. That’s part of the fun of being a gay man. I’m really
wondering how — what that commitment is going to be about. Does that
mean they’re not going to cheat, they’re only going to be with
one?”
Many of us, like Bette, know one or two homosexual men who — you know — like
to “move around.” In fact, we know a whole slew of gay men for
whom “moving around” is — you know — part of it, part
of the fun of being gay. Of course, let the record reflect that the same could
be said of many heterosexual men — and plenty of married ex-presidents — but
her point is still one worth considering.
Some of the attacks on “gay marriage” have been over-the-top alarmist,
like suggesting it could lead to the end of civilization. Others have been
heterosexist, as if there were something innately superior about the “complementarity” of
heterosexual love between people of opposite genders.
Superior? No. But different? Maybe.
WE SOMETIMES FORGET that this “experiment” of same-sex coupling
is still a relatively new one. It is only in the most recent generation that
large numbers of gay men and lesbians felt free enough to find a partner and
build a life together.
For many gay couples, especially the men, long-term relationships aren’t
necessarily exclusive sexually. In fact, as Bette put it so — you know — eloquently,
many of us have found that’s part of the fun of being gay. We write our
own rules.
Of course there are plenty of same-sex couples, especially on the lesbian
side, for whom sexual monogamy is every bit as important as it is to George
W. and Laura. And there are even some heterosexual couples today, especially
under 30, who tie the knot and then make unconventional decisions about what
that commitment means to them sexually.
But the gay rights movement hasn’t always been exclusively about accessing
traditional institutions like marriage and the military. For a long time, it
was much more revolutionary, focused on rewriting traditional institutions
to reflect a more progressive and less rigid view of life.
In the case of marriage, the legal rules can be pretty darn rigid, depending
upon the state. They certainly all aspire toward sexual exclusivity, and sex
outside of marriage can be grounds for divorce or, in states with “no
fault” divorce, at least an argument for a more favorable division of
property.
In some states, adultery remains a crime, though it’s unclear whether
those laws will survive the Supreme Court’s ruling this summer striking
down sodomy laws that criminalize private consensual sex between adults.
Certainly the major religious faiths that have recognized gay marriage in
one form or another expect the couple to remain faithful sexually.
BUT THOSE OF us who have been in long-term same-sex relationships, and those
who professionally counsel us, often find that it is more important to communicate
honestly about what sort of ground rules each partner wants and coming to agreement
and living faithfully to those terms. For some of us, that means monogamy,
but not for many of us. The ground rules themselves, whether complete monogamy
or some — you know — moving around, are less the point.
Do same-sex couples who choose something less than total sexual exclusivity
still deserve full access to marriage rights and responsibilities? Are they
less entitled than straight couples who publicly aspire toward monogamy but
then look the other way at sexual infidelity (those ex-presidents come to mind
again).
Is it any of the government’s business what private arrangements couples
might make on something so private as sexual monogamy? Does it become the government’s
business when the couple signs up for legal and financial benefits?
And what about unmarried couples, gay and straight? An entire framework of
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