Marriage Amendment/Same
Sex Marriage
After the Ball--Why the
Homosexual Movement Has Won
by Dr. R. Albert Mohler Jr.
June 03, 2004
The
spectacular success of the homosexual movement stands as one of
the most fascinating phenomena of our time. In less than two decades,
homosexuality has moved from "the love that dares not speak
its name," to the center of America's public life. The homosexual
agenda has advanced even more quickly than its most ardent proponents
had expected, and social change of this magnitude demands some explanation.
A partial explanation of the homosexual movement's
success can be traced to the 1989 publication of After the Ball:
How America Will Conquer Its Fear and Hatred of Gays in the 90s.
Published with little fanfare, this book became the authoritative
public relations manual for the homosexual agenda, and its authors
presented the book as a distillation of public relations advice
for the homosexual community. A look back at its pages is an occasion
for understanding just how successful their plan was.
Authors Marshall Kirk and Hunter Madsen combined
psychiatric and public relations expertise in devising their strategy.
Kirk, a researcher in neuropsychiatry, and Madsen, a public relations
consultant, argued that homosexuals must change their presentation
to the heterosexual community if real success was to be made.
Conceiving their book as a "gay manifesto for
the 1990s," the authors called for homosexuals to repackage
themselves as mainstream citizens demanding equal treatment, rather
than as a promiscuous sexual minority seeking greater opportunity
and influence.
Writing just as the AIDS crisis hit its greatest
momentum, the authors saw the disease as an opportunity to change
the public mind. "As cynical as it may seem, AIDS gives us
a chance, however brief, to establish ourselves as a victimized
minority legitimately deserving of America's special protection
and care," they wrote.
Give them credit: they really did understand the
operation of the public mind. Kirk and Madsen called for homosexuals
to talk incessantly about homosexuality in public. "Open, frank
talk makes gayness seem less furtive, alien, and sinful; more above
board," they asserted. "Constant talk builds the impression
that public opinion is at least divided on the subject, and that
a sizeable bloc--the most modern, up-to-date citizens--accept or
even practice homosexuality."
Nevertheless, not all talk about homosexuality is
helpful. "And when we say talk about homosexuality, we mean
just that. In the early stages of the campaign, the public should
not be shocked and repelled by premature exposure to homosexual
behavior itself. Instead, the imagery of sex per se should be downplayed,
and the issue of gay rights reduced, as far as possible, to an abstract
social question."
Portraying homosexuals as victims was essential
to their strategy. Offering several principles for tactical advance
in their cause, the authors called upon homosexuals to "portray
gays as victims of circumstance and depression, not as aggressive
challengers." This would be necessary, they argued, because
"gays must be portrayed as victims in need of protection so
that straights will be inclined by reflex to adopt the role of protector."
Such a strategy could, they asserted, lead to something
like a "conversion" of the public mind on the question
of homosexuality. "The purpose of victim imagery is to make
straights feel very uncomfortable; that is, to jam with shame the
self-righteous pride that would ordinarily accompany and reward
their antigay belligerence, and to lay groundwork for the process
of conversion by helping straights identify with gays and sympathize
with their underdog status."
Obviously, this would mean marginalizing some members
of the homosexual community. Kirk and Madsen were bold to advise
a mainstreaming of the homosexual image. "In practical terms,
this means that cocky mustachioed leather-men, drag queens, and
bull dykes would not appear in gay commercials and other public
presentations. Conventional young people, middle-age women, and
older folks of all races would be featured, not to mention the parents
and straight friends of gays." Furthermore, "It cannot
go without saying, incidentally, that groups on the farthest margins
of acceptability, such as NAMBLA [North American Man-Boy Love Association],
must play no part at all in such a campaign. Suspected child molesters
will never look like victims."
What about the origin of sexual orientation? The
success of the homosexual movement can be largely traced to the
very idea of "orientation" itself. More precisely, homosexuals
advanced their cause by arguing that they were born that way. Madsen
and Kirk offer this as candid public relations advice. "We
argue that, for all practical purposes, gays should be considered
to have been born gay--even though sexual orientation, for most
humans, seems to be the product of a complex interaction between
innate predispositions and environmental factors during childhood
and early adolescence." Alas, "To suggest in public that
homosexuality might be chosen is to open the can of worms labeled
'moral choices and sin' and give the religious intransigents a stick
to beat us with. Straights must be taught that it is as natural
for some persons to be homosexual as it is for others to be heterosexual:
wickedness and seduction have nothing to do with it."
There can be no doubt that Christianity represents
the greatest obstacle to the normalization of homosexual behavior.
It cannot be otherwise, because of the clear biblical teachings
concerning the inherent sinfulness of homosexuality in all forms,
and the normativity of heterosexual marriage. In order to counter
this obstacle, Kirk and Madsen advised gays to "use talk to
muddy the moral waters, that is, to undercut the rationalizations
that 'justify' religious bigotry and to jam some of its psychic
rewards." How can this be done? "This entails publicizing
support by moderate churches and raising serious theological objections
to conservative biblical teachings. It also means exposing the inconsistency
and hatred underlying antigay doctrines."
Conservative churches, defined by the authors as
"homohating" are portrayed as "antiquated backwaters,
badly out of step with the times and with the latest findings of
psychology."
A quick review of the last 15 years demonstrates
the incredible effectiveness of this public relations advice. The
agenda set out by Kirk and Madsen led to nothing less than social
transformation. By portraying themselves as mainstream Americans
seeking nothing but liberty and self-fulfillment, homosexuals redefined
the moral equation. Issues of right and wrong were isolated as outdated,
repressive, and culturally embarrassing. Instead, the assertion
of "rights" became the hallmark of the public relations
strategy.
Other principles offered by the authors included
making gays look good by identifying strategic historical figures
as being hidden homosexuals, and, on the other hand, making "victimizers"
look bad in the public eye. Kirk and Madsen suggested isolating
conservative Christians by presenting them as "hysterical backwoods
preachers, drooling with hate to a degree that looks both comical
and deranged." They offered a concrete example of how this
strategy could be used on television and in print. "For example,
for several seconds an unctuous beady-eyed Southern preacher is
shown pounding the pulpit in rage against 'those perverted, abominable
creatures.'" While his tirade continues over the soundtrack,
the picture switches to heart-rending photos of badly beaten persons,
or of gays who look decent, harmless, and likeable; and then we
cut back to the poisonous face of the preacher. The contrast speaks
for itself. The effect is devastating."
Public relations is now a major part of the American
economy, with hundreds of millions of dollars poured into advertising
strategies and image enhancement programs. Observers of the public
relations world must look back with slack-jawed amazement at the
phenomenal success of the approach undertaken by homosexuals over
the last two decades. The advice offered by Marshall Kirk and Hunter
Madsen is nothing less than a manifesto for moral revolution. A
look back at this strategy indicates just how self-consciously the
homosexual movement advanced its cause by following this plan.
Those who oppose the normalization of homosexuality
have indeed been presented as backwoods, antiquated, and dangerous
people, while those advancing the cause are presented as forces
for light, progress, and acceptance. Conservative Christians have
indeed been presented as proponents of hatred rather than as individuals
driven by biblical conviction. The unprecedented success of this
public relations strategy helps to explain why America has accepted
everything from homosexual characters and plotlines in prime-time
entertainment to the lack of outrage in response to same-sex marriage
in Massachusetts.
At least we know what we are up against. Biblical
Christians must continue to talk about right and wrong even when
the larger world dismisses morality as an outdated concept. We must
maintain marriage as a non-negotiable norm--a union of a man and
a woman--even when the courts redefine marriage by fiat. At the
same time, we must take into account the transformation of the American
mind that is now so devastatingly evident to all who have eyes to
see.
The real tragedy of After the Ball is that the great
result of this is not a party, but the complete rejection of the
very moral foundations which made this society possible. In order
to address the most fundamental problems, we must understand the
shape of the American mind. Looking back at After the Ball after
fifteen years, it all comes into frightening focus.
|