
What's up with Garrison Keillor? I always thought of this guy as a liberal, but his March 17 2007 article on Salon called "
Stating the Obvious"
suggests otherwise. The article starts by blasting a costly
government-funded study about the benefits of exposing children to art, then goes on to explain the superiority of "old fashioned" parenting - without any
requirements for costly studies.
He has since come under fire (and apologized) for his comments suggesting that stereotypical same-sex couples are ill-suited for parenting. He wrote:
"The country has come to accept stereotypical gay men -- sardonic fellows with fussy hair who live in over-decorated apartments with a striped sofa and a small weird dog and who worship campy performers and go in for flamboyance now and then themselves. If they want to be accepted as couples and daddies, however, the flamboyance may have to be brought under control. Parents are supposed to stand in back and not wear chartreuse pants and black polka-dot shirts. That's for the kids. It's their show."
-GK
In his apology, GK explains that the entire article was tongue-in-cheek, meant to be funny, just a joke and all that. Pretty un-funny stuff coming from a professional who should be able to communicate a little more clearly. He goes on to write: "
...the government is paying large sums of money to have the obvious pointed out..."
-GK
WRONG - The government spends money on valuable research so that decisions that affect individual rights and public interest aren't made based on the limited perspective of personal opinion. Thanks to the willingness to invest in research, we now know that that children with gay or lesbian parents fare as well as those raised in families with a mother and a father. The American Academy of Pediatrics, the Child Welfare League of America (
CWLA) and other adoption advocacy groups will confirm this.
I grew up the child of a mixed-gender marriage that lasted until death parted them, and I could tell you about how good that is for children, and you could pay me whatever you think it's worth.
Back in the day, that was the standard arrangement. Everyone had a yard, a garage, a female mom, a male dad, and a refrigerator with leftover boiled potatoes in plastic dishes with snap-on lids.
-GK
WRONG: It may have seemed that everyone had the same idyllic
experiences and situations growing up with two
loving mixed-gender parents, in reality the world is a much bigger place than
GK's neighborhood. In the great big world, and likely in
GK's little neighborhood, too many kids suffer unspeakable abuse and shameful neglect at the hands of their mixed-gender parents. Let's not advance the notion that a kid having a mom and a dad in their life is always a good thing.
Monogamy put the parents in the background where they belong and we children were able to hold center stage.
-GK
PLEASE: Another example of how perception and reality differ. Just
because GK wasn't aware of any shenanigans that may have been going on at the time DOESN'T mean that people were any more faithful back in the good old days. Perhaps they were just sneakier, or
benefited from having no "smoking gun" cell phone or email records to
implicate them. I don't understand the need to
idealize a previous generation in this way.
Nature is about continuation of the species -- in other words, children.
-GK
SORT OF: Continuation of the species is certainly one thing that nature is about, it might even be the main thing. But we also know that homosexuality is widespread throughout the animal kingdom, that some parents in nature kill the young when they have the opportunity, and that many species have very little to do with their young outside of conception. Thankfully, most people
are smart enough to realize that
mimicking the brutality of nature is neither humane nor virtuous.
And now gay marriage will produce a whole new string of hyphenated relatives.
-GK
ABSURD: I'm gay. I'm married. Like many married people, I call my spouse "husband", I refer to his parents as my in-laws, and if he had children I would likely refer to them as "the kids". Is GK suggesting that a married gay man needs some new kind of prefix or label to announce a difference that shouldn't matter to anyone else in the first place? This would be like suggesting that mixed-race marriages require a new set of hyphenated labels for our relatives.
I hold the (liberal?) belief that change is good and necessary so that we can improve the imperfect world we live in. I'm
thankful for all of the people who came
before me who had the courage to advocate necessary changes, sometimes at their own peril. So many people today enjoy the rights of equality to which they are naturally entitled, thanks to those who have had the courage to change the rules. I'm disappointed to learn that Garrison Keillor doesn't share this belief.