To My Friends, With love…Sincerely, Toddy English

July 20, 2009

Gay Is Not The New Black (By LZ Granderson)

Filed under: News and Issues, social commentary — toddyenglish @ 6:58 pm

Dear Friends:

I’d like to know your thoughts on this article. Seriously, let’s discuss this. Anyway, the opinions presented here are the opinions of Mr. Granderson. I’m just the messenger bringing the news.

Read on…

Editor’s note: LZ Granderson is a senior writer and columnist for ESPN The Magazine and ESPN.com, and has contributed to ESPN’s Sports Center, Outside the Lines and First Take. He is the 2009 Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD) award winner for online journalism and the 2008 National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association (NLGJA) winner for column writing.

LZ Granderson says criticism of President Obama by the gay community has gone too far.

LZ Granderson says criticism of President Obama by the gay community has gone too far.

(CNN) — Far from flowing rainbow flags, the sound of Lady Gaga and, quite honestly, white people, stands a nightclub just outside of Wicker Park in Chicago, Illinois, by the name of The Prop House.

The line to get in usually stretches down the block, and unlike many of the clubs in Boystown and Andersonville, this one plays hip-hop and caters to men who may or may not openly identify as gay, but without question are black and proud.

And a good number of them are tired of hearing how the gay community is disappointed in President Obama, because they are not.

In recent weeks, one would have thought the nation’s first black president was also the nation’s biggest homophobe. Everyone from Oscar winner Dustin Lance Black and radio personality Rachel Maddow to Joe Solmonese, the president of Human Rights Campaign, the country’s largest gay advocacy group, seem to be blasting Obama for everything from “don’t ask don’t tell” to Adam Lambert not winning American Idol.

In their minds, Obama is not moving fast enough on behalf of the GLBT community. The outcry is not completely without merit — the Justice Department’s unnerving brief on the Defense of Marriage Act immediately comes to mind. I was upset by some of the statements, but not surprised. (After the Tuskegee Syphilis Study, President Ronald Reagan’s initial handling of AIDS and, more recently, Katrina, there is little that surprises me when it comes to the government and the treatment of its people.)

Still, rarely has criticism regarding Obama and the GLBT community come from the kind of person you would find standing in line at a spot like The Prop House, and there’s a reason for that.

Despite the catchiness of the slogan, gay is not the new black.

Black is still black.

And if any group should know this, it’s the gay community.

Bars such as The Prop House, or Bulldogs in Atlanta, Georgia, exist because a large number of gay blacks — particularly those who date other blacks, and live in the black community — do not feel a part of the larger gay movement. There are Gay Pride celebrations, and then there are Black Gay Prides.

There’s a popular bar in the heart of the nation’s capital that might as well rename itself Antebellum, because all of the white patrons tend to stay upstairs and the black patrons are on the first floor. Last year at the annual Human Rights Campaign national fundraiser in Washington, D.C. — an event that lasted more than three hours — the only black person to make it on stage was the entertainment.

When Proposition 8 passed in California, white gays were quick to blame the black community despite blacks making up less than 10 percent of total voters and whites being close to 60 percent. At protest rallies that followed, some gay blacks reported they were even hit with racial epithets by angry white participants. Not to split hairs, but for most blacks, the n-word trumps the f-word.

So while the white mouthpiece of the gay community shakes an angry finger at intolerance and bigotry in their blogs and on television, blacks and other minorities see the dirty laundry. They see the hypocrisy of publicly rallying in the name of unity but then privately living in segregated pockets. And then there is the history.

The 40th anniversary of Stonewall dominated Gay Pride celebrations around the country, and while that is certainly a significant moment that should be recognized, 40 years is nothing compared with the 400 blood-soaked years black people have been through in this country. There are stories some blacks lived through, stories others were told by their parents and stories that never had a chance to be told.

While those who were at Stonewall talk about the fear of being arrested by police, 40 years ago, blacks talked about the fear of dying at the hands of police and not having their bodies found or murder investigated. The 13th Amendment was signed in 1865, and it wasn’t until 1948 that President Harry S Truman desegregated the military. That’s more than an 80-year gap.

Not to be flip, but Miley Cyrus is older than Bill Clinton’s “don’t ask, don’t tell.” That doesn’t mean that the safety of gay people should be trivialized or that Obama should not be held accountable for the promises he made on the campaign trail. But to call this month’s first-ever White House reception for GLBT leaders “too little too late” is akin to a petulant child throwing a tantrum because he wants to eat his dessert before dinner. This is one of the main reasons why so many blacks bristle at the comparison of the two movements — everybody wants to sing the blues, nobody wants to live them.

This lack of perspective is only going to alienate a black community that is still very proud of Obama and is hypersensitive about any criticism of him, especially given he’s been in office barely six months.

If blacks are less accepting of gays than other racial groups — and that is certainly debatable — then the parade of gay people calling Obama a “disappointment” on television is counterproductive in gaining acceptance, to say the least. And the fact that the loudest critics are mostly white doesn’t help matters either.

Hearing that race matters in the gay community may not be comforting to hear, but that doesn’t make it any less true.

The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of LZ Granderson.

7 Comments »

  1. I read this article somewhere. For my part I have to confess a distaste for activity that is divisive whether on the part of Blacks or Whites. To be sure a statement like “Gay is the new Black” is bound to be divisive and rather insensitive.

    What I do not like is the proprietary sense Black people seem to have about Civil Rights, as if we are the only ones that have struggled and that our struggle trumps all others. I am certain the Jewish folk feel the same about anti-semitism. Why do we insist on believing our struggle is more important and more difficult than anyone else’s? I would think the fact that two people or groups who suffer or have suffered would provide a link that would propel them to gather and share resources, not trivialize their suffering by comparing notes.

    White LGBT made a tactical mistake in the methods they employed to access the Black community and Black LGBT. The racism and prejudice in the LGBT community is real and present and is what inserts mistrust between White and Black LGBT. White LGBT have made little effort to overcome it but when our help is needed they launch a campaign trying to draw comparisons to the Black struggle. Predictably, this has been met with mistrust, anger and disappointment.

    We need a common denominator in this formula. To me, it is the struggle or a struggle for civil rights and equality. Why do we insist on coming to each other on what divides us rather than what unites us?

    The problem with these matters is that they are terribly emotional and people tend to be dragged down by the undertow of their emotions.

    Comment by aSeaNamedSolaris — July 20, 2009 @ 11:15 pm | Reply

    • In total agreement Thomas. The mainstream LGBT community has done little to nothing to embrace their African American counterparts. If we are to call ourselves “The gay community” then you cannot pick and choose–until you need their help–who gets to be apart of it.
      However, some of this I do attribute to apathy on behalf of the black gay community. Yet, when you face racism from the gay community who you’re trying to be apart of…What then? As I’ve always said if you’re black and gay or lesbian you become the ultimate riddle.

      Comment by toddyenglish — July 21, 2009 @ 4:49 pm | Reply

  2. I read the article on CNN, and for the most part agree with it. Racism within the gay community is an issue that often gets swept under the rug, and this separatism is big reason why white LGBT organizations have such a hard time reaching the black community.

    However I’m conflict about the author’s view that gays should bite their tongues when it comes to criticizing Obama. While I definitely think some gays have been riding the president too hard on LGBT issues (the man has only been in office for 6 months)and have unrealistic expectations of how quickly he should address things such as DADT and marriage equality, I don’t think we should simply sit down and shut up just because some in the black community don’t want to hear about gay rights.

    Comment by Kevin — July 21, 2009 @ 4:41 am | Reply

    • I agree. My complaint is that the gay community does not know how to pick and choose it’s battles. It is DEMOCRATIC to stand up and dissent when you don’t like something. However, when you horse whip a gay ally because he hasn’t made significant change as fast as you want then that is just insanity. These same activists comparing this struggle to that of the civil rights movement fail to realize that it took YEARS to engender full equality for African Americans. The struggle was hard fought…All they are doing is alienating those of us that do want to support the president.

      Comment by toddyenglish — July 21, 2009 @ 4:54 pm | Reply

  3. I agree 100% with what he said. The white gay community has chose racists to do their speaking, Dan savage and others who come off like Klansmen with anyone black, gay or straight. The black gay community and the white gay community have nothing in common other than sexuality and while many don’t want to say it, racism is alive and well and thrives more in the gay community than it does in the mainstream. The issues that black gay men and own face have little to nothing to do with white gays, like get a good job, decent housing and even basic healthcare.

    While gay equality is something we should all strive for, the average black gay can hardly open the front door without being confronted with a myriad of issues. The man has been in office for 6 or 7 months and has two wars, unemployment at 10% or higher and 17% for black men, and, all they can do is whine about DADT? I guess when you have a good job, nice home and great health care and can hit the circut parties once a month you can get into side issues.

    After Prop 8 hate and all the hate they spewed then and the constant, nonstop bashing of Obama to fix issues that they were quiet on for the past 8 years, the white gay’s have nothing to offer me and I view them the same as I would Pat Buchanan.

    And, lastly this is a topic that should be discussed out in the open, but, the minute its bought up on gay blog’s, all you get is why can’t you stop being black first and gay second?

    Comment by Darnell — July 21, 2009 @ 4:38 pm | Reply

    • In total agreement, sadly. When I read the article I was saddened because I agreed with over 95% of what LZ Granderson had to say. Again, it is not a generalization nor castigation of all white LGBT people…But the “community” as a whole completely ignores gays of color, especially blacks.
      That is why I am glad there is such a dearth of black gay voices in the blog world and youtube land. We NEED them, for real.

      Comment by toddyenglish — July 21, 2009 @ 4:58 pm | Reply

      • wealth, you mean? anyhoo, in total agreement with the posts and the comments.

        Comment by swiftset — July 22, 2009 @ 3:53 am


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