Guess
I’m feeling
a little
disappointed
that Pete
Buttigieg
has ended
his run to become
the
Democratic
candidate
for
president.
In
my mind, he
was
always a credible,
intelligent
candidate
with sound policies
for moderate
minded
Democrats
(and Independents).
I’m not American
so it means
nothing to say he’d
have
had
my vote.
He
was
knocked
by many for being
too young and too inexperienced.
I think his greatest
liability was a lack of charisma, the
same
Achilles
heel
of past
contenders
Walter
Mondale,
Michael
Dukakis and Bob Dole.
With
the
exception
of George
H.W.
Bush, bland doesn’t
usually cut it. (This
is a country, after
all, whose
current
leader
was a reality
TV star who is fond of belittling
his many, many adversaries
with grade-school
insults.)
In
most realms,
lacking charisma is not a bad thing. It can also come
with
stability, thoughtfulness,
loyalty and trustworthiness,
all qualities
the
present
American
leader
sorely
lacks. Unfortunately,
it seems
that many gay men
seem
to have
taken
the
lack
of charisma and twisted
it
into a criticism that Mayor Pete
is
not gay enough.
My
first reaction
to this was, Wait...What?
I
always thought that, if you could summon the
courage
to
come
out,
you’d made
it.
End
of the
rainbow.
Hello,
gayness.
Welcome
to
the
LGBTQ
community. Sorry, swag bag not included.
Come
on
out to the
next
Pride
parade.
Or
stay home.
Either
way is okay. You’re
still
gay.
Stream
music from one
or
more
of
the
following
divas: Madonna, Gaga, Beyonce,
Britney,
Kylie,
Cher,
Sam (Smith). Or don’t. If Drake
or
Mumford & Sons or Sammy Hagar is more
your
thing, so be
it.
(As a courtesy,
it might be
best
to use
your
ear
buds.) Still
gay.
Tune
in
to RuPaul’s Drag Race
or
The
Real
Housewives
of…, I don’t know...Omaha? In
the
alternative,
if
you insist on watching all one
hundred
sixty-two games
of the
Yankees
regular
season
or re-watch
all eleven
seasons
of “Duck Dynasty”, don’t save
a
seat
for me.
(More
beer
for you.) Again,
the
gay
thing sticks.
Sorry,
there
is
no gay manual. As
far as I know, there
isn’t
a “How Gay Are
You?”
quiz you can download from www.advocate.com
and score
yourself
before
you
take
to
Twitter
and proclaim that you officially reached
Liberace
Level.
(I did find a tongue-in-cheek
2014 Buzz Feed quiz and, whew,
I think I only
passed
after
choosing “Big Pretty
Rainbow” as a favorite
weather
phenomenon.)
I’m
glad there
isn’t
a real
exam
that one
must
take
to
earn
his gay certification.
In my early
twenties,
I would have
probably
had to retake
the
test
several
times.
When
I first dared
to go to gay bars—and back then
I didn’t know of any other
places
to go in search
of guys (supposedly)
like
me—there
was
a lot I couldn’t relate
to.
Ass-less
leather
chaps looked
too drafty. I
never
wanted
to try Ecstasy.
I had enough
common sense
and
chronic clumsiness
to know that I wouldn’t have
a
go at strutting down
Santa
Monica Boulevard
in a pair of high heels.
My
body didn’t seem
to fit the
gay
standard and I
couldn’t afford to miss a week
of jogging due
to
a sprained
ankle.
It’s
true,
I’ve
never
been
on Grindr. Still gay. I thought “Brokeback
Mountain” was a bit slow. Still gay. I would never
go to a concert
to watch Britney
lip sync
for ninety
minutes,
I don’t own an antique
anything,
a gay cruise
sounds
like
pure
hell
(even
pre-coronavirus)
and I’ve
never
worn Lycra to the
gym.
Guess
what, folks? I’m a gay man.
Whoever
is out there
deciding
that Pete
isn’t
gay enough
needs
to put away the
litmus
test.
It shouldn’t be
a
news
flash that we’re
a
diverse
lot
that includes
fats, fems,
Asians, people
of
all races,
ethnicities,
socioeconomic
levels,
occupations and fashion styles.
Some
of
us come
out
at fifteen,
some
at
eighty.
Some
of
us don’t even
post selfies
after
a gym workout. Ever.
Don’t discount my gayness.
Or Pete’s.
I’m
not sure
I
have
any
more
in
common with Pete
Buttigieg
than
I do with Sir Elton
or Billy Porter
or Larry Kramer.
I have
no
military experience,
I’m not a Rhodes
Scholar, I’ve
only
taken
one
brief
walk on the
Harvard
campus, I’ve
never
held
civic office
and
I, alas, I don’t have
a
husband. Doesn’t
matter.
I’m gay, Pete’s
gay, Elton’s
gay, Billy’s gay, Larry’s gay. Each
different
but each
enough.
Gay
is gay.
If
you’re
gay
and Pete
Buttigieg’s
proposals or his demeanor
didn’t appeal
to you, so be
it.
But
it
strikes
me
as
sad that other
gay men
would dismiss
Pete
for
not being
gay enough.
He
was
unequivocally
the
gayest
candidate
out
there
simply
by being
the
first
and the
only
one.
Gayer
than Bernie
or
Joe
or
Amy or Elizabeth.
Gayer
than the
buffoon
currently
in the
White
House.
I’m
thankful Pete
Buttigieg
stepped
up. I’m pleased
that his being
gay didn’t matter
so much to (most) voters.
I’m proud of how he
responded
to Rush Limbaugh’s inability to get
over
Pete
kissing
his spouse
in
public
and
prouder
of how he
distinguished
himself
from the
president.
For many, he
is
the
first
public figure
that
got people
seeing
beyond
the
fact
he
is
gay and
what kind of sex
he
has
or doesn’t
have.
He
is
the
first
openly
gay man to have
a
go at the
nomination
of either
party.
And
that, to me,
is
more
than
enough.
2 comments:
Amen. Couldn't agree more. And thanks for the laughs. Liberace level. Love it.
Pete isn't over. He's thirty-seven. He has GREAT ideas. He reminded me of the good qualities in Kennedy. He's just not ready yet. I'm confident he'll try again. He should. He was terrific, and I think, with the help of a lot of support in key administrative positions, he would have made a good president. Not his time. Everything has its time. Mayor Pete's will come.
I dig the Beatles.
I've never been to a gym.
Still, I'm queer.
Great post with great points!
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