Over the last few months Stonewall has been running ads on
the side of Strumpetville’s shiney red buses “some people are gay: get over it!”.
A very simple and effective message, and part of a campaign that is
complemented with posters and leaflets and T-shirts etc.
Ensue much hullabaloo and stroking of beards, oh yes indeed.
A group called the Core Issues Trust, supported by Anglican Mainstream, The largely
unsought battle between religious faith and sexual orientation continues apace,
it appears.
So what’s the issue? Well, the nominal reason is the
suggestion the ad promotes gay cures. We know, I think, that such ‘cures’ are utter rubbish, and if anything actively cause a lot of harm.
Does the advertisement itself claim to offer, or support, “gay
cures”? No, not really. But I think the man in the street would reasonably infer
that such a thing were possible, or at least that sexual orientation is
mutable. And we cannot ignore both Core Issues trust and Anglican Mainstream
focus on offering gay cures. Certainly the advertisement goes further than
arguing, as this article in the Daily Mail suggests, that homosexuality as an aberration
and as such we gayers need to “get over” our 'agenda'.
The Advertising Standards Authority, the regulator of advertisements
in the UK, has come in for much criticism for not banning the ads itself. But
should it? I used to work for the ASA and grapple with issues such as these. It
is implausible to ban advertisements because you disagree with their content or
message in principle; but on the other hand you can be so offensive that in
limited instances freedom of speech can, and should, be restricted.
The ASA cannot arbitrate on this before an advertisement is
run. Such a thing is censorship. If after seeing an advertisement someone has
grounds for complaint, that complaint should be fully considered and a decision
made in favour of one party or the other. That is what regulators do; they are in
the business of disappointing people. Not protecting them, on the grounds of
some moral code nobody agreed, from things they might not like.
The timing of the
advertisement, and the decision to ban it, can also not be ignored. The Mayor
is running for re-election on 3 May, and up to now the campaign has been a mud-slinging vileathon with no debate about real issues. Of the party (right of centre) that is the main
partner in the unpopular national coalition government, and one that is consistently considered to
be sleazy and nasty, and in an incredibly diverse and largely left leaning city…
I strongly suspect he’ll have swung some of those swing votes. Being sued by
people who are to me clearly a hate group (although I’m sure they sincerely don’t
see themselves as such, take out the words gay or homosexual in what they write
and replace them with black of Jewish and see how it reads then) won’t hurt
either, methinks.
Cynical? Perhaps. But should then the advert be run? Well,
freedom of speech is a right for those who understand, as all sane adult men
and women do, their responsibilities. We must think before we speak, and
sometimes consider whether we need to speak at all. So it can’t always be
absolute.
If I were Mayor of Strumpetville – or better still, king and
tyrant – then I would let the advert run, but publicly and loudly voice my
disagreement with its message and my view of those behind it. I would use it as
a reason to keep equality, rights (and obligations), tackling hatred, and proper
education about sexual health sand orientation high on the list of social
priorities
In the meantime we have to accept that there are those who
disagree with, or simply hate, homosexuality, and this must be tackled through
open and honest debate. It creates climate of fear that stops people freely
living their lives. Those, like the Anglican Mainstream or the Daily Mail, who
clearly have an agenda all their own that is closer to something far more right
wing and pernicious than sleaziness or nastiness must not be driven underground
or simply banned. They have to be shown to be wrong.
1 comment:
Great post Mike
Funny when I read the offending slogan at first, I didn't get the 'sexuality cure' message.
I just thought it was an attempt at a humorous response to that 'I'm the only gay in the village' gay victim mentality which seems to piss a lot of straight people off
'Not Gay! Ex-Gay, Post-Gay and Proud! Get over it!'
I (incorrectly)read as 'Neither Gay, nor Ex-Gay nor Post-Gay Just Straight and Proud! You've got your rights now move on and get over it!'
I was up in London last week with my fella and we saw one of the 'Some People Are Gay..' slogans on a double-decker and we were laughing at how it made the bus seem like a gay bus full of gay people sitting at the windows. I suppose most of the people on the bus would have been unaware of the proud declaration emblazoned over their chosen means of transport.
Hmm! What is it with churches and sexuality? Some gays are spiritual-get over it! Most churches aren't- sad but true!
Love
GS
x
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