India has just legalized gay sex. This is roughly one-sixth
of the world's population. A few years ago, this would have been unthinkable.
What happened? An admission about homosexual influences, by a famous
documentary, does much to explain society today.
We
must first go back to the 1960s, to an amazing documentary by CBS, hosted by
Mike Wallace, called "The Homosexuals."
In
the documentary, Mike Wallace noted that, as late as 1967:
Most
Americans are repelled by the mere notion of homosexuality. A CBS news survey
shows that two out of three Americans look upon homosexuals with disgust,
discomfort or fear… The majority of Americans favor legal punishment, even for
homosexual acts performed in private between consenting adults. "The Homosexuals,"
(6:39), CBS, 1967, with Mike Wallace.
Not
too long ago, people received severe sentences for homosexual behavior.
This
man is twenty-seven, college educated... He has been in jail three times for
committing homosexual acts. If he is arrested once more, he faces the
possibility of life in prison. "The Homosexuals,"
(6:03) CBS, 1967, with Mike Wallace.
Yet,
within a generation, homosexuality became accepted, and today it is celebrated,
almost as desirable and heroic. This would have been unthinkable, even in the
1960s.
I
have also noticed older people, whom I have known for decades, change their
attitudes. In the 1960s, they would have been one of those Americans who saw
homosexuality as disgusting. Now, they are "tolerant." The
brainwashing seems to have worked retroactively.
Do
not get me wrong! I am not advocating the recriminalization of consensual
homosexual acts. Some of the laws back then were unnecessarily strict. But
neither do I celebrate homosexuality as a good thing, something to be sought. I
would have preferred the limited accommodation of decriminalization, and
nothing more.
The
usual explanation given is that the Stonewall Riots of 1969 were the game
changer. When police raided a homosexual bar, the patrons fought back.
Homosexual rights were brought into the public eye. The problem is that the
Stonewall Riots were not the cause.
One
could track further back to the Mattachine Society founded
in 1950, or the drawings by Tom
of Finland, the latter of which would become the inspiration for the
Village People.
Simply
put, without Tom of Finland, there would have been no Village People. – The Guardian
An
amazing admission in the 1967 CBS documentary confirms what many have said
under their breaths, and what other have suspected.
Homosexuals
are discriminated against in almost all fields of employment, in all parts of the
country. But in the world of the creative arts, they received equal treatment;
indeed, some would say better treatment. There is even talk of a homosexual
mafia in the arts, dominating various fields. Theater, music, dance, fashion.
In
painting, there is the commonly expressed notion that the homosexuals influence
has been corrupting:
In
the fashion industry, many observers see an effort to blend the sexes, to
defeminize woman, to replace curve and counter with sexless, geometric
sterility… "The
Homosexuals," (31:05) CBS, 1967, with Mike Wallace.
If
someone said that out loud today, they would be charged with hate speech and
have their lives destroyed.
But
the problem is not even limited to homosexuality.
If
one were to watch fashion shows, with a discerning eye, one would wonder why so
much of women's fashion has women dressed like boys. The women look almost
androgynous.
This
in not even a recent development
1920s
women's clothing was also extremely androgynous, especially considering the
flouncy skirts and cruelly exaggerated waistlines that had gone before it
during the Victorian period. – A
History Of Androgyny In Fashion
Writers
have noted how the ideal runway model seems perilously close to looking
pre-pubescent.
Acne
Confirms: Fashion's Ideal Woman Is a 12-Year-Old Boy –Yahoo
Lifestyle
Now,
obviously, it is not the models who push this. It is the fashion designers. The
very ones that Mike Wallace said might belong to a "homosexual
mafia."
Neither
am I a fulminating fundamentalist who thinks women should not wear pants. I
think jeans look good on a woman, when they accent her curves and contours. I
do not expect all women to look like the quasi-androgynous Twiggy of the 1960s or
Kate Moss. And why would androgyny be pushed as the ideal, anyway?
Since
the rise of Hollywood, and mass media, we have allowed our culture to be
directed, and led, by a minority. Though it be politically incorrect to admit,
it seems that a disproportional amount of these people are what many, in the
1960s, would have called sexually deviant.
With
the advent of movies, they could influence the population, but only to a point.
If they became too radical, the public would not pay for the tickets. With
radio in the 1930s and 40s, there was no visual input. Androgyny does not
translate well over AM.
With
the introduction of visual TV in the 1950s and 60s, these creative
professionals set the tone. Most of the public had no choice about what was
broadcast. And since TV was ostensibly free at that time, there was no
disincentive not to watch. An advertiser might balk if things went too far, but
it was a process of erosion.
So
within a short period from 1967 to 1976, the media could move the public to
accept homosexual rights. Rod Stewart released "The Killing of Georgie,"
a song about the murder of a New York homosexual, and it got major airplay,
something which would have been unthinkable nine years earlier.
There
can be no doubt that Hollywood and New York were the most influential centers
of art in the Western world, though that may be changing. Leveraging this
influence, the embedded "homosexual mafia" changed the United States,
which then started the ball rolling to change the world. Hence… India, which
has just legalized gay sex.
A small "homosexual mafia" has
foisted itself on the planet, and quite successfully.
The key was their control of the media.
The present cultural war is over that
control. The internet truly democratized the media, which is no longer
centralized. Hence, Facebook and Twitter are now shadow banning.
What
would have been unthinkable 50 years ago – and might have landed one in jail –
is today lauded and heralded. And much of this is due to the influences of a
small, unrepresentative community. What is amazing is how easily people have
allowed themselves to be led, rather than think for themselves. This mafia
should never have had this much influence.
Now
that the internet has broken the monopoly of those creatives, they seek new
ways to reign in the true liberty that would counteract them.
Donald
Trump has angered feminists all over again, after a new report suggests that he
has told the female staff of his administration that they need to always
"dress like women" when at work. – The Telegraph
Trump
is not destroying democracy, he is contesting with the minority who would.
Mike Konrad is the pen name of an American who wishes he had availed
himself more fully of the opportunity to learn Spanish better in high school,
lo those many decades ago. He runs a website about the Arab community in South
America at http://latinarabia.com.