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'07 Authors Insider Tips
FictionCraft by Louisa Burton Formatting Your Manuscript Scams / Choosing an Agent Pitching Your Novel... From The Call to Published... Hard Business From Greg Herren Who Is Telling This Story? It’s Work, Not A Hobby Where Ideas Come From Sexy on the Page With Shanna Germain Plotting Erotic Fiction Seducing Your Muse Creating Characters... Description, Action & Dialogue Fucking on Paper Ten No-Nos of Erotic Fiction Climactic Moments: First Draft Critique Groups Revising Your Erotic Story Finding the Perfect Markets... Just Submit Already Rejections and Acceptances Two Girls Kissing With Amie M. Evans Verb Tense Confusion Coming Up with Story Ideas Attend a Writers’ Conference The Fundamentals of POV Should I Sign That? Etiquette for Authors Erotica is Serious Work No Body Writes for Free... Shameless Self Promotions The Myth of Writer's Block The Write Stuff From Ashley Lister The Time is Write The Beautiful People A Book by Any Other... Synopsis: the Necessary Evil Erotica or Porn? Feedback Whine 2007 Smutters Lounge Ashley Lister Submits by Ashley Lister What's it like being a writer? Blog An Apology to Salespeople Get All Worked Up With J.T. Benjamin About Secrets The Perfect Fuck About Choices The Age of Consent The Kingmaker Kids and Sex M.Y.O.B. The Price of Beauty The G.O.P. All Worked Up About Hate Real Men Pondering Porn With Ann Regentin Good Sex: A Physics Lesson Meet Frankenstein Thoughts on the Orgasm Gap The Very Bloody Marys The Doomsday Erection Online Threesome Porn |
All Worked Up About Choices
Here in the United States, we’re fascinated by the concept of rebels. The notion of one person or one small group of people bucking "the system" and going their own way is deeply rooted in our culture and in our collective mythology. Of course, this country was founded by a ragtag bunch of anti-establishment traitors who, after defeating the British Empire, became patriots. More than one hundred and forty years after Lee’s surrender at Appomattox, residents of states south of the Mason-Dixon line take great pride in being called rebels, so much so that some of them take great and almost confrontational pride in displaying the flag of the Confederate States of America. On a more individual basis, some of our most popular historical figures qualify as being rebels even when their activities were actually crimes. Consider how people like Billy The Kid, Jesse James, Al Capone, Lucky Luciano, and John Gotti achieved celebrity status in their respective days. On our favorite television shows and movies, the heroes are inevitably anti-establishment loners. How many TV and movie cops, secret agents, cowboys, soldiers and athletes are portrayed as lone wolves bucking the system and swimming against the tide, seeking their own brand of justice, playing by their own rules and living their lives to the fullest as they see fit? Rooster Cogburn, Shane, Huckleberry Finn, the Corleones, Rambo, and any role portrayed by Chuck Norris, Mel Gibson, or Vin Diesel. We in the United States practically worship those who, as Mr. Frost put it, took the road less traveled by. Most of them, anyway. See, all of the examples I provided above have one thing in common besides being considered rebels. They’re all straight. That makes their acts of rebellion okay. Gay people have been in the news a lot lately, with all the criticism and vicious rhetoric that seems to come with the territory. For example, former NBA player John Amaechi just published a book in which he admitted he’s gay. This prompted another former NBA player, Tim Hardaway, to come out of his own closet and admit he’s a bigoted, homophobic asshole. On WAXY-AM in Miami, Florida, Hardaway said to Dan Le Batard about what he thought of possibly having a gay teammate. "You know, I hate gay people, so I let it be known," Hardaway said. "I don't like gay people and I don't like to be around gay people. I am homophobic. I don't like it. It shouldn't be in the world or in the United States." When Hardaway was asked how he’d react if a teammate came out while both he and Hardaway were still active in the league, Hardaway said, "First of all, I wouldn't want him on my team. And second of all, if he was on my team, I would, you know, really distance myself from him because, uh, I don't think that's right. And you know I don't think he should be in the locker room while we're in the locker room. I wouldn't even be a part of that." Hardaway was justifiably crucified in the media for his comments, and one of the more popular forms of criticism was to say, "Take Hardaway’s rant and substitute the word ‘black’ for the word ‘gay’ and you see how hateful his opinions are." However, Hardaway had his defenders, too, and many of them relied on the old myth that homophobia is different than racism. Whereas people have no say in whether they’re born black or white or yellow, homosexuals "decide" to be gay. You see, if somebody’s born a certain way it’s really not fair to be prejudiced against him or her for it. However, if someone makes a lifestyle choice to be a certain way, being a hateful bigot towards him or her is perfectly acceptable. Sorry, I don’t buy it. Take John Amaechi, for example. Does anybody really think he chose to subject himself to the kind of bile Tim Hardaway’s been spewing forth? That Amaechi weighed the plusses and minuses and said, "You know what? I’m going to try being gay for a while?" Now, the evidence is pretty clear that homosexuality is no more a choice for most people than is eye color or an allergy to peanuts. I won’t bore you with an analysis of what’s called the "gay gene" or the genetics of homosexuality, since I don’t understand most of it myself, anyway. (I was a liberal arts major). Suffice it to say, most of the scientific community is convinced that people have no control over which gender they are sexually attracted to. Of course, homophobes don’t need science or common sense. They just need an excuse to hate, and by claiming gays choose to be gay, it’s their own fault when they get humiliated, persecuted, and beaten. But then again, the "choice" excuse is also a great way to wiggle out from under an uncomfortable stigma. You remember Ted Haggard, of course? He’s the high-profile former pastor for Colorado’s New Life Church who had to resign in disgrace when it came out he’d been having a long-term affair with a gay male prostitute. Well, it turns out all that gayness was just a passing phase! After only three weeks at an Arizona treatment center with four fellow Evangelical pastors, it was announced that Rev. Haggard is completely heterosexual. I kid you not. Of course, the Holy Terrors have been claiming for years that gays can be cured of their homosexuality, but this is revolutionary! Who knew it could be as simple as spending three weeks in the Arizona desert with four other men? I’m not saying I doubt that Reverend Haggard was cured….okay, maybe I am. Think about it. If someone said that after only three weeks of therapy, he was cured of alcoholism or depression (or a fondness for crystal meth), would you believe him? As I said before, I don’t buy the whole "lifestyle choice" bunkum. But let’s, for the sake of argument, say that people can choose to be gay. So what? America loves people who go against the grain. Who live the lives they choose, and who are willing to bear the consequences, even if those choices take them down the road less traveled. As long as they’re not hurting anyone else, let them be gay, right? They’re free agents, they’re capable of rational thought and knowing for themselves what’s best. Let them choose and live with those choices, and it ain’t nobody’s business but their own. After all, we make lifestyle choices every day. We choose to wear the red tie or the yellow tie. We choose between thongs and granny panties. Take the bus or fight traffic? Paper or plastic? CSI or Scrubs?" Condoms or diaphragms? Whips and velvet-lined cuffs or the silk ropes and the paddle? People even choose which faith to live by, which religious leader to follow, which god to whom they pray. If we were to offer blanket condemnations to people for the religious decisions they made, to justify prejudice and bigotry and persecution because someone chose to live by a certain religious creed, even a creed we might disagree with, well…that would be wrong, wouldn’t it? Instead of substituting the word "black" for the word gay" in Tim Hardaway’s rant, let’s substitute a real lifestyle choice. In place of the word, "gay," let’s substitute words like, "Jew," "Muslim," or "Catholic." Is that kind of hatred still considered acceptable? J.T. Benjamin ______
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'07 Book Reviews
Anthologies A for Amour / B for Bondage Review by Ashley Lister Best Women's Erotica '07 Review by Ashley Lister The Butcher, The Baker... Review by Ashley Lister C is for Coeds Review by Ashley Lister Cream: The Best of ERWA Review by Ashley Lister Cream: The Best of ERWA Perceptions by Cervo Coming Together for the Cure Review by Lisabet Cross-Dressing Review by Ashley Lister F is for Fetish Review by Ashley Lister Got a Minute? Review by Ashley Lister He's on Top Review by Ashley Lister Love on the Dark Side Review by Angelika Devlyn Lust: ...Fantasies for Women Review by Ashley Lister The Mammoth Book Vol 6 Review by Lisabet Sarai Naughty Spanking Stories Review by Ashley Lister Quickies 1 Review by Angelika Devlyn She's on Top Review by Ashley Lister Sixteen of the Best Review by Ashley Lister Novels Amorous Woman Review by Lisabet Sarai The Boss Review by Angelika Devlyn Burning Bright Review by Lisabet Sarai Call Me By Your Name Review by Lisabet Sarai Cockhold Review by Lisabet Sarai Continuum Review by Ashley Lister Dark Designs Review by Ashley Lister Equal Opportunities Review by Lisabet Sarai Enthralled Review by Angelika Devlyn Flood Review by Angelika Devlyn Gothic Blue Review by Ashley Lister Hotbed Review by Ashley Liste The Lords of Satyr: Nicholas Review by Helen E. H. Madden Love Song of the Dominatrix Review by Angelika Devlyn Ménage Review by Angelika Devlyn Riding the Storm Review by Lisabet Sarai The Silver Collar Review by Ashley Lister Split Review by Ashley Lister Suite Seventeen Review by Ashley Lister Sweet as Sin Review by Angelika Devlyn Tiffany Twisted Review by Lisabet Sarai Top of Her Game Review by Angelika Devlyn Whalebone Strict Review by Ashley Lister Wife Swap Review by Gary Russell Wings of Madness Review by Angelika Devlyn Gay Erotica Historical Obsessions Review by Erastes Homosex: 60 Years of Gay... Review by Erastes Mammoth Book of New Gay... Review by Erastes Standish Review by Lisabet Sarai Lesbian Erotica Iridescence:...Lesbian Erotica Review by Lisabet Sarai Sex Guides The Path of Service Review by Ashley Lister Secrets of Porn Star Sex Review by Ashley Lister Touch Me There Review by Ashley Lister Non-Fiction Concertina: An Erotic Memoir... Review by Rob Hardy Daddy's Girl Review by Ashley Lister Dirt for Art's Sake Review by Rob Hardy Entangled Lives Review by Lisabet Sarai Impotence: A Cultural History Review by Rob Hardy I, Goldstein: My Screwed... Review by Rob Hardy In Praise of the Whip Review by Rob Hardy Insatiable: ...Porn Star Review by William S. Dean Letters of a Portuguese Nun Review by Rob Hardy Mississippi Sissy Review by Rob Hardy Ron Jeremy Review by Rob Hardy Virgin: The Untouched... Review by Rob Hardy The Year of Yes Review by Rob Hardy |
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