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Frank Rich: Angels in America

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Me. Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Aug-14-10 06:51 PM
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Frank Rich: Angels in America
“The proper names in her biographical sketch suggest a stereotype from a bygone New Yorker cartoon: Miss Hewitt’s Classes, the Ethel Walker School, Bryn Mawr, the Junior League. She “was introduced to society,” as they said of debutantes back then, at the Piping Rock Club, Locust Valley, N.Y., in 1947. As the fashionable wife of Samuel P. Peabody in the decades to follow, she shared the society pages with Pat Buckley, Babe Paley and Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. But to quote Tracy Lord, the socialite played by Katharine Hepburn in the classic high-society movie comedy “The Philadelphia Story,” “The time to make up your mind about people is never.” In 1985, Judith Peabody, a frequent contributor to the traditional good causes favored by those of her class, did the unthinkable by volunteering to work as a hands-on caregiver to AIDS patients and their loved ones.

Those patients were then mostly gay men, and, as Guy Trebay recently wrote in The Times, they were “treated not with compassion but as bearers of plague.” There was no drug regimen to combat AIDS, and there were many panicky rumors about how its death sentence could be spread through casual contact. People of all types and political persuasions shunned dying gay men even as they treated healthy gay men and lesbians as, at best, second-class citizens. The Times did not put the mysterious disease on Page 1 until after the casualty rate exceeded 500 and didn’t start covering it in earnest until Rock Hudson died of AIDS three years after that. In 1985, the term “gay” itself was an untouchable for writers in this newspaper.”…cont…

“Much has been said about the triumph of the odd-couple legal team, the former Bush v. Gore adversaries Ted Olson and David Boies, who opposed Prop 8 in court. But of equal significance is the high-powered lawyer on the other side, Charles Cooper. He was named one of the 10 best civil litigators in Washington in the same National Law Journal list that included Olson and, in his pre-Supreme Court incarnation, John Roberts. Yet, as Judge Walker made clear in his 136-page judgment, Cooper, for all his talent and efforts, couldn’t find facts to support his argument that full civil marital rights for same-sex couples would harm the institution of marriage, children or anyone else. Cooper only managed to summon two “expert” witnesses. In the judge’s determination, one undermined his credibility by giving testimony contradicting his own opinions while the other provided “evidence” rendered worthless by its lack of scientific methodology or even fundamental peer-review vetting.

Boies and Olson produced nine expert witnesses with the relevant professional and academic expertise lacking in Cooper’s duo and compiled an encyclopedic record of empirical findings that demolished the arguments for denying gay families equal rights under the law. In the understatement of The Economist, that record “now seems a high hurdle” for the Supreme Court to overturn. That could still happen, of course, and already there are signs of a campaign from the right to besmirch the likely swing justice, Anthony Kennedy. Though Kennedy was a Ronald Reagan appointee who wrote much of the unsigned decision in Bush v. Gore, that did not prevent him from being called “the most dangerous man in America” by the family-values czar James Dobson after Kennedy wrote a majority opinion decriminalizing gay sex in 2003.”…cont…

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/15/opinion/15rich.html?_r=1&ref=frankrich

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elleng Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Aug-14-10 07:07 PM
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1.  “I shall go wherever I am asked to participate for freedom,” she said.
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Me. Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Aug-14-10 08:42 PM
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2. A Kick For A Worthy Read
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Bluenorthwest Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Aug-14-10 09:12 PM
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3. This was such a wonderful read
It is really hard to emphasize enough how saintly crazy bold Judith Peabody was in 1985. People were fucking nuts, paranoid, there was not much useful fact and lots of harmful fiction running round.
And anyone who has not seen "Angels in America" or at the very least read it, you must NetFlix the HBO version at once, order in and watch all of it at once. Tony Kushner's play is one of the most important dramatic works of our time, it was an event of the time, a play for the ages. Anyone reading Democratic Underground would want to see it. Or read the play in print. DUers would also like his play "Homebody/Kabul" I recommend reading that, as I don't know of a filmed version.
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Me. Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Aug-14-10 10:58 PM
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6. You Just Never Know Do You?
Who's doing what.
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RainDog Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Aug-14-10 09:13 PM
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4. thank you for sharing this.
what a beautifully written piece.
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riderinthestorm Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Aug-14-10 09:42 PM
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5. Frank Rich, one of America's Angels as well. Thanks for posting. Great piece. nt
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FreeState Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Aug-14-10 11:13 PM
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7. An amazing article - we gay men have so many straight and gay men and women to look up to
Edited on Sat Aug-14-10 11:14 PM by FreeState
Women in particular were many of the first to help in the AIDS crisis. Though I'm fortunate enough to be HIV- I'll never forget those that have put their hearts into the struggle. It means the world.
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