In the closet?
Thursday, December 6th, 2007
Are rumors that our Secretary of State is a lesbian true? Is this the reason that she is so reluctant to run for the Presidency? In order to broach these subjects, the Sunday Times reporter, Tony Allen-Mills, used the fig leaf of a National Enquirer article, “Who’s Gay and Who’s Not,” to denigrate the progress, however modest, made at the Annapolis Middle East summit in his December 2nd article, “Gay rumours eclipse Condi’s glory moment.”
This article brings up some interesting points.
- Is it an insult to call someone “gay?”
- Is someone’s private sex life a legitimate campaign or political issue? Most us would answer “no,” but notice the use of the word “private.” For example, marriage is a state-sanctioned institution, so marital infidelity is both a public and private matter, especially for those in positions of public trust – as an indicator of one’s propensity to violate one’s serious commitments. (Lying under oath about such infidelities is in no way excusable using the guise that it is strictly a “private” matter.) Likewise, public solicitation of sex in public bathrooms is not part of an individual’s “private” sex life. Additionally, salacious comments made by senior leaders to subordinates, especially interns, with whom they have come into contact in the course of conducting public business, while not always necessarily criminal, are certainly inappropriate and a matter legitimate public concern. (Apologies to Messrs. Clinton, Craig and Foley.)
- Tabloid articles are becoming “trial balloons.” If a story appeals to a particular journalist, for whatever reason, the tabloid story can become the basis for an article in a more mainstream publication. Allen-Mills described the motivation for such practices as a way for so-called mainstream publications to spice-up their content and compete with the Internet and tabloids.
The steady flow of salacious and often thinly sourced sex-related stories is causing headaches for US newspaper editors, who have been bludgeoned by shrinking circulations and internet competition yet are still clinging to values….The drift towards internet-fuelled sensationalism was deemed to be so serious earlier this year that the Columbia Journalism Review, a bastion of US media elitism, convened a panel of top editors to consider whether the government should step in to subsidise serious newspapers…
The reporter himself seems to have employed this “thinly sourced sex-related” strategy with the following anonymous quotations pulled from the National Enquirer article – not to mention the article’s title.
According to the buzz among political insiders, it’s an open secret that . . . Rice is gay. The piece quoted an unnamed “in-the-know” blogger as saying that during her years as provost of Stanford University in California, Rice was “completely out as a lesbian…”
The one fact that is used to corroborate the story is that Dr. Rice and a female friend bought a home together in 1998. Well, that’s certainly conclusive evidence! This morsel was uncovered by Glenn Kessler, a Washington Post correspondent, who is hawking his recently released book about Condi, The Confidante: Condoleezza Rice and the Creation of the Bush Legacy. (Do you think that he might have some small personal agenda? Or that he might just have some small, infinitesimal elements of bias?) If purchasing property with a member of the same sex is proof positive that one is homosexual, then there are a lot of us that need to become card-carrying members of Log Cabin Republicans. (website) Randy Bean, the woman with whom Dr. Rice purchased the property in question, has been interviewed in Radar magazine, in that publication’s “DC Confidential” column.
“Condi and I have been friends for 25 years,” she told us. “We co-own an investment property in Palo Alto. We do not share a home. Bean, who now works for Stanford University, told Kessler on his radio show that she was buried in medical bills, and Rice helped her buy the home along with another acquaintance, Coit Blacker, a Stanford professor who is openly gay.
Unless someone makes their sexuality a public issue by personal choice or public misconduct, then it should remain private. Once private sexuality becomes “fair game” for politics, we are in danger of having political discourse in our nation truly degenerate. Do we really want to have candidates for high offices asked about their private sex lives? For example, how many aging male politicians would like to discuss the intimate details of their treatment for prostate cancer and how it has affected their private sex life? Spouses and ex-spouses will asked about the use of sex toys, whether they’re multi-orgasmic, etc. It wouldn’t be long until Jerry Springer would be moderating presidential debates as accusations and innuendoes fly. Do we really want this?
The tabloid press does uncover important news items from time to time. Then again, a broken clock is right at least twice a day. Does anyone remember this Globe cover? (Or our blog post?) So which is it? Is Dr. Rice a lesbian, or a home-wrecking seductress? (We can already see where this is heading! We predict that the next time you see Condi on the cover a tabloid that she’ll be bisexual!) Enough is enough. Mainstream outlets should exercise extreme caution when citing the tabloids, lest they seek to join their titillating colleagues in the checkout line.
Please note: As far as we are aware, there’s no underlying racial implication to the expression, “The Black Swan.” Rather, it is the title of Nissam Nicholas Taleb’s book, The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable, released in April, 2007. With a penchant for citing philosophers and writers that (with luck) most of us haven’t heard about since freshman Philosophy 101 and Western Civilization 101, the book describes how we all handle, or mishandle in many cases, situations that involve the highly improbable, or what the writer terms “black swans.”
Regardless of your political philosophy, party affiliation, psychosocial milieu, etc. there is one core principal upon which the vast majority of Americans can agree: The US Presidency is not, or at least should not, be “for sale.”
When Condi becomes a candidate will she be able to become the next Teflon President? (Reagan was the first.) See our homepage post on Anita Kumar’s St. Petersburg Times
There are several biographies, written from different perspectives, that are being released in time for this summer and the 2008 election. At least two are available for “pre-order:” The Faith of Condoleezza Rice by Leslie Montgomery (Hardcover 


