A Gay Manifesto (1970)
by Carl Wittman
San Francisco is a refugee camp for
homosexuals. We have fled here from every part of the nation, and like refugees
elsewhere, we came not because it is so great here, but because it was so bad
there. By the tens of thousands, we fled small towns where to be ourselves would
endanger our jobs and any hope of a decent life; we have fled from blackmailing
cops, from families who disowned or ‘tolerated’ us; we have been drummed out of
the armed services, thrown out of schools, fired from jobs, beaten by punks and
policemen.
And we have formed a ghetto, out of self-protection. It is a ghetto rather than
a free territory because it is sill theirs. Straight cops patrol us, straight
legislators govern us, straight employers keep us in line, straight money
exploits us. We have pretended everything is OK, because we haven’t been able to
see how to change it - we’ve been afraid.
In the past year there has been an awakening of gay liberation ideas and energy.
How it began we don’t know; maybe we were inspired by black people and their
freedom movement; we learned how to stop pretending form the hip revolution.
Amerika in all its ugliness has surfaced with the war and our national leaders.
And we are revulsed by the quality of our ghetto life.
Where once there was frustration, alienation, and cynicism, there are new
characteristics among us. We are full of love for each other and are showing it;
we are full of anger at what has been done to us. And as we recall all the
self-censorship and repression for so many years, a reservoir of tears pours out
of our eyes. And we are euphoric, high, with the initial flourish of a movement.
We want to make ourselves clear: our first job is to free ourselves; that means
clearing our heads of the garbage that’s been poured into them. This article is
an attempt at raising a number of issues, and presenting some ideas to replace
the old ones. It is primarily for ourselves, a starting point of discussion. If
straight people of good will find it useful in understanding what liberation is
about, so much the better.
It should also be clear that these are the views of one person, and are
determined not only by my homosexuality, but my being white, male, middle class.
It is my individual consciousness. Our group consciousness will evolve as we get
ourselves together - we are only at the beginning.
I. ON ORIENTATION
1. What homosexuality is: Nature leaves undefined the object of sexual desire.
The gender of that object is imposed socially. Humans originally made
homosexuality taboo because they needed every bit of energy to produce and raise
children: survival of species was a priority. With overpopulation and
technological change, that taboo continued only to exploit us and enslave us.
As kids we refused to capitulate to demands that we ignore our feelings toward
each other. Somewhere we found the strength to resist being indoctrinated, and
we should count that among our assets. We have to realize that our loving each
other is a good thing, not an unfortunate thing, and that we have a lot to teach
straights about sex, love, strength, and resistance.
Homosexuality is not a lot of things. It is not a makeshift in the absence of
the opposite sex; it is not a hatred or rejection of the opposite sex; it is not
genetic; it is not the result of broken homes except inasmuch as we could see
the sham of American marriage. Homosexuality is the capacity to love someone of
the same sex.
2. Bisexuality: Bisexuality is good; it is the capacity to love people of either
sex. The reason so few of us are bisexual is because society made such a big
stink about homosexuality that we got forced into seeing ourselves as either
straight or non-straight. Also, many gays go turned off to the ways men are
supposed to act with women and vice-versa, which is pretty fucked-up. Gays will
begin to turn on to women when 1) it’s something that we do because we want to,
and not because we should, and 2) when women’s liberation changes the nature of
heterosexual relationships.
We continue to call ourselves homosexual, not bisexual, even if we do make it
with the opposite sex also, because saying “Oh, I’m Bi” is a copy out for a gay.
We get told it’s OK to sleep with guys as long as we sleep with women, too, and
that’s still putting homosexuality down. We’ll be gay until everyone has
forgotten that it’s an issue. Then we’ll begin to be complete.
3. Heterosexuality: Exclusive heterosexuality is fucked up. It reflects a fear
of people of the same sex, it’s anti-homosexual, and it is fraught with
frustration. Heterosexual sex is fucked up too; ask women’s liberation about
what straight guys are like in bed. Sex is aggression for the male chauvinist;
sex is obligation for the traditional woman. And among the young, the modern,
the hip, it’s only a subtle version of the same. For us to become heterosexual
in the sense that our straight brothers and sisters are is not a cure, it is a
disease.
II. ON WOMEN
1. Lesbianism: It’s been a male-dominated society for too long, and that has
warped both men and women. So gay women are going to see things differently from
gay men; they are going to feel put down as women, too. Their liberation is tied
up with both gay liberation and women’s liberation.
This paper speaks form the gay male viewpoint. And although some of the ideas in
it may be equally relevant to gay women, it would be arrogant to presume this to
be a manifesto for lesbians.
We look forward to the emergence of a lesbian liberation voice. The existence of
a lesbian caucus within the New York Gay Liberation Front has been very helpful
in challenging male chauvinism among gay guys, and anti-gay feelings among
women’s lib.
2. Male Chauvinism: All men are infected with male chauvinism - we were brought
up that way. It means we assume that women play subordinate roles and are less
human than ourselves. (At an early gay liberation meeting one guy said, “Why
don’t we invite women’s liberation - they can bring sandwiches and coffee.”) It
is no wonder that so few gay women have become active in our groups.
Male chauvinism, however, is not central to us. We can junk it much more easily
than straight men can. For we understand oppression. We have largely opted out
of a system which oppresses women daily - our egos are not built on putting
women down and having them build us up. Also, living in a mostly male world we
have become used to playing different roles, doing or own shit-work. And
finally, we have a common enemy: the big male chauvinists are also the big
anti-gays.
But we need to purge male chauvinism, both in behavior and in thought among us.
Chick equals nigger equals queer. Think it over.
3. Women’s liberation: They are assuming their equality and dignity and in doing
so are challenging the same things we are: the roles, the exploitation of
minorities by capitalism, the arrogant smugness of straight white male
middle-class Amerika. They are our sisters in struggle.
Problems and differences will become clearer when we begin to work together. One
major problem is our own male chauvinism. Another is uptightness and hostility
to homosexuality that many women have - that is the straight in them. A third
problem is differing views on sex: sex for them has meant oppression, while for
us it has been a symbol of our freedom. We must come to know and understand each
other’s style, jargon and humor.
III. ON ROLES
1. Mimicry of straight society: We are children of straight society. We still
think straight: that is part of our oppression. One of the worst of straight
concepts is inequality. Straight (also white, English, male, capitalist)
thinking views things in terms of order and comparison. A is before B, B is
after A; one is below two is below three; there is no room for equality. This
idea gets extended to male/female, on top/on bottom, spouse/not spouse,
heterosexual/homosexual, boss/worker, white/black and rich/poor. Our social
institutions cause and reflect this verbal hierarchy. This is Amerika.
We’ve lived in these institutions all our lives. Naturally we mimic the roles.
For too long we mimicked these roles to protect ourselves - a survival
mechanism. Now we are becoming free enough to shed the roles which we’ve picked
up from the institutions which have imprisoned us.
“Stop mimicking straights, stop censoring ourselves.”
2. Marriage: Marriage is a prime example of a straight institution fraught with
role playing. Traditional marriage is a rotten, oppressive institution. Those of
us who have been in heterosexual marriages too often have blamed our gayness on
the breakup of the marriage. No. They broke up because marriage is a contract
which smothers both people, denies needs, and places impossible demands on both
people. And we had the strength, again, to refuse to capitulate to the roles
which were demanded of us.
Gay people must stop gauging their self-respect by how well they mimic straight
marriages. Gay marriages will have the same problems as straight ones except in
burlesque. For the usual legitimacy and pressures which keep straight marriages
together are absent, e.g., kids, what parents think, what neighbors say.
To accept that happiness comes through finding a groovy spouse and settling
down, showing the world that “we’re just the same as you” is avoiding the real
issues, and is an expression of self-hatred.
3. Alternatives to Marriage: People want to get married for lots of good
reasons, although marriage won’t often meet those needs or desires. We’re all
looking for security, a flow of love, and a feeling of belonging and being
needed.
These needs can be met through a number of social relationships and living
situations. Things we want to get away from are: 1. exclusiveness, propertied
attitudes toward each other, a mutual pact against the rest of the world; 2.
promises about the future, which we have no right to make and which prevent us
from , or make us feel guilty about, growing; 3. inflexible roles, roles which
do not reflect us at the moment but are inherited through mimicry and inability
to define equalitarian relationships.
We have to define for ourselves a new pluralistic, rolefree social structure for
ourselves. It must contain both the freedom and physical space for people to
live alone, live together for a while, live together for a long time, either as
couples or in larger numbers; and the ability to flow easily from one of these
states to another as our needs change.
Liberation for gay people is defining for ourselves how and with whom we live,
instead of measuring our relationship in comparison to straight ones, with
straight values.
4. Gay ‘stereotypes’: The straight’s image of the gay world is defined largely
by those of us who have violated straight roles. There is a tendency among
‘homophile’ groups to deplore gays who play visible roles - the queens and the
nellies. As liberated gays, we must take a clear stand. 1) Gays who stand out
have become our first martyrs. They came out and withstood disapproval before
the rest of us did. 2) If they have suffered from being open, it is straight
society whom we must indict, not the queen.
5. Closet queens: This phrase is becoming analogous to ‘Uncle Tom.’ To pretend
to be straight sexually, or to pretend to be straight socially, is probably the
most harmful pattern of behavior in the ghetto. The married guy who makes it on
the side secretly; the guy who will go to bed once but won’t develop any gay
relationships; the pretender at work or school who changes the gender of the
friend he’s talking about; the guy who’ll suck cock in the bushes but won’t go
to bed.
If we are liberated we are open with our sexuality. Closet queenery must end.
Come out.
But: in saying come out, we have to have our heads clear about a few things: 1)
closet queens are our brothers, and must be defended against attacks by straight
people; 2) the fear of coming out is not paranoia; the stakes are high: loss of
family ties, loss of job, loss of straight friends - these are all reminders
that the oppression is not just in our heads. It’s real. Each of us must make
the steps toward openness at our own speed and on our own impulses. Being open
is the foundation of freedom: it has to be built solidly. 3) “Closet queen” is a
broad term covering a multitude of forms of defense, self-hatred, lack of
strength, and habit. We are all closet queens in some ways, and all of us had to
come out - very few of us were ‘flagrant’ at the age of seven! We must afford
our brothers and sisters the same patience we afforded ourselves. And while
their closet queenery is part of our oppression, it’s more a part of theirs.
They alone can decide when and how.
IV. ON OPPRESSION
It is important to catalog and understand the different facets of our
oppression. There is no future in arguing about degrees of oppression. A lot of
‘movement’ types come on with a line of shit about homosexuals not being
oppressed as much as blacks or Vietnamese or workers or women. We don’t happen
to fit into their ideas of class or caste. Bull! When people feel oppressed,
they act on that feeling. We feel oppressed. Talk about the priority of black
liberation or ending imperialism over and above gay liberation is just anti-gay
propaganda.
1. Physical attacks: We are attacked, beaten, castrated and left dead time and
time again. There are half a dozen known unsolved slayings in San Francisco
parks in the last few years. “Punks,” often of minority groups who look around
for someone under them socially, feel encouraged to beat up on “queens” and cops
look the other way. That used to be called lynching.
Cops in most cities have harassed our meeting places: bars and baths and parks.
They set up entrapment squads. A Berkeley brother was slain by a cop in April
when he tried to split after finding out that the trick who was making advances
to him was a cop. Cities set up ‘pervert’ registration, which if nothing else
scares our brothers deeper into the closet.
One of the most vicious slurs on us is the blame for prison ‘gang rapes.’ These
rapes are invariably done by people who consider themselves straight. The
victims of these rapes are us and straights who can’t defend themselves. The
press campaign to link prison rapes with homosexuality is an attempt to make
straights fear and despise us, so they can oppress us more. It’s typical of the
fucked-up straight mind to think that homosexual sex involves tying a guy down
and fucking him. That’s aggression, not sex. If that’s what sex is for a lot of
straight people, that’s a problem they have to solve, not us.
2. Psychological warfare: Right from the beginning we have been subjected to a
barrage of straight propaganda. Since our parents don’t know any homosexuals, we
grow up thinking that we are alone and different and perverted. Our school
friends identify ‘queer’ with any non-conformist or bad behavior. Our elementary
school teachers tell us not to talk to strangers or accept rides. Television,
billboards and magazines put forth a false idealization of male/female
relationships, and make us wish we were different, wish we were ‘in.’ In family
living class we’re taught how we’re supposed to turn out. And all along, the
best we hear if anything about homosexuality is that it’s an unfortunate
problem.
3. Self-oppression: As gay liberation grows, we will find our uptight brothers
and sisters, particularly those who are making a buck off our ghetto, coming on
strong to defend the status quo. This is self oppression: ‘don’t rock the boat’;
‘things in SF are OK’; ‘gay people just aren’t together’; ‘I’m not oppressed.’
These lines are right out of the mouths of the straight establishment. A large
part of our oppression would end if we would end if we would stop putting
ourselves and our pride down.
4. Institutional: Discrimination against gays is blatant, if we open our eyes.
Homosexual relationships are illegal, and even if these laws are not regularly
enforced, they encourage and enforce closet queenery. The bulk of the social
work psychiatric field looks upon homosexuality as a problem, and treats us as
sick. Employers let it be known that our skills are acceptable as long as our
sexuality is hidden. Big business and government are particularly notorious
offenders.
The discrimination in the draft and armed services is a pillar of the general
attitude towards gays. If we are willing to label ourselves publicly not only as
homosexual but as sick, then we qualify for deferment; and if we’re not
‘discreet’ (dishonest) we get drummed out of the service. Hell, no, we won’t go,
of course not, but we can’t let the army fuck over us this way, either.
V. ON SEX
1. What sex is: It is both creative expression and communication: good when it
is either, and better when it is both. Sex can also be aggression, and usually
is when those involved do not see each other as equals; and it can also be
perfunctory, when we are distracted or preoccupied. These uses spoil what is
good about it.
I like of think of good sex in terms of playing the violin: with both people on
one level seeing the other body as an object capable of creating beauty when
they play it well; and on a second level the players communicating through their
mutual production and appreciation of beauty. As in good music, you get totally
into it - and coming back out of that state of consciousness is like finishing a
work of art or coming back from an episode of an acid or mescaline trip. And to
press the analogy further: the variety of music is infinite and varied,
depending on the capabilities of the players, both as subjects and as objects.
Solos, duets, quartets (symphonies, even, if you happen to dig Romantic music!)
are possible. The variations in gender, response, and bodies are like different
instruments. And perhaps what we have called sexual ‘orientation’ probably just
means that we have not yet learned to turn on to the total range of musical
expression.
2. Objectification: In this scheme, people are sexual objects, but they are also
subjects, and are human beings who appreciate themselves as object and subject.
This use of human bodies as objects is legitimate (not harmful) only when it is
reciprocal. If one person is always object and the other subject, it stifles the
human being in both of them. Objectification must also be open and frank. By
silence we often assume or let the other person assume that sex means
commitments: if it does, ok; but if not, say it. (Of course, it’s not all that
simple: our capabilities for manipulation are unfathomed - all we can do is
try.)
Gay liberation people must understand that women have been treated exclusively
and dishonestly as sexual objects. A major part of their liberation is to play
down sexual objectification and to develop other aspects of themselves which
have been smothered so long. We respect this. We also understand that a few
liberated women will be appalled or disgusted at the open and prominent place
that we put sex in our lives; and while this is a natural response from their
experience, they must learn what it means for us.
For us, sexual objectification is a focus of our quest for freedom. It is
precisely that which we are not supposed to share with each other. Learning how
to be open and good with each other sexually is part of our liberation. And one
obvious distinction: objectification of sex for us is something we choose to do
among ourselves, while for women it is imposed by their oppressors.
3. On positions and roles: Much of our sexuality has been perverted through
mimicry of straights, and warped from self-hatred. These sexual perversions are
basically anti-gay:
“I like to make it with straight guys”
“I’m not gay, but I like to be ‘done’”
“I like to fuck, but don’t want to be fucked”
“I don’t like to be touched above the neck”
This is role playing at its worst; we must transcend these roles. We strive for
democratic, mutual, reciprocal sex. This does not mean that we are all mirror
images of each other in bed, but that we break away from the roles which enslave
us. We already do better in bed than straights do, and we can be better to each
other than we have been.
4. Chickens and Studs: Face it, nice bodies and young bodies are attributes,
they’re groovy. They are inspiration for art, for spiritual elevation, for good
sex. The problem arises only in the inability to relate to people of the same
age, or people who don’t fit the plastic stereotypes of a good body. At that
point, objectification eclipses people, and expresses self-hatred: “I hate gay
people, and I don’t like myself, but if a stud (or chicken) wants to make it
with me, I can pretend I’m someone other than me.”
A note on exploitation of children: kids can take care of themselves, and are
sexual beings way earlier than we’d like to admit. Those of us who began
cruising in early adolescence know this, and we were doing the cruising, not
being debauched by dirty old men. Scandals such as the one in Boise, Idaho -
blaming a “ring” of homosexuals for perverting their youth - are the
fabrications of press and police and politicians. And as for child molesting,
the overwhelming amount is done by straight guys to little girls: it is not
particularly a gay problem, and is caused by the frustrations resulting form
anti-sex puritanism.
5. Perversion: We’ve been called perverts enough to be suspect of any usage of
the word. Still many of us shrink from the idea of certain kinds of sex: with
animals, sado/masochism, dirty sex (involving piss or shit). Right off, even
before we take the time to learn any more, there are some things to get
straight:
1. we shouldn’t be apologetic to straights about gays whose sex lives we don’t
understand or share;
2. it’s not particularly a gay issue, except that gay people are probably less
hung up about sexual experimentation;
3. let’s get perspective: even if we were to get into the game of deciding
what’s good for someone else, the harm done in these ‘perversions’ is
undoubtedly less dangerous or unhealthy than is tobacco or alcohol.
4. While they can be reflections of neurotic or self-hating patterns, they may
also be enactments of spiritual or important phenomena: e.g. sex with animals
may be the beginning of interspecies communication: some dolphin-human
breakthroughs have been made on the sexual level; e.g. one guy who says he digs
shit during sex occasionally says it’s not the taste or texture, but a symbol
that he’s so far into sex that those things no longer bug him; e.g.
sado/masochism, when consensual, can be described as a highly artistic endeavor,
a ballet the constraints of which are thresholds of pain and pleasure.
VI. ON OUR GHETTO
We are refugees from Amerika. So we came to the ghetto - and as other ghettos,
it has its negative and positive aspects. Refugee camps are better than what
preceded them, or people never would have come. But they are still enslaving, if
only that we are limited to being ourselves there and only there.
Ghettos breed self-hatred. We stagnate here, accepting the status quo. The
status quo is rotten. We are all warped by our oppression, and in the isolation
of the ghetto we blame ourselves rather than our oppressors.
Ghettos breed exploitation: Landlords find they can charge exorbitant rents and
get away with it, because of the limited area which us safe to live in openly.
Mafia control of bars and baths in NYC is only one example of outside money
controlling our institutions for their profit. In San Francisco the Tavern Guild
favors maintaining the ghetto, for it is through ghetto culture that they make a
buck. We crowd their bars not because of their merit but because of the absence
of any other social institution. The Guild has refused to let us collect defense
funds or pass out gay liberation literature in their bars - need we ask why?
Police or con men who shake down the straight gay in return for not revealing
him; the bookstores and movie makers who keep raising prices because they are
the only outlet for pornography; heads of ‘modeling’ agencies and other pimps
who exploit both the hustlers and the johns - these are the parasites who
flourish in the ghetto.
SAN FRANCISCO - Ghetto or Free Territory: Our ghetto certainly is more beautiful
and larger and more diverse than most ghettos, and is certainly freer than the
rest of Amerika. That’s why we’re here. But it isn’t ours. Capitalists make
money off of us, cops patrol us, government tolerates us as long as we shut up,
and daily we work for and pay taxes to those who oppress us.
To be a free territory, we must govern ourselves, set up our own institutions,
defend ourselves, and use our won energies to improve our lives. The emergence
of gay liberation communes, and out own paper is a good start. The talk about
gay liberation coffee shop/dance hall should be acted upon. Rural retreats,
political action offices, food cooperatives, a free school, unalienating bars
and after hours places - they must be developed if we are to have even the
shadow of a free territory.
VII. ON COALITION
Right now the bulk of our work has to be among ourselves - self educating,
fending off attacks, and building free territory. Thus basically we have to have
a gay/straight vision of the world until the oppression of gays is ended.
But not every straight is our enemy. Many of us have mixed identities, and have
ties with other liberation movements: women, blacks, other minority groups; we
may also have taken on an identity which is vital to us: ecology, dope,
ideology. And face it: we can’t change Amerika alone: Who do we look to for
collaboration?
1. Women’s Liberation: summarizing earlier statements, 1) they are our closest
ally; we must try hard to get together with them. 2) a lesbian caucus is
probably the best way to attack gay guys’ male chauvinism, and challenge the
straightness of women’s liberation; 3) as males we must be sensitive to their
developing identities as women, and respect that; if we know what our freedom is
about, they certainly know what’s best for them.
2. Black liberation: This is tenuous right now because of the uptightness and
supermasculinity of many black men (which is understandable). Despite that, we
must support their movement, particularly when they are under attack form the
establishment; we must show them that we mean business; and we must figure out
which our common enemies are: police, city hall, capitalism.
3. Chicanos: Basically the same problem as with blacks: trying to overcome
mutual animosity and fear, and finding ways to support them. The extra problem
of super up-tightness and machismo among Latin cultures, and the traditional
pattern of Mexicans beating up “queers” can be overcome: we’re both oppressed,
and by the same people at the top.
4. White radicals and ideologues: We’re not, as a group, Marxist or communist.
We haven’t figured out what kind of political/economic system is good for us as
gays. Neither capitalist or socialist countries have treated us as anything
other than non grata so far.
But we know we are radical, in that we know the system that we’re under now is a
direct source of oppression, and it’s not a question of getting our share of the
pie. The pie is rotten.
We can look forward to coalition and mutual support with radical groups if they
are able to transcend their anti-gay and male chauvinist patterns. We support
radical and militant demands when they arise, e.g. Moratorium, People’s Park;
but only as a group; we can’t compromise or soft-peddle our gay identity.
Problems: because radicals are doing somebody else’s thing, they tend to avoid
issues which affect them directly, and see us as jeopardizing their ‘work’ with
other groups (workers, blacks). Some years ago a dignitary of SDS on a community
organization project announced at an initial staff meeting that there would be
no homosexuality (or dope) on the project. And recently in New York, a movement
group which had a coffee-house get-together after a political rally told the
gays to leave when they started dancing together. (It’s interesting to note that
in this case, the only two groups which supported us were the Women’s Liberation
and the Crazies.)
Perhaps most fruitful would be to broach with radicals their stifled
homosexuality and the issues which arise from challenging sexual roles.
5. Hip and street- people: A major dynamic of rising gay lib sentiment is the
hip revolution within the gay community. Emphasis on love, dropping out, being
honest, expressing yourself through hair and clothes, and smoking dope are all
attributes of this. The gays who are the least vulnerable to attack by the
establishment have been the freest to express themselves on gay liberation.
We can make a direct appeal to young people, who are not so uptight about
homosexuality. One kid, after having his first sex with a male said, “I don’t
know what all the fuss is about, making it with a girl just isn’t that
different.”
The hip/street culture has led people into a lot of freeing activities:
encounter/sensitivity, the quest for reality, freeing territory for the people,
ecological consciousness, communes. These are real points of agreement and
probably will make it easier for them to get their heads straight about
homosexuality, too.
6. Homophile groups: 1) reformist or pokey as they sometimes are, they are our
brothers. They’ll grow as we have grown and grow. Do not attack them in straight
or mixed company. 2) ignore their attack on us. 3) cooperate where cooperation
is possible without essential compromise of our identity.
CONCLUSION: AN OUTLINE OF IMPERATIVES FOR GAY LIBERTATION
1. Free ourselves: come out everywhere; initiate self defense and political
activity; initiate counter community institutions.
2. Turn other gay people on: talk all the time; understand, forgive, accept.
3. Free the homosexual in everyone: we’ll be getting a good bit of shit form
threatened latents: be gentle, and keep talking & acting free.
4. We’ve been playing an act for a long time, so we’re consummate actors. Now we
can begin to be, and it’ll be a good show!
COMMENTS ON CARL WITTMAN’S “A GAY MANIFESTO”
Carl Wittman’s “A Gay Manifesto” represents an important step forward for our
movement. Gay Liberation is struggling for a self-understanding which would
probe deeply enough into the causes of our oppression to give us a clear vision
of the forms and directions our struggle must take. Wittman has provided an
analysis of homosexual oppression in America which links the
individual-psychological experiences of oppression to the social and economic
facts which are at once the causes and effects of this situation. He has spelled
out the various aspects of gay oppression from his own vantage point, with
self-acknowledged limitations.
Most importantly, Wittman’s “Manifesto” provides a clear statement of Gay
Liberation’s goal: to free ourselves as gays and to free straight society in as
much as it represses its own homosexual aspects. What is noteworthy in Wittman’s
approach is his insistence that we must change our own consciousness to be free
to change the institutions which shape our lives. Liberation of the head can
never be more than a half-step, a transitional move, until fundamental changes
are made in the institutions and cultural forms which create gay oppression. By
making this connection so explicit, Carl Wittman is able to go on to link our
struggle to those of the other oppressed groups in this society, thus widening
the viewpoint of the movement as a whole.
Our criticisms are intended as friendly amendments to Wittman’ s “Manifesto.” As
Wittman says, “we are only at the beginning.” Hopefully these comments of ours
will foster discussion and new thinking throughout the movement.
We feel that two aspects of the “Manifesto” invite further clarification and
development. They are difficult issues central to the entire movement. The first
is the notion of “coming out” and the importance it ought to have within our
movement. The second is the question Wittman raises in section VII of the
“Manifesto”: the kind of social and economic viewpoint most conducive to our
liberation as gays.
On the matter of “coming out,” we agree that the phrase is a description of our
movement’s overall process, that it both describes what we are about and what we
are working for. However, concealed within this idea is an important tension
which ought to be unpacked and examined. It is the same tension which Wittman
develops throughout the pamphlet: the polarity between personal head-freeing and
the need for collective, social action to change institutions. This is no simple
issue and it cannot be solved by simple slogans or catchwords. As in any process
which has to unite two distinct and in some ways opposed actions, problems
result from overemphasis on either of the poles.
Emphasis on personal liberation, the experience of feeling free, which is the
meaning often given to “coming out,” can and often does lead to a kind of
escapism or regression, to detachment from the actual conditions confronting us.
It can also lead to real personal problems for people who act unthinkingly; they
end up “free” in their heads but cut off in fact from access to means for
changing social conditions. This problem is especially acute for our movement
since so much of our oppression consists precisely in being forced to choose
between a personal life in a gay ghetto or a de-personalized 1ife in straight
society -- usually to the detriment of individual growth, no matter which option
is taken.
Emphasis on effective action, pushed to excess, leads to similar immobility, but
in the opposite direction. The homosexual who hides his identity for the sake of
the political movement, the good of his family or whatever, is likely to run
into the dilemma of all “boring from within”; the inability to effect change
because he is not recognized for what he is or has actually forgotten who he is
himself. This is not to say that sisters and brothers may not be entirely
correct to go incognito at least for a time and in certain parts of their lives.
However, the danger here of copping out is real, and if this strategy were
applied by everyone there would obviously be no Gay Liberation movement.
The second issue, the social and economic perspective most conducive for Gay
Liberation, is also very basic. On this question Red Butterfly takes a socialist
perspective. We assert that human liberation in all its forms, including Gay
Liberation, requires effective self-determination, i.e., democracy, in all
spheres of social life affecting the lives of people as a whole. This means
particularly economic and political democracy: common ownership and
decision-making with regard to economic and social matters by society as a
whole. We believe that economic and social democracy are the necessary
conditions for liberation. In Marxist language, we assert that a democratic
socialism is the necessary basis for building a classless society, i.e.,
communism.
To facilitate discussion of this issue we propose the following scheme for
judging a social and economic system which can make a free society possible:
Given the material and technological resources of American society, how well can
the system in question provide:
1) ecological well-being for the nation and the planet as a whole.
2) the basic economic and social necessities: adequate income, housing, medical
care; meaningful employment and democratic civil rights for all participants in
the society.
3) protection for minority groups, such as homosexuals; equal opportunities for
education, leisure, and personal development for all participants.
4) cooperation with world-wide social and economic development and the
self-determination of peoples.
5) effective political power for all, the ability of all social groups to resist
exploitation and to determine their own destinies.
This question is basic to our movement, since the answers we give to it will
determine the concrete political alignments we make and, ultimately, the success
or failure of our struggle for liberation -- which in the long run is a
political struggle.
“TODAY THE FIGHT FOR EROS, THE FIGHT FOR LIFE, IS THE POLITICAL FIGHT.”
H. Marcuse
The Red Butterfly
(1970)