| April 2004
Acceptance of gays on rise, polls show source: Los Angeles Times, 30 March 2004
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While 30 years' worth of surveys consistently show a majority of Americans against same-sex marriage, they also reveal some remarkable shifts in attitudes.
Less apparent is why and how the shift in attitude occurred. Although some religious and social leaders believe the new visibility of gays points to a national moral decline, the evolution of attitudes about gays is a complex brew of factors, according to historians, social psychologists and others who have studied the phenomenon. |
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The
American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank in Washington,
D.C., has compiled 30 years' worth of major public opinion poll results
on Americans' attitudes toward homosexuals. While the surveys
consistently show that about two- thirds of Americans oppose gay
marriage, an issue that has now reached the California Supreme Court,
they also demonstrate remarkable shifts on numerous other fronts. For
example: •
Public acceptance of gays in the military grew from 51% in a 1977
Gallup Poll to 80% in 2003. •
Approval of gays as elementary school teachers grew from 27% in
1977 to 61% over the same period. •
A 1999 Gallup survey showed that 59% would vote for a
well-qualified presidential candidate who was homosexual, up from 26% in
1978. "There's
been an enormous increase in tolerance - that's the bottom line,"
said Karlyn Bowman, who compiled the poll results for the institute. Some
of the factors fueling the changes have been related to gays' own
efforts, some have not. Some factors have opposed one another, some have
been mutually reinforcing. The black civil rights movement, changes in
state and local laws, the AIDS epidemic and even the Sept. 11
catastrophe have been part of the mix. Two
powerful societal forces associated with the 1960s - the sexual
revolution and the civil rights movement - are credited with driving the
change in attitude. The
emergence of widespread contraception and a new insistence on sexual
privacy were key elements in Americans' evolving view of sexuality,
according to Gregory Herek, a UC Davis psychology professor and an
authority on sexual orientation and prejudice. That a person's sexual
behavior was his or her affair, and not society's, became an accepted
precept. That
philosophy eventually led last year to the landmark U.S. Supreme Court
decision in Lawrence vs. Texas, which abolished anti-sodomy laws. Just
17 years earlier, in Bowers vs. Hardwick, the high court had upheld
Georgia's anti-sodomy law, essentially agreeing that homosexuality was a
crime. "In
the Bowers case, the court's opinion essentially trivialized the lives
of gay people," said Herek, who helped prepare abolitionist briefs
in both high court cases. "In the Lawrence opinion, the court
recognized the important role sex plays in people's lives, and
recognized gay people as human beings. The tone was so different. It was
a tremendous change." Whether
that change was viewed as good or bad, it occurred in part because the
black civil rights movement - well organized, passionately led and
highly visible - served as a model for subsequent movements. "It
became imaginable to talk about the harassment of gay workers really
only after people had talked about the harassment of African American
workers, Latino workers and women workers," said University of
Chicago historian George Chauncey, who has chronicled the evolution of
gay culture. Moreover,
according to Cornell University psychology professor Daryl Bem,
"each of these civil rights movements has moved faster than the one
before." Most
historians mark the so-called Stonewall riots of 1969 as the first
flaring of gay militancy. When gay men took to the streets after police
raided the Stonewall Inn bar in New York's Greenwich Village, they
showed other gays that they need not be invisible or silent. In
response to pressure from newly vocal gay groups, the American
Psychiatric Assn. in 1973 removed homosexuality from its Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. In
Herek's view, that toppled one of three pillars on which prejudice
against gays traditionally rested. "Up to that point, homosexuality
could be a sin, a crime and a sickness, and that took one of those
away," he said. The
1970s also saw early attempts to include gays in local
anti-discrimination laws. Acceptance began to surge after large numbers
of gays began to come out of the closet. "The
act of coming out has probably been the single most important
determinant in the change in public opinion polls," said Brad
Sears, who directs the Williams Project on Sexual Orientation Law at
UCLA Law School. "People learn that this isn't some kind of
abstract, foreign, exotic creature. This is somebody who lives down the
street." Especially
persuasive, psychologists said, is learning that a family member is gay.
"If your notion of a gay man was someone lurking in the park
looking for sex - now it's your son," said Cornell's Bem, who has
studied how attitudes change in society. "It's hard to regard them
as a sinner or as a second-class citizen, because we want our children
to be happy." Scholars
describe the dynamic of social acceptance as self-accelerating - the
more gays come out of the closet, the more heterosexuals come to know
gays and feel more tolerant toward them; in turn, the greater atmosphere
of tolerance allows more gays to come out. Nothing,
however, galvanized gays as much as the AIDS epidemic that descended
with such devastating impact in the 1980s. The
AIDS crisis, said UC Davis sociologist Stephen Russell, "changed
the gay community's thinking from sexuality being an individual thing to
the politics of sexuality. People realized it was not OK to just be left
alone to your sexual identity, but that government and public attitudes
were matters of life and death for gay people." Countless
media images of gay people caring for their stricken and dying partners
went beyond stereotypes of gay behavior. Meanwhile, gay organizations
from the Human Rights Campaign, founded in 1980, and the AIDS Coalition
to Unleash Power (ACT UP, begun in 1987) were emerging as a powerful
force, lobbying the federal government and agitating for stepped-up AIDS
research. Gay
influence continued to grow, and soon spawned a strong conservative
political reaction, epitomized by the 1992 presidential candidacy of Pat
Buchanan, an outspoken opponent of gay rights. A pattern established in
the 1970s thus repeated itself. The
new visibility of gays back then had prompted the first major backlash
by social conservatives - Anita Bryant's successful 1977 campaign to
overturn a Dade County, Fla., decision to include gays in local
anti-discrimination laws. Just
as they had organized against Bryant, gay organizations in the '90s
redoubled their efforts, and many heterosexuals recoiled at Buchanan's
vociferousness. Then
came Bill Clinton. With his election as president, gays had their most
powerful advocate ever and, according to opinion polls, the early '90s
marked the greatest upswing in public acceptance of gays. Clinton
"appointed gay people to high office," Herek said. "That
sort of moved the bar to a new level where gay people were considered to
be full citizens by a significant portion of the American people." Politicians
too have begun acknowledging their sexual orientation, notably longtime
Democratic Rep. Barney Frank of Massachusetts. Two years ago, five
California lawmakers formed the Legislative Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and
Transgender Caucus. Though
no federal law prohibits discrimination against gays,
anti-discrimination employment policies that cover gays exist in 38
federal agencies and departments, in 25 state governments (including
California), and in 258 local governments, according to figures compiled
by the Human Rights Campaign, the country's largest gay advocacy
organization. The
1990s also saw gay anti-discrimination policies proliferate among
private employers. In
1992, software producer Lotus Development Corp. became the first
publicly traded company to adopt "spousal equivalent"
benefits. Today, according to HRC statistics, 1,498 companies, including
362 of the Fortune 500, have anti-discrimination policies, and 7,360
offer health benefits to same-sex domestic partners. "Business
has found it to be good for business," Bem said of such
anti-discriminatory practices. As
occurred with African Americans, advances in the rights of gays caused
businesses to begin regarding gays as a niche market for everything from
vodka to furniture to travel packages. Similarly,
gay characters began appearing on TV shows as long ago as the 1970s. The
1972 TV film "That Certain Summer" was considered a landmark
because it presented sympathetic gay characters (played by Hal Holbrook
and Martin Sheen) in a long-term relationship. That
film, Billy Crystal's stint as the gay Jodie Dallas on "Soap,"
MTV's decade-old reality show "The Real World," and other
programs prepared the way for the gay characters and gay-themed programs
broadcast today. While
there are dozens of gay characters on TV, few are in committed
relationships, said Robert Thompson, director of the Center for the
Study of Popular Television at Syracuse University. Thompson thinks TV's
failure to show gay characters in marriage-like relationships may help
explain why more people approve of gays than of gay unions. "
'Ozzie and Frank,' you don't see it out there." Both
the marketing and media developments were attempts to capitalize
financially on the greater societal acceptance of gays, experts said,
but served also to further that acceptance. "When
you have [dozens of] gay characters on situation comedies, the
conservatives have lost," Bem said. "We have a whole
generation raised in an integrated world on TV. There's no putting that
genie back in the bottle." News
reports of gay people swept up in the Sept. 11 attacks provided a small
but resonant affirmation of homosexuals' inclusion in society, Sears of
UCLA said. "The whole country was undergoing collective grief and
suffering, and gay people were part of it - the gay New York Fire
Department chaplain who was killed, the gay rugby player who fought back
on one of the planes. People saw those positive images." What
is more, Sears said, some same-sex domestic partners were able to
collect survivors benefits offered by the federal government. Though
debate and legal battles continue over gay marriage, the attitudes of
today's young people, scholars said, augur for further advances in gay
acceptance in the future. Polls
show people ages 18 to 29 are far more likely than their elders to be
tolerantly disposed toward gays. A national survey of 1,000 high school
seniors, conducted in 2001 by students at Hamilton College in
association with the Zogby polling organization, found that 66% favored
legalizing gay marriage - more than double the percentage found in polls
of adults. "There's
a larger generation gap on this issue than on any we've seen, with the
possible exception of marijuana legalization during the 1960s and
'70s," Bem said. Moreover,
millions of children are being raised by gay parents, though precise
numbers are hard to come by, scholars said. The
social acceptance of gays has achieved such momentum that some gay
scholars, such as Martin Duberman, a distinguished professor of history
at City University of New York and a pioneer in gay studies, wonder if
the uniqueness of the gay experience in America is in danger of being
overwhelmed. "National
organizations within the gay world are presenting themselves as just
plain folks - 'We're ordinary citizens. We're just like everybody else.
So let us in. We're going to behave just the way you want us to behave,'
" Duberman said. "As a people we've had a different historical
experience, just as black people have. The mainstream needs to know what
we know."
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