>From the Op-Ed page of today's (10/29/93) New York Times,
reproduced without permission...
     
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AMERICA WITHOUT CLOSETS
     
By Torie Osborn
     
(Torie Osborn is a columnist for The Advocate, the national
gay news magazine, and author of the forthcoming "Coming
Home to America.")
     
WASHINGTON -- To outward appearances, the gay and lesbian
rights movement is in trouble.
     
We suffered a bitter defeat in the White House and on Capitol
Hill over the military ban on homosexuals; just this week, in
a painful and ironic twist, the Administration asked the
Supreme Court to block a lower-court order lifting the ban.
The far right continues to step up local attacks: three
cities face anti-gay ballot measures next week and as many as
10 states are gearing up for Colorado-style referendums next
year to ban local gay rights laws.
     
And internal organizational ferment, including my own decision
to step down next week as head of the National Gay and Lesbian
Task Force, has been taken as a sign that the movement is in
disarray.
     
But these widely publicized storm clouds conceal a much
brighter outlook.  Lesbian and gay Americans have never had
a better chance to become a mainstream political movement --
if we can come up with the right strategy.
     
The stage has been set by precisely those events that have
led people to conclude we're in trouble.  For this once hidden
minority, widespread visibility is the absolute condition for
all progress.  And with every front-page event -- the battle
over the military ban, the huge march on Washington last April
-- the denial blanketing the very existence of gay men and
lesbians is being thrown off forever.
     
Poll after poll shows that Americans' tolerance on these
issues correlates with personally knowing someone who is gay.
And every day, more and more people do.  A vast new migration
into the mainstream is taking place, from out of the closets
of regular middle- and working-class lesbian and gay
Americans.
     
How is the gay rights movement to take advantage of this
growing visibility?  For 20 years, the movement has been
almost entirely reactive, careering from event to event -- a
court victory here, an electoral loss there.  Now we need to
unify as never before, working across organizational lines
and consolidating resources to develop a national plan of
action -- the gay agenda we've been accused of promoting.
That's why I am leaving the day-to-day management of the task
force: to work with others to develop a broad political
vision for the movement.
     
We need state-of-the-art market research to design winning
messages.  We need think tanks and national media strategies
to counter the disinformation efforts of the right, now sugar-
coating its hate agenda with mainstream language like the
battle cry "no special rights."  Never has it been more
apparent that gay and lesbian people lack the most basic
civil rights than in the case of Sharon Bottoms of Virginia,
who lost custody of her child solely on the basis of her
sexual orientation.
     
A powerful grass-roots political structure must be built to
support local and national efforts, using voter-identification
techniques borrowed from electoral campaigns and high-tech
communications tactics to organize, educate and mobilize the
huge numbers of newly "out" gay men and lesbians, as well as
the thousands of local organizations flourishing across the
country.
     
Gay men and lesbians must also take the time to work on over-
coming our own activist culture's aversion to power, success
and leadership.  This fear, born of being marginalized and
ostracized, diminishes our potential by promoting narrow,
purist thinking as well as destructive attacks on leaders
and organizations.  The politics of protest must become the
politics of taking power, or we will be outsiders forever.
     
Our journey through the agony of AIDS, and through the self-
loathing of the closet and out the door, has forged a new and
potent force -- based on a belief in the courage of community,
a rage at systemic injustice and a new spirit of hopefulness.
When it is fully articulated, it can be a gift to mainstream
America as well as ourselves.  It can help reinvigorate this
country and its vision of a truly pluralist democracy.
