Once again, true to form, the film industry is celebrating the two
latest gay and lesbian flicks, both featuring torrid affairs between an
adult and a teenager, while at the same time there are howls of protest
across America because an 18-year-old girl has been charged with crimes
because of her sexual relationship with a 14-year-old girl. What a
coincidence!
In France, there was such enthusiasm for a pornographic lesbian film
that the top award at the Cannes Film Festival was given to both the
director and the two leading actresses. Blue Is the Warmest Colour won
the best film prize, nominated by a jury led by none other than Steven
Spielberg and Nicole Kidman.
The movie, which features scenes that leave nothing to the
imagination, tells the story of a 15-year-old girl who falls in love
with an older woman. But not to worry—the age of consent in France is
already 15.
Here in America, HBO aired the original movie Behind the Candelabra,
hailed as “a moving and beautifully made film that traces the
clandestine half-decade romance between Vegas showman and pianist
Liberace and his much, much younger live-in boyfriend Scott Thorson.”
The film, which features Michael Douglas as Liberace and Matt Damon
as Thorson, was reportedly deemed “too gay” to be successful by other
studios, hence its airing on HBO. (In today’s gay-happy media culture,
saying that the film was considered “too gay” is saying a lot.) Thorson
became Liberace’s live-in lover when he was just 17.
The extreme praise for these two movies is reminiscent of the media
frenzy over Brokeback Mountain, the first mainstream movie with gay sex
scenes. It “won the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival and was
honored with Best Picture and Best Director accolades from the British
Academy of Film and Television Arts, Golden Globe Awards, Producers
Guild of America, Critics Choice Awards, and Independent Spirit Awards
among many other organizations and festivals.” It was also “nominated
for eight Academy Awards, the most nominations at the 78th Academy
Awards, where it won three.” The same year, Capote, about Truman Capote,
and Transamerica, about a woman undergoing a sex-change, were also
honored with awards.
Isn’t it fascinating that all these LGBT films are so incredibly good—or could there be a little bias in the movie industry?
Back to the real world. While these movies were airing, a national
campaign was gaining steam on behalf of Kaitlyn Hunt, aged 18, who was
charged with committing statutory rape and molestation on her
14-year-old girlfriend.
Why the national outrage over this case? Aren’t 18-year-old boys
regularly charged with statutory rape for having sex with their younger
girlfriends? Why aren’t we hearing about national protests on behalf of
these young men?
It’s simple. They were charged with heterosexual offenses, while
Kaitlyn Hunt’s case involved lesbian sex—and so it can only be “hate”
that is driving the prosecution against her.
Robby C., commenting on my article “Immorality Is Trending,” wrote,
“So being gay is immoral? An 18-year-old and 14-year-old being in love
is immoral? What's wrong with you people. Love is love. Leave the poor
girl alone and stop being bigots and hateful.”
Kaitlyn’s father, Steven, has launched a petition calling on the
assistant state attorney to “stop the prosecution of an 18 year old girl
in a same-sex relationship,” which begs the question: Why bring up the
fact that it’s a same-sex relationship?
The petition also claims that “Kailtyn’s girlfriend’s parents are
pressing charges because they are against the same-sex relationship,
even though their daughter has stated that this is a consensual
relationship.” How utterly hateful of them!
Kaitlyn’s mother claims "the parents of the 14-year-old who pressed
charges are ‘out to destroy my daughter [because] they feel like my
daughter "made" their daughter gay,’ and these ‘bigoted, religious’
parents ‘see being gay as a sin and wrong, and they blame my daughter.’”
(How dare these parents not give full approval to their 14-year-old’s
lesbian affair!)
As for the laws in question, one signer of the petition had this to
say: “If this is an event you feel strongly about, and would like to see
the decay of these archaic laws striking down children for being
children then please take a few seconds out of your day to sign the
petition to aid Kate Hunt in her search for justice.” As the Facebook
page cries out, “Stop the Hate, Free Kate.”
Lost in most news reporting is that the younger girl’s parents, Jim
and Laurie Smith (he’s white, she’s black), told WPEC-TV reporter Jana
Eschbach that they "had twice asked Hunt to leave their daughter alone,
and only went to police after a January incident in which their daughter
ran away and spent the night at Hunt’s house.” And they made clear that
they would have done the same had their daughter taken off with an
18-year-old boy.
But why should we believe them? After all, they must be hateful bigots. The talking points say so.
Interestingly, the 1972 gay rights platform called for the “repeal of
all laws governing the age of sexual consent,” while in 2010, British
gay activist Peter Tatchell argued that “the best way to protect our
children from sexual abuse is paradoxically to give them more sexual
freedom." Furthermore, "Age of consent laws vary from state to state in
the U.S., with the majority being 16 and some ranging as high as 18, but
Tatchell says they should all be lowered to 14.”
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