Some of the more hateful Christians in America like to demand that there's
no such thing as homophobia. This is a conveinient excuse to deny the fact
that their hatred of innocent millions is predicated upon their unfounded,
ignorance-motivated fears.
Studies Discover Clues to the Roots of Homophobia
A rise in hostile actions against homosexuals can be traced primarily to
hatred based on fear and self-righteousness rather than to the AIDS
epidemic, researchers are finding.
Although polls show more Americans are beginning to accept homosexual men
and women and support their rights, there has been a great increase in
reports of anti-gay bias since the beginning of the epidemic. But rather
than creating the new hostility, researchers have found, the disease has
given bigots an excuse to act out their hatred.
In studying the virulence and tenacity of anti-gay feelings, psychologists
are finding clues to the deeper sources of homophobia. The new findings
confirm the theory that some men use hostility and violence to homosexuals
to reassure themselves about their own sexuality. But the greatest
portion of anti-homosexual bias, psychologists now say, arises from a
combination of fear and self-righteousness in which homosexuals are
perceived as contemptible threats to the moral universe.
Such attitudes are supported, researchers say, by the fact that unlike any
other minority, homosexuals still find themselves the target of
institutionalized bias. They are barred from the armed services, and in
many states sodomy laws make their sexual activities illegal. Until 1980,
the official psychiatric diagnostic manual listed homosexuality as a
mental disorder,
"It's as though our very existence is somehow a threat," said
Naomi Lichtenstein, a social worker at the New York City Gay and Lesbian
Anti-Violence Project who counsels victims of attacks.
One of the most troubling findings for those trying to combat anti-gay
bias is data showing the hostility is far more accepted among large
numbers of Americans than is bias against other groups. In surveys, about
three-quarters of homosexuals say they have been harassed by people
calling them names, and as many as one in four say that they have been
physically assaulted.
"Anti-gay violence is still acceptable because while leaders decry racial
and religious bigotry, they ignore violence against gays and lesbians,''
said Matt Foreman, executive director of the New York City Gay and Lesbian
Anti-Violence Project.
A 1988 study by the State of New York for the Governor's Task Force on
Bias-Related Violence concluded that of all groups, "the most severe
hostilities are directed at lesbians and gay men."
In "one of the most alarming findings" the report found that while
teen-agers surveyed were reluctant to advocate open bias against racial
and ethnic groups, they were emphatic about disliking homosexual men and
women.
They are perceived "as legitimate targets which can be openly
attacked," the report said.
In a survey of 2,823 students from 8th to 12th grade, three-quarters of
the boys and half the girls said it would be bad to have a homosexual
neighbor.
The feelings were as strong among 12-year-olds as among 17-year-olds.
Many students added gratuitous vicious comments about homosexuals; that
was not the case with other groups.
Scientists who study attitudes toward homosexuals say the largest group
among people who are biased are those for whom homosexuals "stand as a
proxy for all that is evil," said Dr. Gregory Herek, a psychologist at
the University of California at Davis.
"Such people see hating gay men and lesbians as a litmus test for
being a moral person," said Dr, Herek, who has done extensive research
on attitudes towards homosexuals. Often they act out of adherence to
religious orthodoxy in faiths that hold homosexuality to be a sin.
Dr. Herek does not see AIDS as having increased anti-gay feelings as much
as offering "a convenient hook on which they can hang their pre-existing
prejudices."
The affirmation of one's own values through anti-gay sentiment, his
research has found, is the most common motive. For instance, in a study
of attitudes toward homosexuals in 248 college students, Dr. Herek found
this was the source of hostility in just over half those who held an
anti-gay bias.
Bob Altemeyer, a psychologist at the University of Manitoba who has
developed a scale measuring attitudes toward homosexuals, has found that
those with the most intense hostility have an extreme fear that the world
is an unsafe place and that society is at risk, and a self-righteousness
that leads them to judge those who hold different values as morally
inferior.
"They see homosexuality as a sign that society is disintegrating and as
a threat to their sense of morality," said Dr. Altemeyer. "Their
self-righteousness makes them feel they are acting morally when they
attack homosexuals. It overcomes the normal inhibitions against
aggression."
Religion Makes Change Difficult
Dr. Altemeyer tells his students that he is gay. "For most, over the
course of the year it makes their attitudes toward gays more positive, he
says. But if their hostility toward gays is based on religion, their views
are hardest to change."
"Once a person has an anti-gay bias, it is difficult to change,"
Dr. Herek said, "even when reality contradicts it." Thus the
stereotypes of gay men as feminine and lesbians as masculine persist in
people's minds even though most gay men and lesbians do not, in fact,
conform to those images.
In an article to be published later this year in "Homosexuality:
Social, Psychological, and Biological Issues," (Sage Publishers), Dr.
Herek reviewed a case in point: the tenacity of the belief that homosexuals
should not be teachers because they might sexually molest children.
Citing studies showing that child molesters are overwhelmingly
heterosexual or simply fixated on children, not homosexual, Dr. Herek
notes that despite the facts, many people continue to believe that gay men
are child molesters.
"Once parents perceive a threat to their children," Dr. Herek
said, "their emotionality makes them prone to simplistic thinking. It
is such emotionality that makes anti-gay stereotypes so hard to change."
In a classic study of stereotyping, Mark Snyder, a psychologist at the
University of Minnesota, gave people a description of the life history of
a woman named "Betty K." After reading the history, some were told
that Betty later had a lesbian relationship and lived with her female lover.
Others were told that Betty married a man.
"It made a dramatic difference in how people remembered and interpreted
her life, " said Dr. Snyder. While there was nothing negative in what
people remembered, Dr. Snyder found that people selected facts that
supported stereotypes about lesbians and ignored those that might
contradict them. That normal tendency, he said, can build into a bias.
Negative Attitudes Snowball
"If your attitude is negative, it snowballs, and you only notice and
remember facts that are negative, until it becomes a full-blown
prejudice," said Dr. Snyder. "And you tend to assume everyone
feels as you do. As you become more convinced, you are more likely to take
the next step and put your beliefs into actions like outright discrimination
or violence, whether it's against blacks or gays."
Defensiveness about their own sexuality is another common source of
people's hostility toward homosexuals. In Dr. Herek's research, for
instance, this was the second most common motive, accounting for about 40
percent of those hostile to homosexuals.
This explanation for homophobia is the oldest, dating back at least to a
1914 essay by Sandor Ferenczi, one of Freud's original followers who
proposed that feelings of disgust toward gay men by heterosexual men are
defensive, a reaction against their own similar attraction to other men.
That view stems from Freud's theory that all people are originally
bisexual in early childhood, and repress their attraction to the same sex
as they grow.
"Homophobia has much to do with the stereotypic perception of gays as
feminine: the more feminine a gay man appears, the more hostility he
evokes in other men," said Dr. Richard Isay, a psychiatrist at Cornell
Medical College and author of "Being Homosexual."
Dr. Peggy Hanley-Hackenbruck, a psychiatrist at Oregon Health Services
University and president of the Association of Gay and Lesbian
Psychiatrists, said, "In insecure heterosexual women, a lesbian can arouse
fears of their own latent homosexual feelings, and so provoke hostility."
But Dr. Isay said, "Seeing a feminine man evokes a tremendous amount of
anxiety in many men; it triggers an awareness of their own feminine
qualities, such as passivity or sensitivity, which they see as being a
sign of weakness. Women, or course, don't fear their femininity. That's
partly why men are more homophobic than women, and why those biases are so
strong in groups where men are selected for their masculine qualities,
such as the army or sports."
Other psychoanalysts see the expression of anti-gay bias by men as being a
way to reassure themselves that they are not homosexual.
"By hating gays, they can reassure themselves they are not gay,"
especially if they harbor doubts about their sexual orientation, said Dr.
Jennifer Jones, a psychologist at the Sexuality Research Program at the
State University of New York at Albany.
Both factors can be at play. "In gangs of teen-age boys who go out
looking for gays to attack, the gay symbolizes an outsider," said Dr.
Herek. "The attack solidifies the attackers' membership in their group
and affirms their shared values. But it's also crucial that it is their
sexuality that defines homosexuals as outsiders. If you feel insecure
about your own sexuality, as so many adolescents do, you can reassure
yourself by attacking gays."
An exact accounting of such violence against gays is difficult, since many
victims are reluctant to contact the police. But there were three times
more attacks against gays reported to the New York Police Department Bias
Crime Unit in the first half of 1990 as against the same period the year
before.
In 1989 just over 7,000 incidents of violence and harassment were reported
against gay men and lesbians in the United States, including 62
bias-motivated murders, according to a report released last month by the
National Gay and Lesbian Task Force. The figures through the 1980's show
a steady rise, peaking in 1988 and remaining at about the same level in
1989.
While most racial attacks are matters of turf in which people are attacked
when they enter in to another group's neighborhood, that is not so with
homosexuals. Those who attack gays more often travel to a gay
neighborhood to attack, Ms. Lichtenstein said. The most frequent pattern
of attack, according to Ms. Lichtenstein, is against a lone man or two men
walking together.
As with other bias crimes, the most frequent attackers are young men 21 or
under who act in groups, according to a study of 331 incidents, to be
published in an article by Kevin T. Berrill, director of the anti-violence
project of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, in the September issue
of the Journal of Interpersonal Violence.
"The attacks are intended to drive us back to the invisibility and
isolation of the closet, " Mr. Berrill said.
"Coming out" is one of the most powerful strategies for attacking
anti-gay prejudice, Dr. Herek said. This approach is particularly effective
on those whose anti-gay attitudes are based on a negative stereotype that has
never been challenged by socializing with someone who is gay.
Paradoxically, that approach may also lead to a rise in anti-gay
incidents, gay rights leaders say.
"Although the data might suggest that intolerance is gaining ground, I
believe the opposite is true," Mr. Berrill said. "In years to
come, I think that lesbian and gay people will experience both increased
acceptance and increased violence."
... Jesus must be in jail; that's where everyone seems to find him...
Return to The Skeptic Tank's main Index page.
by Daniel Goleman, New York Times, July 10, 1990
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