Jul. 17th, 2004

mrissa: (Default)
This week, we ran across an editorial against gay marriage, wherein the author pointed out that Greece and Rome had both had homosexuals in them, and had both fallen. We all thought about it. The British Empire certainly had homosexuals in it, and the sun has pretty well set on it. Though none of us knew any of them personally, we were all willing to wager that Napoleonic France had probably had a queer or two here or there, too. The Persian Empire, most likely. The Middle Kingdom, I shouldn't be surprised.

Fallen, fallen, fallen.

It's ridiculous when you look at it that way. It becomes obvious that you could play the same game with other groups. Left-handed people. The myopic. Men.

Still, I think when people bring up Greece and Rome -- particularly both, since ancient Greece is famous for its homosexual couplings, whereas Rome is not so much, really -- they're telling you something important about how they're thinking and how they hope their listeners are thinking.

They're living in the first century of a dominant empire. Perhaps the last century: political dominance is not known for predictable longevity. And who wants to live in a fallen empire? It can be surprisingly comfortable, but compared to being the top of the heap, especially for a people raised to competition -- no. Americans want to maintain dominance in the world. Preferably permanently.

How does a nation do that? Well, sensible domestic and foreign policies would help; a sound economy would be a positive thing. And how easy is it to achieve those things? Not very. It would take thousands of pages to describe a domestic policy alone, and each point of it would be a matter of some contention: whether it was the right thing to do, whether it was actually achievable, whether it would get its proponents tossed out of office before it could succeed.

On the other hand, if it's the fault of homosexuality that empires fall, and we're worried about the fall of our own empire more than almost anything...well, the solution looks much simpler from that vantage. Stop the gays, lest they bring about the downfall of our country, not just in a moral but in a literal sense.

I'm not trying to claim that this is the dominant cause, reasoning, or justification of opposition to gay marriage. Far from it. It's just a thread that interests me. I have a hard time interpreting the Greece and Rome comments any other way. (Anyone else?) And the thing is, if I tried to do something like this in a story, this combination of memes or motivations would seem unreasonable, unbelievable. I couldn't put similar words into a character in a fantasy or science fiction setting and have it come off as believable.

I really hate it when real people are two-dimensional and inadequately motivated.
mrissa: (Default)
One rejection. No acceptances. I did, however, get my check and contributor's copies from Neo-Opsis, lovely Canadians that they are. It's a well-put-together mag, I think; my grandma will be happy to have one for her coffee table. (Last time we were home, she said to me, "And you'd be surprised how many people just pick them up and read them!" Well, no, I probably wouldn't, as I am friends with the type of people who compulsively pick things up and read them. Cereal boxes and toothpaste tubes and all. It's not that I really care what they say. It's just, you know, words. Written down. Must--read--words----)

[livejournal.com profile] minnehaha B. swore Monday that one can fake Finland but not France, but I read some more Finnish history this week anyway, and filed away titles of other volumes to get when I'm writing The Winter Wars. ([livejournal.com profile] timprov thinks it's slightly crazy of me to have a YA prequel to an adult series in mind, but I can't help what the books are in my head, and they stand alone, and if Madeleine L'Engle can do it, it can obviously be done. To be fair, he hasn't said that he thinks I can't do it. He just thinks it's a little nuts, or did last we talked about it. Do you?)

I also worked on Sampo and "Docile Bodies," and if my contact lens starts behaving itself only slightly better, I'll finish "Docile Bodies" today and polish it and ship it off soon soon. And then I'll have another SF story out. I've been writing more fantasy -- I've been more excited about reading fantasy, not conceptually but in terms of what's actually on the stands -- but I do love SF, too, and it would probably be wise to keep trying with markets that have bought pieces from me before. Like, say, Analog and Oceans of the Mind. Seems wise.

I am not always good at doing what is wise.

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