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How Many of Us Have Been Sen. Ashburn?

Sexologist Jallen Rix argues that gays and lesbians quick to condemn newly out senator Ashburn and his actions might want to take a good look at how they behaved before they came out.


ROY ASHBURN MAIN X390 (AP) | ADVOCATE.COM

I have noticed something in my judgments of other people. I can be armed and ready to give someone the third degree, only to realize that what’s really pissing me off is how similar I am to those I want to accuse. I’ve been contemplating this urge to blame California Republican state senator Roy Ashburn, who was arrested for drunk driving after leaving a gay bar. Ashburn — known publicly as a straight man until he came out on a radio program Monday — consistently voted against bills that would expand the legal protection of LGBT people.

The first way I’ve been approaching the Ashburn story is this: When people like the senator are so repulsed by what they see inside, they can’t even bring themselves to admit it. Further, this self-hate is so strong that some people lash out, even violently, to condemn the characteristic in others. This is denial coupled with projection. Psychological projection, briefly defined, is a defense mechanism often unconsciously used “when a person's own unacceptable or threatening feelings are repressed and then attributed to someone else.”

Why else would some people be so hateful about homosexuality — so negatively vocal about it, condemning it as sin, and finding so-called cures for it — unless it’s what they hate and fear in themselves? At the very least, they have given an enormous amount of attention, energy, and thought to it. Straight men don’t do that. They just don’t think about it. They think about having sex with women. “Reparative” therapists, “ex-gay” ministries, and political leaders fighting to negate homosexuality think about it all the time. Maybe the only way they can allow themselves to dwell on homosexuality is by thinking about it in the negative, but they’re thinking about homo-sex nonetheless.

It’s not surprising that they then get caught behaving in the very ways they condemn. In fact, this behavior is often a kind of cry for help. A closeted man behaves in a risky and irresponsible manner, unconsciously wanting to get caught — forcing his hand — so the inner battle will end. Whether he comes out or not, he eventually reaps what he sows. The pain and injustice he allows to be inflicted on gays and lesbians is unavoidably inflicted on himself. So the senator might have voted against protecting LGBT rights, as he said, to reflect his constituents’ wishes, but his self-hate makes him blind to see that his choices are hurting others as well as himself.

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Reader Comments
  • Name: Charles K. Walker
    Date posted: 3/14/2010 9:14:51 PM
    Hometown: Aberdeen

    Comment:

    This guy deserves no sympathy what so ever. The argument that a lot of us have been in this situation is ridiculous. Neither myself or any of my gay friends have tried to deny others their rights by working against the gay community while having sex with them. I didn't come out of the closet until I was in my 30's and I can understand that it is hard to come to terms with your sexuality, especially for someone that grew up in the 60' and 70' like I did. However, that does not mean that it makes it ok to bash your own kind and make things worse for them. Regardless of how I felt about being gay, I never said or did anything to put other gay's down.

  • Name: Bindar Dundat
    Date posted: 3/12/2010 5:02:57 PM
    Hometown: Bangelore

    Comment:

    Christianity is the disease here. I don't think you'd find an atheist in this situation. It's pretty common with those who believe that silliness.

  • Name: gary
    Date posted: 3/11/2010 3:48:01 PM
    Hometown: troy,tn

    Comment:

    I agree with most comments posted.This guy is a jerk, i have no sympathy for anyone to deny others their civil rights! He is just an old chiken hawk along the lines of ex congressman Massa. Hiding who they are so they can continue their hidden agenda for themselves(sex) while not helping others attain civil rights.Keep the status quo.

  • Name: Jeffrey
    Date posted: 3/11/2010 3:32:10 PM
    Hometown: Albany

    Comment:

    Paul, that is a really lame analogy. This man is not 12 years old!! He has spent his ENTIRE adult life, among other things, trying to legislate the rest of us back into the closet all while trolling gay bars by night for some cock to suck. I am sorry, this is not a misguided "coming out" it is pure mental illness. BTW Zachary, the author is not a psychologist, he is a "sexologist", and I am not sure what credentials one must have to hang that shingle out.

  • Name: Greg
    Date posted: 3/11/2010 3:25:50 PM
    Hometown: Providence, RI

    Comment:

    I get the point, but it's hard for most of us to identify as long as we came out at an EARLY age. None of us got elected to public office in our teens or early 20s, the ages when most of us came out; during the time we were closeted we didn't pay for sex with much younger guys (hardly mathematically possible for us) as Ashburn very likely did routinely as a middle-aged closet case; and I hope none of us here consider drunk driving to be a routine part of closeted behavior. At any rate, Ashburn HAS finally come out, however belatedly, so why make excuses for him that he's not even making himself at this point? The more I think about the author's point, the more I think the critics here are right!

  • Name: AlexJB
    Date posted: 3/11/2010 2:02:20 PM
    Hometown: San Francisco

    Comment:

    Ashburn's not the first to fall and he won't be the last. Isn't it time that we recognized this pitiful pattern and come up with a response more constructive than condemnation? Dr Rix is right - many of us have been through the same experience as Ashburn, or know someone who has. The fact that he had more power to exercise his self-hate doesn't change the nature of it. I took at least a year to come out of the closet, even longer in my own mind to reconcile it. It's not reasonable to expect Ashburn to flip his script so quickly. All the queer-rights groups should be sending him recommendations for a good therapist so he can get over himself and start repairing the damage that he's done all these years. If those of us who've been through the experience have no compassion for the ones going through it, how can we claim a moral high ground?

  • Name: Francis
    Date posted: 3/11/2010 1:31:48 PM
    Hometown: Atlanta

    Comment:

    I have never been in the closet. I never welcome those who fight against my right to live. Drunk driving is a serious crime and he should go to jail.

  • Name: George
    Date posted: 3/11/2010 1:24:34 PM
    Hometown: New York

    Comment:

    Paul, get a little self respect and really walk "in someone else's shoes". I support gay rights not those who deny them. I am not filled with self hatred and have no sympathy or identification with homophobes. Maybe therapy can help you. This pig not only repeated voted anit-gay but even staged a rally against gay rights. Of course, this putrid coward was sneaking out to get drunk and pick up guys on the side. Now that he is caught, he has no apologes to the gay community but only seeks to create a whirlwind about sex to disguise his criminal activity. He will also try to use gay rights to benefit himself, a person who fought against what I have worked for all my adult life. If you are anything like him and welcome him, Larry Craig, Haggard or any other closet creep homophobe- please get in the same boat and let it sink. You have burned your bridges and are unwanted. Should Hitler be welcomed in a Temple if it was found out he was Jewish? What rancid crap this article is!

  • Name: David
    Date posted: 3/11/2010 1:15:34 PM
    Hometown: Chester, PA

    Comment:

    How pathetic that this publication is more in tune with this bozo than the gay community fighting for equal rights.

  • Name: Paul
    Date posted: 3/11/2010 1:15:29 PM
    Hometown: Detroit

    Comment:

    After eading the entire story and all the comments I wonder, yet again, how many of you have actually read more than the headline and first paragraph? The headline is a question...who of us have denied who we are at any point in our life? I have to think that those who have screamed loudest in objection are (ironically) those most "guilty". I personally have known who/what I am since I was five or six, but being "out" in the 50's and 60's was a life risking thing to do, so when another 12 y/o kid - who was even queenier than I- had a huge crush on me and I rejected him cruelly. He needed a friend and I denied him because I feared getting the same treatment that he received. He commited suicide not long after. I have felt guilt for years, I could have been his friend, but fear stopped me. Walk in someone else's shoes a bit before throwing stones people.

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