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Proper Manners: Outing Closeted Legislators?

Proper manners say outing is a violation of a person's privacy and not to do it. But when it comes to antigay politicians who lead double lives, Emily Post might make an exception.


Many folks laugh when I tell them I've written a manners and etiquette book, usually thinking it's simply about stationery and place settings or that it's a tome for snobs or what's left of the idle rich. Hardly. In fact, the controversial new documentary Outrage, which outs a closet of elected officials, raises the perfect manners conundrum: Is naming names of closeted politicians good or bad manners and what does that answer say about our contemporary values and mores?

In recent decades, outing -- the practice of revealing another person's sexual orientation -- has been rightfully frowned upon by most in the LGBT community because to come out had been such an intensely personal issue with potentially catastrophic consequences. In The Essential Book of Gay Manners & Etiquette , which I wrote in the mid 1990s, my thinking on the "manners of outing" clearly reflected that other time ­- a time before Ellen , Will & Grace , and the three states where same-sex marriage is currently legal (and the three more where it soon will be).

"Outing a colleague -- intentionally or unintentionally -- is a violation of that person's privacy. Don't do it!"

Good manners, in this regard, clearly sided on the side of privacy.

But times change and so do manners. These days, when being LGBT seems practically commonplace (at least in many parts of the country) and where a majority of people under 40 are in favor of marriage equality, how we understand outing is also morphing. Kirby Dick's film Outrage certainly leaves no prisoners as he squarely takes aim at lawmakers who are believed to be closeted gays. The film's trailer notes that these politicians lead "secret double lives" because they maintain clandestine sexual liaisons with men, but also fight against same-sex marriage, vote against AIDS research, and denounce adoptions by LGBT parents. And, indeed, names are named.

Now, when we look at politicians who lead double lives, and whose actions hurt the LGBT community, how can proper manners side with hypocrisy and vilification even when the right to privacy is still an issue? The late Emily Post, the metaphoric mother of manners in this country, would, I believe, come to the same understanding. In the 1928 edition of Etiquette she trounced hypocrites: "[I]t is not the people who make small technical mistakes or even blunders who are barred from the paths of good society, but those of sham and pretense whose veneered vulgarity at every step tramples the flowers in the gardens of cultivation…"

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Reader Comments
  • Name: don anderson
    Date posted: 5/19/2009 1:53:00 PM
    Hometown: puerto vallarta, mexico

    Comment:

    OUT OUR ENEMIES!!! by outing our enemies we are educating their followers.

  • Name: Kip
    Date posted: 5/19/2009 10:29:00 AM
    Hometown: Tampa

    Comment:

    I live in Florida and that's a photo of our governor, Charlie Crist, who finally got married last year. And now he's running for the senate. There have been rumors about him for years. But how odd to mention Larry Craig in the article and then show Charlie Crist and not even say who it is. Or was there a caption that I missed? I'm a democrat and Crist is a republican, but I think he's been a pretty decent governor. He's not pro-gay, but that's not the only issue we deal with in Florida. I don't see any reason to out him.

  • Name: Jim
    Date posted: 5/18/2009 11:15:00 PM
    Hometown: Columbus

    Comment:

    How can a person's sexuality be "private" when it is assumed to be hetersexual unless proven otherwise?

  • Name: Frank Eggers
    Date posted: 5/18/2009 10:48:00 PM
    Hometown: Albuquerque NM

    Comment:

    Closeted politicians who support anti-gay legislation are not always hypocrits. Some of them are acting out of guilt. They believe that they should be punished and are supporting anti-gay legislation to punish themselves. However, that is not acceptable behavior and they should be outed, but only after confronting them personally and warning them.

  • Name: JT
    Date posted: 5/18/2009 8:53:00 PM
    Hometown: Lewiston, ME

    Comment:

    I have never supported outing people without their knowledge and I never will, no matter the circumstances. It's a detestable practice used only by desperate people and almost always backfires.

  • Name: Jay
    Date posted: 5/18/2009 6:27:00 PM
    Hometown: Nashville

    Comment:

    There is no way for a politician to justify preaching one thing and doing the opposite. The same goes for those know-it-all's who want to dictate other people's morality. Drug-addled serial-divorcing radio hosts, people who preach abstinence with unwed daughters who do the same, Constitution-ignoring ex-vice presidents who insist they know how to govern. They're all the same and need to be exposed repeatedly as hypocrites.

  • Name: Jeff
    Date posted: 5/18/2009 4:45:00 PM
    Hometown: Cincinnati

    Comment:

    The press has been complicit in keeping orientation a secret. Politicians, stars, and others are allowed to bring same-sex partners to events without worrying that the public will find out. We don't see them on camera, and it is not reported in the press. (Anderson Cooper and Mark Foley are 2 that come to mind when hearing stories. Both have been reported as bringing male "friends" to events, but without explaining the relationships.) A generation ago, politicians traveled with women who were not their wives and nothing was reported (JFK comes to mind.) Now there are no such gentlemen's agreement with the press. I fail to see why the same standard is not applied to LGBT politicians and celebrities. If they are out of the closet far enough to bring a date, then it's not exactly a private matter. It's not outing; it's called reporting.

  • Name: Mark
    Date posted: 5/18/2009 2:45:00 PM
    Hometown: Thomas

    Comment:

    We will never get equal civil rights if we continue to act as if there is something wrong with being born gay/lesbian. I find it repulsive when news stories go into details about the personal/family lives of heterosexual politicians and celebrities, yet mention nothing about the personal/family lives of gay/lesbian politicians and celebrities. Since sexual orientation is a genetic reality like race or eye color, it should be reported on in every story about a celebrity. If that's outing, then out every single one of them, and save the life of another gay/lesbian kid told he/she is evil by his/her church, parents, teachers, and government, desperately searching for a role model.

  • Name: Staggo Lee
    Date posted: 5/18/2009 2:40:00 PM
    Hometown: Seattle, WA

    Comment:

    I've always been against outing a person unless that person is a public figure who uses the attention that comes with her or his position to condemn LGBTs and LGBT causes. I also think that outing should come with an open hand, because it would make a greater statement if the outed person could be brought to the belief that his or her internalized homophobia is misguided. Often these folks operate on fear and panic. Outing with a vengeance can further entrench the outed, who too often claims some permutation of "I strayed, but prayer has freed me from my sin." But if an outed person, like Sen. Craig or Rev. Ted Haggard, remains committed to his or her hypocrisy, then go for the throat.

  • Name: Scott
    Date posted: 5/18/2009 2:39:00 PM
    Hometown: Denver, Co.

    Comment:

    If honest hard working gays who don't lie and hunt others can be witch hunted, outed and removed in the military, why can't lying closeted gay politicians who have the capacity to (and do) witch hunt and ruin thousands of people's lives on a daily basis through legislation or lack there of be witch hunted viciously and personally in return? Further, this should be codified as criminal action and punishable with jail time IF they propose or vote for anti-gay legislation while in the closet. Finally, might as well find and forward their personal contact info to all the wignut hate groups so they can face the same things they subject Matthew Shepard and others to...and will never feel safe for the rest of their lives, nor should they.

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