For years
rumblings have surfaced on the Internet, conjecture about
her casual references to ''sexual orientation'' and
''respect.''
Now Dear Abby is
ready to say it flatly: She supports same-sex marriage.
''I believe if
two people want to commit to each other, God bless 'em,''
the syndicated advice columnist told the Associated Press.
''That is the highest form of commitment, for heaven's
sake.''
What Jeanne
Phillips, a.k.a. Abigail Van Buren, finds offensive and
misguided are homophobic jokes, phrases like ''That's so
gay,'' and parents who reject or try to reform their
children when they come out of the closet.
Her views are the
reason she's being honored this week by Parents,
Families, and Friends of Lesbians and Gays, a national
advocacy group that provides support for gay people
and their families. The original Abby, Phillips's
89-year-old mother, Pauline, helped put PFLAG on the
map in 1984 when she first referred a distraught parent to
the organization.
Jeanne Phillips,
who formally took over the column when her mother was
diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease five years ago, has
continued plugging the group, as well as its affiliate
for parents with children who identify as transgender,
and a suicide hotline aimed at gay teenagers.
''I'm trying to
tell kids if they are gay, it's OK to be gay. I've tried
to tell families if they have a gay family member to accept
them and love them as they always have,'' she said
Friday.
PFLAG director
Jody Huckaby said Abby is the perfect choice for the first
Straight for Equality award, part of the group's new
campaign to engage more heterosexuals as allies.
''She is such a
mainstream voice,'' Huckaby said. ''If Dear Abby is
talking about it, it gives other people permission to talk
about it.''
Alert Dear Abby
readers may have noticed that the youthful attitude
Phillips promised to bring to the column includes a
decidedly gay-friendly take on most matters.
In a March 2005
column that touched a nerve with some readers, for
instance, Phillips came down unequivocally on the side of
scientists who say sexual orientation is a matter of
genetics, not personal choice. She advised a mother
who had cautioned her 14-year-old daughter to keep her
feelings for other girls secret to ''come to terms with your
own feelings about homosexuality.''
Last year,
addressing a groom whose gay brother refused to serve as
best man or even attend the wedding because he did not
have the right to marry, she made it clear her
sympathies lay with the boycotting brother.
''Accepting the
status quo is not always the best thing to do,'' she
wrote. ''Women were once considered chattel, and slavery was
regarded as sanctioned in the Bible. However, western
society grew to recognize that neither was just.
Canada, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Spain have
recognized gay marriage, and one day, perhaps, our country
will too.''
Phillips, who
lives in Los Angeles, said she isn't worried that aligning
herself with gay rights advocates will cause newspapers to
censor or cancel the column, which appears in about
1,400 newspapers.
Her outspokenness
on gay rights issues has never caused a strong
backlash, said Kathie Kerr, a spokeswoman for Universal
Press Syndicate, which distributes the column. It's
possible some editors choose not to run the segments
dealing with homosexuality, but if so, they have not
complained to the syndicate, Kerr said.
''We get
brouhahas all the time, and they haven't been about Dear
Abby,'' Kerr said.
Phillips realizes
not everyone agrees with her on gay rights; she and her
husband ''argue about this continually,'' she said. He
thinks civil unions and domestic partnerships ''would
be less threatening to people who feel marriage is
just a religious rite.'' She thinks anything less than
full marriage amounts to second-class citizenship.
''If gay
Americans are not allowed to get married and have all the
benefits that American citizens are entitled to by the Bill
of Rights, they should get one hell of a tax break.
That is my opinion,'' said Phillips, who speaks with
the no-nonsense tone of someone who is used to
settling debates.
Right now, Abby,
as Phillips prefers to be called, is working on a reply
to a woman who wanted to know whether she should include
childhood photographs of her transgender
brother-in-law in a family album. The woman is worried
what she will tell her children when they see pictures
of their uncle as a little girl.
Phillips's
guidance to Worried Reader will be simple, she said: Include
the photos, of course. Silence is the enemy. Answer any
questions the kids have honestly -- Uncle John was
born with a body of the wrong sex, so even when he was
called Jane he was really John inside.
Phillips said
that while it might be tempting to devote an entire column
to why she thinks jokes invoking homosexual slurs are in
poor taste, she does not plan to spell out her views
on same-sex marriage in print any more directly than
she has already.
''If they are my
readers, they know how I feel on the subject,'' she
said. ''I don't think I'm a flaming radical. I'm for
civility in life. I'm for treating each other with
respect, trying to do the best you can.'' (Lisa
Leff, AP)