February 1, 2004
THE ENCHANTED KINGDOM:
Straight and narrow (Leo McKinstry, The Spectator, 31/01/04)
As I waded through page after page of interminable dogma and municipal jargon, one statement suddenly leapt out at me: ‘Some 50 per cent of people being approved of as adoptive parents in Brighton and Hove are from the lesbian, gay and bisexual community.’ Those words — from a policy document entitled ‘Sexuality — the New Agenda’, published this month by the Local Government Association (LGA), the umbrella body for local authorities — were followed by another disturbing sentence: ‘Brighton and Hove Council has also shown that it is committed to taking rigorous action against homophobia, including, in one instance, de-registering foster carers who stated that they opposed lesbians being parents.’Even in Blair’s exciting new pro-gay Britain, this seemed to be too extreme to be true. And indeed it was. In its enthusiasm to highlight supposed enlightened principles, the LGA had grossly distorted the truth about Brighton. In reality, according to the council, 16 per cent of adoptive parents are gay, while no potential foster carers have been struck off the register for their attitudes towards lesbian parenting. [...]
In town halls and most of our public services, the pursuit of gay rights is now seen as politically more important than emptying the bins or teaching children to read. Indeed, the LGA argues that the ‘impetus to challenge institutionalised discrimination’ lies ‘at the heart’ of its modernisation agenda. An entire publicly funded industry has been built on this cause, leading to chaos in traditional institutions like the police, the armed services and the Church, producing a deluge of action plans, and creating jobs for campaigners. Only last week, for example, there were public advertisements for posts such as a ‘Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Youth Support Project Worker’ in West Rhyl, north Wales — not a placed renowned for its dynamic gay scene — on a salary of up to £20,100. No heterosexuals need apply, since the successful applicant will ‘positively identify as a lesbian or gay man’. In the same vein, the Birmingham NHS is looking for a ‘Senior Health Promotion Officer’, on £25,000, to join the Healthy Gay Life team. [...]
But the determination of our new public servants to embrace homosexuality is all too obvious, if at times unfortunately expressed: the document explains that Manchester City Council has a ‘bottom-up’ approach to gay consultation, while Northamptonshire Council trumpets its funding for the lesbian and gay ‘oral history’ archive in the county. In the name of combating homophobia, no one can escape the influence of the gay evangelists. Local libraries are told to have gay sections and ‘Proud to read’ booklists; leisure departments are urged to follow the examples of Yorkshire City Council, which last year supported both a lesbian book festival and a lesbian opera. All schools should be given ‘sexuality awareness training’; all workforces should be provided with ‘anti-homophobia’ instruction. The ideological commitment of private-sector contractors is just as important. The LGA document instructs councils to ‘monitor the work of contractors and sub-contractors to ensure that they consult with lesbian, gay and bisexual communities and respond to their needs’.
But the strongest indication of Stonewall’s position lies in its own project Citizenship 21, which has been funded to the tune of no less than £892,000 by the National Lottery. Some of this lavish subsidy goes towards Citizenship 21’s staff, who include project manager Ali Harris, a former campaigner for the Hebrew Immigrant Society, and Juris Lavikovs, the information officer who boasts that he once worked in the ‘lesbian and gay movement in Latvia’. Much of the rest of the money goes on grants, many of which defy parody. So £5,000 has been spent on the ‘South Asian Queer Photography Project’ to produce a ‘book of photographs showing the lives of South Asian lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender communities living in England’; the same sum went to ‘Dorothy’s Helping Hand’, which is ‘a support group for lesbians, bisexual and heterosexual women in the Bolton area who are experiencing mental health difficulties’. Another grant was handed out to make ‘a video documenting the Jewish Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgendered Experience’ and there has also been backing for the ‘Insight Drama Therapy Project’, aimed at tackling racism and homophobia in Milton Keynes. There were also rewards for ‘Out in the Countryside’, which seeks to ‘develop awareness of the lesbian, gay and bisexual community’ in Scarborough, shamefully neglected until now, and the ‘Cartooning Project’, which brings ‘disabled and non-disabled lesbians together’ to ‘raise sexuality awareness with disability communities through challenging images using postcards, posters and drinks mats’...
As with murder, drama and breakfast, nobody does local (municipal) government quite like the British. This almost makes one yearn for the good old days when the hard left limited itself to harmless pastimes like nationalizing the steel industry and leading hospital staff out on strike. Westminster may be the universal symbol of democracy, but much of British local government is openly marxist and proudly subversive.
This appalling nonsense may be worth remembering the next time you hear your state government promise to use lottery proceeds for “charity”.
Posted by Peter Burnet at February 1, 2004 7:06 AM
Since the Lottery is essentially a tax on the stupid it's rather consistent to spend the proceeds on idiotic projects.
Posted by: M Ali Choudhury at February 1, 2004 7:19 AMI wonder what form the backlash will take.
Posted by: Barry Meislin at February 1, 2004 7:33 AMI lived in England 20 years ago, nothing has changed. There were town councils then just as rabidly, and ridiculously, left wing then, as now.
Posted by: Jeff Guinn at February 1, 2004 8:31 AMI would love to see a study on Lotteries around the world. It is clear that Lotteries serve the role of expanding the risk-return spectrum available to economic agents, with the benefit of limited liability. This is a necessary, but not sufficient, condition for achieving a more productive allocation of resources. Ideally, thus, Lottery proceeds should not be earmarked but, should rather simply feed into the government budgets and be used to finance tax cuts that would put money into the pockets of savers. (If this feels too regressive, use it to target middle class tax cuts only.)
Posted by: MG at February 1, 2004 8:46 AMTo read this inventory of utopian projects directed at promoting an abnormal sexual act, you have to believe that people have run out of worthwhile causes towards which they can direct their energies. I think that we have reached that point in time predicted by post-war futurists where people's needs would be so fully provided for by government that they would have nothing more to do but pursue leisure activities. But people are basically not fulfilled by leisure activities, they have to believe that they are working for a great cause.
This is the great project of the left now - turn self gratification into a grand moral crusade.
Posted by: Robert D at February 1, 2004 11:11 AMOf course homosexuals would be strong supporters of adoption-- the modern domesticated varieties don't breed well at all, while the wild strains of the past didn't breed true.
I suppose one of the biggest differences between Britain and the US today is that in the US local government is local, whereas in Britain it is a department of the national government.
France, too, come to think of it.
I would not chortle too much about the absurdity of British local councils. I've been covering local councils for 35 years and once sat through a debate on whether a chicken is a mammal.
Posted by: Harry Eagar at February 2, 2004 12:50 AMI would suggest that the absurd grants mentioned should be looked at as comical rather than dangerous.
Daft campaigns at local levels are the inevitable consequence of the fact that the most vigorous campaigners at the local level are very often, well...quite daft.
You simply don't get too many noisy campaigners demanding money to 'maintain the status quo!' ("What do we want? Things to stay pretty much the same! When do we want it? Now!").
The lottery funds have provided plenty of good things as well as plenty of silly things.
I can't see British society collapsing because some Guardian-reader has been lobbed a few quid to take some pictures of asian lesbians...
Posted by: Brit at February 2, 2004 6:06 AMGLBT -- the latest acronym for non-straights.
Sounds like the name of some Soviet secret ops collective -- or at least Russian Bureaucatese.
Posted by: Ken at February 2, 2004 12:26 PM