Secret City: The Hidden History of Gay... A source page for quotes linked to James Kirchick. 0 quotes
“The greatest fear of the American male is that he will be homosexual. Beginning with the stern warnings he recieves as a young boy about overly friendly men in public parks, through the adolescent shaming prompted by the slightest hint of effeminacy, to the suspicion provoked by an interest in artistic pursuits, he is conditioned to believe that homosexuality is incompatible with manhood. From his family to his friends, in his church and at his workplace, from the realm of the everyday experience to the popular culture surrounding him, the message is unambigious that there is absolutely nothing worse in the world than to be a sissy, a faggot, a queer.” MenShameGuiltHomosexualTransgender Book:Secret City: The Hidden History of Gay Washington Source: Secret City: The Hidden History of Gay Washington
“The following year, Kramer would put on Just Say No, "a play about a farce" based in the fictional country of New Columbia, wherein everyone call's the president "Daddy", the First Lady is a harridan named "Mrs. Potentate" and the couple's ballet dancer son pines for his Secret Service detail” HumourRonald ReaganLarry Kramer Book:Secret City: The Hidden History of Gay Washington Source: Secret City: The Hidden History of Gay Washington
“It was 3:15 in the morning of June 26, 1980, and Congressman Bob Livingston was extraordinarily drunk, hiding in the Congressional Gym beneath the Rayburn House Office Building, petrified that a team of highly trained right-wing homosexuals working on behalf of Ronald Reagan was about to kill him.” CongressHomosexualConspiracy TheoryRonald Reagan Book:Secret City: The Hidden History of Gay Washington Source: Secret City: The Hidden History of Gay Washington
“Washington, it has been said, is Hollywood for ugly people.” HumorWashington Dc Book:Secret City: The Hidden History of Gay Washington Source: Secret City: The Hidden History of Gay Washington
“Starting with the father of the nation-depicted in the fresco that adorns the eye of the Capital Rotunda, the Apotheosis of George Washington, as an angel ascending into heaven-Americans have idealized their presidents. "People identify with a President in a way that they do not with no other public figure" wrote Ray Price..."Potential presidents are measured against an ideal that's a combination of leading man, God, father, hero, pope, king, with maybe just a touch of avenging Furies thrown in” PresidentsRichard NixonGeorge Washington Book:Secret City: The Hidden History of Gay Washington Source: Secret City: The Hidden History of Gay Washington