\input zine.sty \font\dec=cmssq8 \def\decl{\vskip\parskip \parindent10pt\narrower\obeylines \dec\baselineskip=9pt \parskip=0pt\raggedright} \def\header#1{\bigskip\lline{\bf#1}\vskip\parskip} \lline{\hl DON'T BE GAY, OR,} \lline{\hl HOW I LEARNED TO STOP WORRYING AND FUCK PUNK UP THE¨ ASS} \vskip\parskip \lline{by G.B. Jones (dyke division) and Bruce LaBruce (fag¨ division)} \lline{for the New Lavender Panthers} \vskip\parskip \begindoublecolumns {\it [This article appeared in MAXIMUMROCKNROLL Feb. 89, for the¨ sexuality issue (the best ever MRR issue). The response was\dots¨ underwhelming. It ain't a problem with the article. You figure it¨ out. Reprinted without permission. -- tj]} \header{HAS PUNK FAILED?} As part of our preparation for this article, and included in the¨ latest issue of JD's {[\it \#4? \#3? -- tj]}, our homocore¨ fanzine, we devised a questionnaire on the subject of gays and¨ punks. Question number six implored you to go to the dictionary¨ and look up ``punk'' too see if you'd feel any different¨ afterwards. {\decl \item{Q:} Go to the dictionary. Look up "punk". Did you do it?¨ Honest? Did you feel any different? \vskip4pt \item{A:} No, I don't feel any different, just smarter. \indent -- Jane Guskin / YEASTIE GIRLZ \vskip4pt \indent I don't own a dictionary. \indent -- Gerard "Conflict" Cosloy \vskip4pt \indent What was the purpose of that? \indent -- Marc Rentzer / LETCH PATROL \vskip4pt \indent No, I didn't do it, because I don't have a dictionary¨ "handy". \indent -- anonymous wimp } \vskip\parskip If you weren't too busy, and you managed to find it, here's the¨ definition of punk that might have confronted you: {\decl punk (pungk) slang. noun. 1. An inexperienced or callow youth. 2. A young tough. 3. A passive homo- sexual, or catamite. } (If you {\it really} did your homework, you would've discovered¨ that punk is also an archaic word for dried wood used for tinder,¨ the original meaning of the word ``faggot'' as well. Homosexuals,¨ witches, criminals, all denounced as enemies of the state, were¨ once burned at the stake. The word for the material used to set¨ them on fire became another name for the victims themselves. It's¨ no accident that ``punk'' and ``faggot'' have a similar root.) Whaddyaknow. Punks are fags, too. Better start worrying now. Long¨ before `punk' meant mohawks and MAXIMUMROCKNROLL, young boys were¨ being `turned out' in jail (recruited to serve other prisoners'¨ sexual desires) and labeled `punks' (``I punked the kid'').¨ Displaying homemade tattoos and a distaste for authority, these¨ original punks, many of them delinquent minors imprisoned for¨ breaking society's rules, became, on the inside, {\it sexual}¨ outlaws as well. This was {\it the} point of identification for¨ the early `punk rockers' who emerged in the mid-seventies,¨ explicitly playing out the role of `the punk' in dress, attitude,¨ and the rejection of social norms. This stance {\it obviously}¨ included sexual delinquency -- looking for {\it bad} trouble by,¨ for example, acting like 42nd Street hustlers (Dee Dee Ramone,¨ Patti Smith, among others, in the U.S.) or wearing a t-shirt with¨ two guys fucking on it (Sid and Johnny in the U.K.). {\decl \item{Q:} Has anybody ever called you a fag or dyke because you¨ are a punk? \vskip4pt \item{A:} Yes! Yeastie Girls get called dykes all the time. \indent -- Jane Guskin \vskip4pt \indent Yes, but because I was a \underbar{real} punk. \indent -- anonymous wimp \vskip4pt \indent Yeah, and then she asked me for some lipstick. \indent -- Jim \vskip4pt \indent Yes. \indent -- Lawrence Livermore / LOOKOUT \vskip4pt } \vskip\parskip The phenomenon of a highly visible and disruptive subculture¨ looking sexually deviant and seeming to behave that way has¨ proven an effective weapon against institutions that attempt to¨ control and contain personal identity and sexual freedom. So what¨ does it mean when someone calls you a fag or dyke? Society¨ considers you as outside of its restraints and controls, and that¨ your protest must extend to sexual behavior as well. The next¨ time someone calls you queer, consider the implications. Maybe¨ you've got them right where you want them. Early punks, and, judging from our questionnaire, some punks¨ still today, fuck around with people's conservative notions about¨ sex roles. But as a `movement', it doesn't seem like punk has¨ clued in to the idea of using sex as a strategy for promoting¨ change. So the obvious question {\it we're} asking is: \header{What is the Failure of Punk?} Let's face it. Going to most punk shows today is lot like going¨ to the average fag bar (MIGHTY SPHINCTER notwithstanding): all¨ you see is big macho `dudes' in leather jackets and jeans¨ parading around the dance floor/pit, manhandling each other's¨ sweaty bodies in proud display. The only difference is that at¨ the fag bar, females have been almost completely banished, while¨ at the punk club, they've just been relegated to the periphery,¨ but allowed a pretense of participation (ie. girlfriend, groupie,¨ go-fer, or post-show pussy). In this highly masculinized world,¨ the focus is doubly male, the boys on stage controlling the¨ `meaning' of the event (the style of music, political message,¨ etc), and the boys in the pit determining the extent of the¨ exchange between audience and performer. And where does this¨ leave the rest? `Wimpy' boys, with glasses, maybe, who can't¨ compete, or girls who aren't exactly encouraged to participate?¨ Unless, of course, they're willing to take a stand against `all¨ that macho crap'. (There are of course exceptions to the male¨ rule: girl bands or bands that include women as equal¨ participants, or bands like the CRUCIFUCKS and the RYTHYM PIGS¨ who pointedly criticize macho behavior during shows.) The gay `movement' as it exists now is a big farce, and we have¨ nothing else to say about it, so we won't say anything at all,¨ except that, ironically, it fails most miserably where it should¨ be the most progressive -- in its sexual politics. Specifically,¨ there is a segregation of the sexes where unity should exist, a¨ veiled misogyny which privileges fag culture over dyke, and a¨ fear of the expression of femininity which has lead to the¨ gruesome phenomenon of the ``straight-acting'' gay male. But¨ subversive gay boys and girls who expected to find in punk an¨ alternative to a stagnant culture find themselves largely¨ disappointed and unwelcome. So our next question is: \header{Have Gays and Punks Been Coopted?} Gay youths are abandoning the gay establishment because it's been¨ `co-opted'. Threatened by subcultures that challenge and question¨ its basic principles, the dominant ideology, comprised of those¨ ideals and values we are expected to follow and accept as natural¨ and inevitable, allows these miscontents to present their protest¨ well within its boundaries. Under the headings of ``democracy'',¨ ``pluralism'', and ``liberalism'', society presents each `radical¨ subculture' as one of several alternatives, albeit more¨ `theatrical', in an array of `lifestyles' to choose from.¨ Accepting this illusion of freedom the subculture lapses into¨ complacency and loses impetus, becoming increasingly¨ indistinguishable from that which it originally stood in¨ opposition to. The homosexual subculture provides a perfect¨ example of cooption. Presented with a facile freedom that offers¨ gay bars, discos, and fashion within a `gay ghetto', a radical¨ option sanctioned by and contained within normalcy becomes the¨ only concession to liberation. Society has long recognized `punk'' as a viable commodity to be¨ copied, incorporated, and sensationalized. Although not yet¨ `ghettoized' to the extent of gay culture (maintaining a more¨ nomadic edge), punks must constantly be wary of society's¨ attempts to reduce their protest merely to fashion, the¨ representation of the `radical' as `hip' new product to be¨ consumed. One way to avoid such cooption is to present a movement¨ that refuses to conform to the standards of sexual decency and¨ moral conduct expected of even the most rebellious of youths,¨ while avoiding the mistakes of the gay movement: ghettoization,¨ liberal reform, class capitulation. And that's what homocore,¨ coming out of the pages of a gay softcore pornography fanzine for¨ punks, is all about. \header{Androgyny vs. the King and Queen of Punk} If the early punk movement sought to break down sex/gender¨ restrictions, its more exciting performers were the best¨ examples. Patti Smith's initial image, decked out in leather¨ jacket, man's shirt and tie, jeans, and wrestling boots, set the¨ standard. NERVOUS GENDER, CATHOLIC DISCIPLINE, and THE DICKS¨ consciously played out gender-fuck; Siouxie Sioux included love¨ songs to women in the BANSHEE's sets (``Christine'', ``Dear¨ Prudence''). Women were talking to other women via songs, not¨ mediated by their relationship to men, but directed against¨ society, and their position within it. As the BUZZCOCKS and X-RAY¨ SPECS protested rigid roles in relationship to sex, the style of¨ the day attempted the same critique, with couples on the end of¨ each others' dog leashes, bondage clothes -- fetish items that¨ were eventually absorbed by the fashion industry as ``new wave''¨ and made ``marketable''. Hardcore, more conscious of the power of¨ cooption, has limited itself to a kind of unisex uniform -- band¨ t-shirt, motorcycle or army boots, jeans (braces optional) -- in¨ its attempt to avoid this trap, but in so doing, have¨ `deradicalized' the earlier overtures towards sexual revolution.¨ A common complaint today is that most punk boys date girls who¨ are more rigidly sex-role-defined as sexy or girlish. For those¨ girls who refuse to define themselves that way, the message¨ behind their image, more often than not, is one of aping their¨ boyfriends in the limited vocabulary of hardcore `style'. Or the¨ girl is dismissed as not `valuable' to men as sex object, fetish¨ object, or participant in their `scene'. Either way she loses. \header{Lydia for Lunch} Lydia Lunch is a prime example of this phenomenon (or worst). The¨ queen of transgression herself cannot seem to grasp how miserably¨ her entire project has failed. (Open footnote to L. Lunch: Dear Lydia; we all have fond memories¨ of those TEENAGE JESUS days, but of course we couldn't expect you¨ to stand in one spot and yell ``Orphans In The Storm'' forever.¨ Perhaps it's the people around you, the inevitable hangers-on.¨ Lydia, please, take a long hard look at what's happened. It's¨ never too late. We know you don't really want to be a public¨ joke. Act now.) A devotee of the `fuck-pig' school of punk, Lunch, dressed like a¨ Penthouse punk fantasy, squeals, moans, and whines abusively on¨ the various records produced by her various boyfriends. Real¨ protest is replaced by petty diatribes against her latest¨ paramour, playing into the male desire to confront an aggressive,¨ enraged woman, and conquer her, as she has been so often in the¨ past (ie.~``Right Side of My Brain''). Like a used Kleenex, Lunch¨ discards one image of the damaged woman to move on to the next.¨ Her ``pro-sex'' (read ``pro-abuse'') anti-censorship stance is¨ easily canceled out by her image of powerlessness and¨ ineffectuality. As with the PANDORAS, `men' line the stage to¨ ogle her breasts and buttocks while Lunch protests about the¨ same. Attempting to present abusive male power over women as¨ spectacle, she creates no distance between a woman being abused¨ and the representation of this. While the male performer's¨ sexuality is allowed to remain implicit, the female performer's¨ must be explicit, typified by Lunch, who consistently plays into¨ this unspoken but widely accepted prerequisite. But wait! Lydia's scruntiness doesn't stop there? She also¨ legitimizes the boys' outdated position as male spectator by¨ bestowing on them the luxury of using political rhetoric to¨ uphold the correctness of her `pro-sex' position. Defending her¨ on `political' grounds, the boys relish the opportunity to¨ sustain the tired positions of voyeur and female sex object,¨ allowing them to have their Lunch and eat it, too. Hiding behind the sanctified purity of `art' or `performance art'¨ lends Lydia's act a touch of class, which is somehow supposed to¨ raise her above the sex-trade worker of 42nd Street. Why she¨ feels it necessary to elevate herself above prostitution, which¨ is, at least, an honest profession, especially when compared to¨ that of the artist, remains a mystery. Naturally, we couldn't¨ care in the least if people are involved in explicit sexual¨ representation (after all, we're pornographers ourselves), as¨ long as it doesn't mirror the oppressive and entrenched value¨ system of culture at large. \header{Gee, that G.G.'s Such a Punk!} \lline{``Smart money says he won't live past 1987.''} \lline{Gerard Cosloy} \vskip\parskip Well, it looks like Mr. Cosloy's big money loss is everyone's¨ loss, as G.G. Allin `limps' through another year. The male Lydia¨ Lunch in the fuck-pig tradition has become the newest punk rock¨ star, but when you're number two, you have to try harder. You¨ have to go a little bit further. Assuming that the most radical¨ position is the most excessive, Allin masturbates, gets blown,¨ and attacks women during his show, the act as proof of his¨ virility -- he'll fuck anything. Homosexual behavior becomes one¨ in an array of disgusting acts intended to reinforce his stature¨ as king of the slag heap. As in biker culture, when two men deep¨ tongue kiss to demonstrate how fearless and macho they are, G.G.¨ Allin presents this abnormality as one of a continuing series of¨ abuses to be endured, proving that real men must get their rocks¨ off at all costs -- any hole will do. What Mr. Allin doesn't¨ realize is that showing affection to the same sex is a much more¨ alarming and revolutionary gesture. If two same-sex couples were¨ to kiss in the pit, believe you me, the reaction to the crowd¨ would be much more violent and intense than the spectacle of G.G.¨ Allin allowing some poor sap to give him a blow-job on stage.¨ G.G.'s such a punk. \header{The Royal Scam} If Lydia would be queen and G.G. king, then these two extremes,¨ symbolizing male/female sex roles within hardcore, pathetically¨ mirror straight society's options. This reactionary response¨ signals a further cooption of punk. As a movement, it begins to¨ imitate a repressive society, one that abhors homosexuality and¨ insists on heterosexual coupling, an entrenched institution, as¨ it exists, that empowers the male, as hypermasculine aggressor,¨ while debilitating the female, as victim. \vskip\parskip \centerline{* * * * *} \header{A Riddle} {\decl \item{Q:} How do you tell if your roommate is gay? \item{A:} His cock tastes like shit. } \vskip\parskip In a recent letter to MAXIMUMROCKNROLL (\#64), a punk/homo wrote¨ in a minor diatribe about the virtues of being a straight-looking, straight-acting gay male seeking same. This¨ apologist for the ``mundane'' moralizes against the unsavory¨ practices of male homosexuals, preferring to remain invisible and¨ inoffensive to straight society. The male fear of femininity¨ rears its ugly head once more as the writer expresses disgust at¨ the ``flexed wrist'' and ``pouting lips'' of the ``disgusting¨ homo routine some fags like to play'', finding it ``disgusting as¨ most straights do''. ``Most gays'', he concludes, ``aren't the¨ raging butt-rangers you think they are''. Oh no? The New Lavender¨ Panthers (male contingent) would like it to be known that not¨ only do they consider themselves butt-rangers, but also bum-chums, turd-burglars, knob-gobblers, cocksuckers, and¨ gaylords, while the girls are well-known diesel-dykes, baby¨ butches, and lezbo killer whores. In other words, fuck sexual¨ conformity. The writer complains about fag-bashing, forgetting¨ that the victims are usually the kind of people that he himself¨ describes as loathsome. In another gay letter in issue \#64 the¨ (non-gay) writer realizes that it's the most visible and vocal¨ members of marginalized society that bear the brunt of the¨ attacks of the moral majority: ``Ain't life hell when those¨ oppressed minorities start acting sassy'' he writes. If apologist fags choose to live drab, uneventful, straight-looking lives, that's their choice, BUT! assuming a¨ disapproving position towards sodomy (with condoms, of course),¨ promiscuous activity (safe sex rules!), and non-straight-acting¨ behavior plays right into the tactic of mainstream culture¨ promoting division within insurrectionary movements. So we'll¨ leave you with these thoughts on the matter: {\decl There's a faggot in the family I don't know what to do There's a faggot in the family He's not like me and you There's a faggot in the family If Grandma only knew (Wow man, how embarrassing, what would my friends say.) \vskip4pt \indent -- from ``Faggot In The Family'' / ARYAN DISGRACE } \dots and\dots {\decl I love him, I love him, I love him And when he comes I'll swallow, I'll swallow, I'll swallow And that's because I love him, I love him, I love him And when he comes I'll swallow, I'll swallow, I'll swallow And that's because I love him \vskip4pt \indent -- from ``Nips Get Pissed'' / NIP DRIVERS } \header{H*O*M*O*P*H*O*B*I*A} {\decl \item{Q:} Have you ever participated in a queer-bashing incident? \vskip4pt \item{A:} I tried to foment lynch mobs to take vengeance for fag-bashing. \indent -- Brosquin Rewde \vskip4pt \indent The other day I hit myself in the face with my yo-yo. \indent -- Donna Dresch \vskip4pt \indent When I was 16, my gang went downtown to beat up queers but we never found any and I was just as glad of it. \indent -- Lawrence Livermore \vskip4pt } \vskip\parskip There's a lot to say on the subject of homophobia, but why not¨ just listen to the J.D.s Top Twenty Hit Parade song by UGLY¨ AMERICANS: {\decl Let's beat up some faggots 'Cause they really make me sick We all know it's a mans's world And real men don't eat dick No way! \vskip\baselineskip I know some funny AIDS jokes They make me laugh like hell! And if you don't like niggers too I'll tell you a few about Sickle Cell \vskip\baselineskip Homophobia -- homophobia Up my ass H-O-M-O-P-H-O-B-I-A } \vskip\parskip (In case you didn't detect the sarcasm and think this song is¨ pro-homophobia, consider that UGLY AMERICAN's drummer is black,¨ and they have another song on the same album (Who's been¨ Sleeping\dots) called ``I Love My Mom''. And don't forget¨ ``Weenie Man''\dots) {\decl \item{Q:} Have you ever been beaten up because someone thought¨ you were a faggot or dyke? \vskip4pt \item{A:} Yes, but it's not because they thought I was a faggot,¨ it's because I am a faggot. \indent -- anonymous wimp \vskip4pt \indent Not yet, but I always feel like I have to have eyes in¨ the back of my head. \indent -- Donna Dresch \vskip4pt \indent Not so much for being a faggot as for being a punk/wussy. \indent -- Marc Rentzer \vskip4pt } \vskip\parskip And here's another song called ``Homophobia'', by VICTIMS FAMILY: {\decl `I just heard this song, caught the last few words It's all about hating fags, man it was fuckin' rad!' What did it mean? Why did you agree? You're just a closet-queen And you're not impressing me. "No, I'm fucking serious, it was really cool! I think I can remember and now I'm gonna sing it for you.' No, I don't want to hear it. Your head is up your ass You must be insane, Why don't you tell me about your past? } \vskip\parskip \header{J.D.s Sex-Gang Wants You!} {\decl \item{Q:} Do you read J.D.s? \vskip4pt \item{A:} No, I just jerk off to the pictures. \indent -- Donny The Punk \vskip4pt \indent Before the pages got stuck together. \indent -- Mykel Board \vskip4pt \indent Fuck no! That rag?!! \indent -- Tom Jennings / HOMOCORE zine \vskip4pt } \bigskip Oi! readers: This is the end of our show. Some may be shocked, others¨ offended, but none untouched. What can we tell you about J.D.s¨ that hasn't already been said in the dozens of reviews, articles¨ and interviews, some even published, over the past two years.¨ Maybe just this. J.D.s is one of a number of projects instigated¨ by the New Lavender Panthers, a collective of fags, dykes and¨ other fuck-ups dedicated to the task of putting the `gay' back in¨ `punk' and the `punk' back in `gay'. Recent attempts in the media¨ to coopt J.D.s by singling out individuals to be humored as token¨ fag-punks cannot be conscienced by the collective. The homocore movement is a spontaneous insurrection provoked by¨ specific incidents of discrimination and, yes, even violence,¨ directed against us queers. The compilation of the Top Twenty¨ Homocore Hits in J.D.s points to widespread and increasing¨ instances of the inevitable rebellion against conservatism within¨ the punk movement. Many of the songs we've chosen to represent¨ the roots of homocore have been unconscious in their motivation.¨ Now we are in the process of making a compilation tape of gay¨ punk bands/performers whose contributions are not only openly gay¨ in content, but also confrontational and direct in their¨ political themes, critical of both the apathy of the gay¨ community and the limitations of punk. If any groups or¨ individuals are interested in contributing to this tape, write us¨ at this address: {\bf JDs / Box 1110 / Adelaide St. Station / Toronto Ontario M5C¨ 2K5 / CANADA} Hate mail should include SASE and recent photo. Thanx. \bigskip \centerline{* * * * *} At the end of the questionnaire, we added the following¨ invitation: ``We are writing an article for an international¨ fanzine on the subject of Gays and Punks. If you have any¨ comments, queries, or quotable quotes to offer (or anecdotes,¨ dirty stories, true-to-life tales, compromising photos, etc)¨ please include. Thanx.'' Here are some of the responses we got: \header{Tom Jennings} When I tell people that I'm a homo-punk I get all kinds of¨ interesting reactions, almost none of the ones you'd expect.¨ Never have I gotten (to my face anyways) anything like the nasty¨ ``fucking fag'' type shit you might imagine. Mostly I get no¨ reaction at all. (This is most disappointing, as it deprives me¨ of the chance to get righteous and angry!) Why would I tell anyone that I'm queer, and just not leave it¨ unsaid, of to be mentioned discretely when the time comes?¨ There's lots of reasons, but mainly: maybe I'll meet someone I'd¨ like to be boyfriends with. What the hell did you expect, some¨ sort of selfless higher purpose? First things first, I say. Now most of my friends and acquaintances are considered pretty¨ intelligent and worldly, and are pretty cool about complex¨ subjects like sex and love and all that. Therefore they have to¨ use more refined methods of containment and harassment than¨ ordinary folks. I'm not going to dwell on obvious oppressive shit like violence¨ -- that's easy, or at least straightforward. No one I know would¨ tolerate that kind of stuff anyway. There are things far more¨ insidious than that! You'll find all sorts of help if you get¨ assaulted (well, sometimes); the quiet friendly shit that well-meaning people do is much worse, and harder to sort out. One such ``intelligent'' response to my telling friends about my¨ sexual desires is: ``There's no need to make a big deal of your¨ sexuality, why do you need to tell people that?'' I used to take¨ this to heart and wonder if I was making a big deal out of¨ nothing, but that's not it at all: the real question is why does¨ it bother THEM? What they mean is that they can't deal with it,¨ but since they are so smart and broad-minded, if it makes them¨ uncomfortable then it must be YOU that's at fault. Why don't you¨ just make it easier and shut up? The very fact that NO ONE KNOWS is why I and so many others are¨ so fucking isolated, in the middle of a room filled with friends.¨ That's a big part of the reason why I tell people. I am not the¨ one that makes a big deal out of my sexuality. Everyone else¨ does. Before I went to first grade I especially liked certain¨ guys, and before I reached puberty I also knew it was something¨ that was not real cool, and that to survive (for me) meant hiding¨ most of it. Another really intelligent-sounding reaction is: ``Labels are so¨ awful and limiting, how can you limit yourself like that?'' (As¨ in `labeling' myself homo, etc.) Well, labels and categories may¨ be limiting, but this isn't a label or category, it's a¨ preference. Read my lips: PREFERENCE. It don't care why I like¨ guys sexually more than girls, it doesn't matter if it's genetic¨ or I sent away for it mail order. As far as labels go, I'm not a homo/\hskip0pt gay/\hskip0pt¨ faggot/\hskip0pt queer/\hskip0pt etc, it's just that I like boys¨ for sexy purposes much more than girls. I didn't make up the¨ label(s). Now if yo like 'em short and dark, you don't get called¨ a short-and-dark-liker, or a queer, or get beat up, you don't get¨ called anything, that's just something you like. I like guys, I¨ get called a queer and maybe get beat up. I'm guilty of using the¨ labels for conversational convenience, homo/faggot/queer, since¨ everyone's making such a big deal of it, but other than that, I'm¨ not applying labels to myself, so get over it, OK? The assumption for all these so-called intelligent responses is¨ that I am somehow limiting myself by not wanting girls for lovers¨ or for sex or whatever, and that the reasons for it are somehow¨ suspect; in other words, just like the overt homophobes maintain,¨ there's something wrong with me. I must hate girls, I just¨ haven't found the right one(s), I had a traumatic experience, etc¨ etc. Don't bother arguing with them. Ask them: why does it bother¨ you that I like what I like? (Is this the flip side to¨ accusations of some people that will ``fuck anything with a¨ cunt/dick''?) (As a small aside, there's that clich\'e ``man-hating dyke'' and¨ ``woman-hating faggot thing that's so stupid: how many straight¨ guys have you met that have no use for women except for fucking?¨ How many close opposite-sex non-sexual friends do YOU have? The¨ clich\'e itself is illuminating, especially when you think about¨ who says it the most.) What is really going on is that most people are so uncomfortable¨ with sex, or closeness to others or even their own fucking¨ bodies, and that they've barely figured others' or even their own¨ heads to just barely cope with the few things that THEY do, that¨ when you do something else, they just can't handle it. No one¨ really talks about human sexuality, except when absolutely¨ necessary, and so never get rid of all those old cobwebby ideas. I'm the first to admit I'm far from perfect regarding my own¨ sexuality, never mind yours. Shit, it's taken me all this time¨ just to figure this much out, and I still haven't had a boyfriend¨ in three years of looking. It's just that to be an outlaw in this¨ world, and to survive (never mind thrive), you have to work¨ harder and be more perfect than non-outlaws. Everything we've been taught (or not taught) about sexuality, our¨ bodies, and our relationships to others is pure shit. Just like¨ everything we've been taught about what this country's government¨ does and stands for ain't necessarily so. You think lies and¨ self-deceit are limited to political subjects? I was forced to go¨ through a process that made me doubt a lot of things about sex,¨ and so it's not surprising I thought a lot about other things¨ too, and started to doubt all sorts of assumptions about how the¨ world supposedly works. Lots of people have gone through a¨ similar process, usually after suffering some injustice, like¨ you're a girls and everyone ignores what you say, or you're black¨ and you get shunned or worse at a show. Frequently when it¨ happens in one aspect of like, you go through a similar thing in¨ others; women dealing with the horror of trying to get a humane¨ abortion find out how bad the medical industry is, how poorly¨ governmental bureaucracies treat people, how families can be¨ oppressive, etc. I went to the anarchist gathering in Toronto, and for the first¨ time in my life met a lot of people with the same dilemma as me.¨ It goes like this: ``I go to `gay' places, and that's all it is;¨ same old shit except the yuppie consumers are gay, and just as¨ narrow-minded. I go to punk things that are my life, that I feel¨ art of, and I have to hide away my sexuality.'' This is¨ incredibly common. Not every homo is an ``assimilationist'', ie.¨ someone who is gay but wants to be part of mainstream culture,¨ thinks ``equal rights'' means women and homos in the Army, the¨ right to a shitty job for life, and thinks that ``freedom of¨ choice'' means Coke, Pepsi or SevenUp. Much of the social system we live in is meant to keep us apart,¨ to draw lines between us, keep us in our separate little¨ categories, make us hate each other and do their work for them.¨ ``Unity'' is bullshit. I'm not and don't wanna be the same as¨ you; let's `cooperate'' as unique individuals, or for shit's¨ sake, at least stop hating each other. You'd be surprised who¨ your friends really are\dots \header{Radikal Ray} I dated a skinhead once and we we're screwin' around one day,¨ drinking, smoking dope, etc. I (for some godforsaken reason)¨ could not get my peter to stand up; of course the guy found it¨ amusing and bet me he could get it hard. So he started sucking me¨ off, prodding my ass with his fingers while he did it (his way of¨ letting me know that he was going to fuck my brains out as soon¨ as he sucked me off) and as I'm (finally) reaching total climax,¨ he pukes vodka all over the wall. Needless to say, I went soft¨ again\dots \header{Jeffery Kennedy / BOYSVILLE USA} Let me be perfectly honest. When I was younger, I turned to punk¨ because I thought it would welcome me. I mean, I liked the music¨ and I was what I would call an outcast, although that sounds way¨ clich\'e. Like, the boys liked me until they found out I was a¨ fag. Then they ran. So much for anarchy and brotherhood. It¨ wasn't til I removed myself and confronted that whole scene on my¨ own terms that I could really have fun. It was a learning¨ experience, let me tell you. \header{Anonymous Boy} There are lots and lots of gay punks! I used to think that there¨ were very few but I keep finding out there are more and more! I¨ think that's great! One of the problems is that where it used to be OK to be gay in¨ the punk scene a long time ago, something happened when a lot of¨ bands in the hardcore movement started using the words ``gay''¨ and ``homo'' and ``fag'' as insults and put-downs. I don't know¨ why straight punks feel threatened or whatever but I really want¨ to see it swing back in the other direction. I am a 23 year old¨ guy and I've been into punk music since I was 16 and I always¨ felt like I had to hide being gay. But now I want to break out¨ more and more. I have to get a permanent job so I can get the¨ money to get my own apartment away from parents and their hate¨ views. \header{Donny The Punk} Throughout the formative period of punk (75 -- 79) I think the¨ emphasis was on being free of society's concepts and limitations,¨ being experimental, rather than on expressing a ghettoizing¨ identity as ``Gay''. Punx were more able to do or try anything¨ without accepting such labels. Patti Smith and the Ramones, who¨ between them founded punk rock, both had songs relating to¨ homosexuality on their initial LPs (Patti's ``Horses/Land'' which¨ is about a boy who gets raped and ``Redondo Beach'', a dirge for¨ a female lover by a singer who also sang of male lovers; the¨ Ramones' ``53rd and Third'' about male prostitution) but in none¨ of these songs was the main character ``gay''. On the British¨ side a year later the Buzzcock's first single was a big hit (by¨ punk standards) about a boy who didn't seem to care whether his¨ partner was male or female: ``Orgasm Addict''. One could make a¨ long list of famous punx who were known to have involved in same-gender sex, from both sides of the Atlantic, starting with¨ Johnny and Sid (before Nancy came along). Then came Tom Robinson, who used to work for London's Gay¨ Switchboard, and whose ``Glad to Be Gay'' was very popular among¨ punx in general; I think he was the first well-known punk to¨ identify himself as ``gay''. Pete Shelley of the Buzzcocks¨ followed with ``Homo Sapien'' after the `cocks split up. On the¨ American side, Lance Loud, the teenager who ``came out'' to his¨ family on national television (``An American Family'') fronted a¨ punk band in New York. When punk made the transition from the classic style to hardcore,¨ there started a new emphasis, not part of the original idea of¨ punk, of being ``hard'', and this was identified with being¨ `macho''. Given the popular image of homosexual activities (among¨ guys) as ``unmanly'', it is not surprising that homophobia soon¨ became a part -- fortunately, a very controversial part -- of the¨ punk scene. With homophobic violence on the scene, it became¨ risky to be perceived as willing to experiment with same-gender¨ sexuality; at the same time fewer punx were willing to take risks¨ in order to assert their independence of peer pressure from other¨ punx. The net result was a heavy repression of homoeroticism. The¨ AIDS panic, fed by government propaganda which did not¨ distinguish between risky behavior like ass-fucking and safe¨ behavior like cock-sucking, has certainly contributed to this¨ repression. The punx most willing to combat this atmosphere were¨ those who identified themselves as ``gay'', so the emphasis in¨ the open discussion has shifted in the 1980's from being free of¨ boundaries on sexual expression to the problems of an oppressed¨ minority group, ``gays''. Personally, I find this to be one of¨ the most significant areas or regression in punk. As a footnote, it is worth noting that a 1978 issue of PUNK¨ Magazine, then the only punkzine on the East Coast, carried a¨ discussion with the manager of Max' Kansas City (at the time in¨ the process replacing CBGB's as New York's main punk club) on the¨ word ``punk'' in which he clearly stated that the term was used¨ in jail for younger prisoners who got raped and sexually¨ enslaved, so the awareness of those connotations was widespread. I think also that the intensity of male-male physical contact on¨ slam-dancing has contributed to homophobia because it brings out¨ fears of homo-sexuality (confused with homo-sensuality) to the¨ surface in insecure teenagers who would otherwise not be dealing¨ with the issue, or not with so much emotion. \bigskip {\decl \item{Q:} Does slamming give you a hard-on? \vskip4pt \item{A:} No. \indent -- Lawrence Livermore \vskip4pt \indent These days everything makes me horny. \indent -- Jane Guskin \vskip4pt \indent No, you fucking idiot, slamming does give me a hard-on.¨ However, whilst dancing with Annabella Lwin (BOW WOW WOW) at my prom, I came in my pants. I don't slamdance anyway. Faggot. \indent -- Marc Rentzer \vskip4pt \indent Slamming into what? \indent -- Mykel Board \vskip4pt \indent Slamming doors always gets me off. \indent -- anonymous wimp \vskip4pt \indent Slamming has never given me a hard-on. Neither has¨ watching other slam. \indent -- anonymous boy \vskip4pt \indent Well, um, gee, urk, yeah. Like three weeks ago I went to this show in Seattle and GIRL TROUBLE was playing, a really great band from Tacoma, and it was in this boxing club which used to be an S\&M places. Anyway, it had been a hot day and there were 200 people there crammed into this little room with no ventilation. It was STEAMING. You could not breathe! Of course, every boy in the room had taken their shirt off and I jumped in the middle of 'em when GIRL TROUBLE starting playing ``Little Sister'' (Elvis). I was faint. Dancing, slamming, dizzy, sweaty, panting, scratching\dots yeah, slamming does give me a hard-on. \indent -- Jeffery Kennedy \vskip4pt \indent If you want you can make up an equivalent question for girls, but it's stupid anyways. \indent -- G.B. Jones \vskip4pt } \enddoublecolumns \bye