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The Rainbow Reporters new show, Freshly Doug, broadcasts live every Thursday 9-noon AEST in Melbourne Australia on 94.9 FM, streaming via the web at joy.org.au.

A quiet kind of Pride

February 8th 2010 04:09
Doug with Corey Irlam
Doug at Pride with Corey Irlam

Commentating on the Pride March for Joy 94.9 this year gave me a good vantage point – from the back of a stationary ute – which you don’t get when you’re actually marching. And I have to say it was a rather strange Pride March this year. Strange, but also encouraging.


There were the sights you expect to see, but I was surprised and delighted by the very large number of young people taking part.

Melbourne High School boys, in their uniforms, marching with their principal, indicate how far we’ve come.

Schools have marched before, but to see the number one selective state school in Victoria marching, the one which gave us Simon Crean, Alan Stockdale, Graham Kennedy, Lindsay Fox, Bruce Ruxton and numerous others, took my breath away.

It was also the first time anyone could remember a Federal Liberal Senator joining the marchers, with Judith Troeth walking with the local Liberal contingent.

There was also a marked increase in the number of people from regional Victoria, including Bendigo, Ballarat, Shepparton, Daylesford, Macedon, and two lesbians from Geelong. Many of these were from youth groups, too.

Sport fielded rowers, runners, swimmers and volleyballers, joined for the first time by gay rugby and soccer teams. Again, lots of youngsters. I confidently predict a gay AFL team taking to the field sooner rather than later.


Cute award of the day had to go to the Tykes on Trikes. Young as they were, there was no doubting their enthusiasm, although their steering and braking ability needs work.

How many times have we heard people – gay and straight – moaning “What’s the point of Pride?” “Surely we don’t need Pride any more?” Sunday gave an answer.

Because what I witnessed on Sunday was the passing on of our cultural DNA. A new generation picking up the reins. For the first time I felt confident that the struggle for equality will go on, and that we will win it.

That was the encouraging part. The strangeness came from the relative silence of the spectators. Normally you can track the progress of certain favoured groups – like PFLAG, or the police – by the cheers rippling down the street, breaking through the base level of applause.

And there were some cheers now and then. But for the most part the crowd just stood and watched. Some marchers remarked how eerie it felt. No coincidence, I suspect, that this was also one of the fastest marches on record.

Maybe it was because Sunday was also Victorian bushfire remembrance day. Or maybe it was just the heat. But to me it felt as if the covert hostility of the mainstream was just a little nearer the surface, as they took note of how much closer to them we have moved.
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Gay MP blackmailed

February 23rd 2009 00:56
Catherine Tate as Derek Faye
“Who, dear? Me, dear? Gay, dear? No, dear!”: Derek Faye (Catherine Tate)

We’ve heard a lot recently about elderly same-sex couples and the fears that some of them will be outed by Centrelink against their will.

No doubt there are a few who have been hiding so long they haven’t come out even to themselves, let alone to the neighbours. Like the Derek Faye character created by Catherine Tate, they say, “Who, dear? Me, dear? Gay, dear? No, dear!”. We should show them some compassion.

There are others who, while uncomfortable about their imminent exposure, are prepared to wear it as the price of equality. Given the price many of them have already paid for their sexuality, we should be hailing them as heroes and doing our best to support them.

My personal conviction is that gays and lesbians will never achieve equality while we seek it from a position of invisibility. If people don’t know who we are, they are free to imagine all kinds of nonsense.

On the other hand, we have to respect the privacy of people who think that their sexuality is no-one’s business but their own.

But I have no patience with those who say that public individuals have a right to the same consideration, especially politicians who conceal their sexuality to sell themselves to their electorates as straight and/or married. As Derek Faye might say, “How very dare they?”

This past weekend the story emerged of a married MP who has allegedly been blackmailed by his gay lover. This situation could not have arisen in the first place if the MP had been honest.

We’re not allowed to know who this man is. The courts have suppressed his name, at least for now. We know a great deal about the alleged blackmailer, but nothing of his victim.

Ordinarily this is as it should be. The victim has committed no crime, and should not therefore be punished. But in the case of a politician, it’s not so simple.

When you stand for public office you offer yourself for public scrutiny. Your beliefs, your character and your behaviour become the perfectly proper subject for public debate.

A politician who has presented himself for election as married and therefore by implication straight, has deceived the public, and has done so for personal gain.

No-one could favour the forcible outing of elderly pensioners who’ve been persecuted by the state simply for being gay for much of their lives. They would undoubtedly view it as a public shaming, and we have no right to even ask that of them, let alone impose it.

But when a man has built a career, for which he has been well paid out of public funds, on the basis of a lie, I find myself feeling a good deal less compassionate. When he has chosen to misrepresent himself as a happily married man, when he could have been a role model for the gay community, when he has taken the easy road, instead of the hard road we are enforcing on many of our elderly against their will, I see nothing wrong, and much that would be right, in making his identity known.

He has made his bed, and should lie in it.
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Will a frost follow Nixon?

February 1st 2009 22:48
Christine Nixon Lucy Loosebox
Christine Nixon enjoys a joke with Lucy Loosebox - pic by Daniel Sutton


When Christine Nixon marched in Pride 2002, she got the biggest cheer of the day. Criticism in the tabloid press and talkback radio, fanned by Saltshaker zealots and other extremist “Christians”, did not deter her.

The Herald Sun was predictably ‘outraged’ that she not only allowed her officers to march, in uniform and on full pay, but led the contingent herself.

“The people who asked me to join them in the Pride March have worked for the force and the community for up to 30 years,” she explained patiently.

“They are professional, dedicated, experienced and hard working officers who feel strongly about marching in uniform. They deserve a fair go. It was important to support the officers when asked”.

For those officers who had endured the slights of their traditionalist macho colleagues for all that time, it was heady stuff to know that the most senior officer on the force was prepared to openly stand by you.

She also signalled her support for the rainbow community in general, and, by implication, for all other minorities.

“Police involvement was an attempt to forge links with one of the under-represented groups in our cosmopolitan community. . .. I think people of the community really hope that we have overcome some of the prejudices that used to be there,” she told the tabloid.

Nixon understood that in order to police a diverse society, the force must reflect that diversity. People must be confident that there are officers on the force who share their heritage, background and experiences, and where they do not, they have at least some understanding of what it is like to be gay, lesbian, black, Asian or whatever.

This approach is not popular with the ‘hard men’ in the force, who despise what they see as a ‘soft’ approach. They see themselves as ‘defending society’, which they tend to define in rather narrow White Australian terms, and this has been reflected in Nixon’s many battles with the Police Association.

She appears to have had some success in changing the culture of Victoria Police. How much of it will survive her departure remains to be seen. Much hangs on the choice of her successor. Will they continue to promote and respect diversity, or will the thaw in relations with the gay community she promoted be succeeded by a frost?

The Gay and Lesbian Liaison Officers have come under threat in the past from senior officers who naively assume that if they don’t see lots of gay and lesbian related crime on their screens, they don’t need to spend resources on gay and lesbian related policing. Will her successor take such a simplistic approach?

Nixon herself has been criticised by some in our community for only marching the once. She took the view that she had made her point, and was not in the habit of repeating herself. The message was clear.

Now she marches again, at the end of her tenure, in a clear signal to those who will choose her successor that this is one achievement, at least, that she is proud of, and one they should not jeopardise with their choice.
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Rainbow Report tonight 4/12

December 4th 2008 04:33
Some of the darker deeds of the election are being brought to light in Tasmania. You may remember pamphlets were circulated claiming same-sex marriage was a danger to society and granting transgender rights would destroy the family – or was it the other way about?

Anyway, the Tasmanian Anti-Discrimination Tribunal is holding hearings and Rodney Croome will be waiting on the line to tell us about it


[ Click here to read more ]
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Hostage
How Stuff Works - A Liberal/National 'Conscience' Vote


Q: When is a conscience vote not a conscience vote


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Rainbow Report

It’s been a dramatic week in gay and lesbian publishing, with the collapse of bnews and the sudden emergence of two new gay media – Canvas, an arts and entertainment magazine from Evolution Publishing, and Southern Star, from Sydney Star Observer.

[ Click here to read more ]
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On The Rainbow Report Thursday Night

August 6th 2008 06:45
Rainbow Reporter
Every Thursday evening 7-8pm AEST broadcasting live from Melbourne on Joy 94.9FM, streaming live at www.joy.org.au. Podcasts available on the Joy site by the weekend.

Last week we had a few things to say about Jeff Kennett, but he’s rather gone to ground since then. But the issue of gays in sport, the entrenched homophobia in sport, hasn’t gone away. In fact, if anything Jeffs intervention made it worse


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Bronwyn Pike
Bronwyn didn't pike it


The numbers may have been down – only about 300 turned out for this year’s Melbourne Equal Love Rally, well down on previous years – but two facts made it a memorable occasion


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Dark Knight priest
Dark Night Priest


Well, I was going to lay off Jeff Kennett, but the man just keeps chewing on that foot in his mouth. In the Herald Sun today he continues to make a link between bisexuality and pedophilia. Such a link does not exist, and such a slur is incredibly damaging


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Should Jeff Kennett Apologise?

July 27th 2008 22:37
I wrote about this yesterday.

The story also made Channel 7 news last night


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