White liberal (gay) guilt and my friend Henry's big black dick
I have to apologize for this title -- it really shouldn't be "white liberal
(gay) guilt" but "white liberal (gay) pretentiousness, parochialism,
stupidity, and ignorance."  But that was too long, and I already had black
cock in the title.

Let me begin with an anecdote:

*When I worked at a university hospital, a lesbian hospital manager, Cate,
was taking my work group on a little tour. The group consisted of me, the
technical writer and de facto English as a second language teacher of the
group, and a number of Taiwanese and Japanese-American radiologists and
software engineers.  Cate jokingly asked the group "What's white and 10
inches?" to which of course the punch line is "Nothing."  It's a phallus
joke (amazing in a way that this was being told at an East Coast university
since this was in the 90s and was probably already legally actionable
workplace harassment by this (white) lesbian against a group of socially
conservative, mainly immigrant, Asian men).  I never asked Cate, with whom
I was on good terms, about her joke.  I am thinking however that Cate may
have been a "pure" lesbian, who had had little or no experience of penises.
 She had heard that white penises were smaller than black ones, and had
somehow confused this with white penises being smaller than "penises of
color" generally.  So to a group who probably didn't have a dick over 5 or
6 inches among them, she had made this joke.*

Like my friend Cate, I have to assume that *MetroWeekly* columnist Sean
Bugg writes the things he does because of the limits of his experience and
imagination. In a recent column, Bugg, a cute guy who claims to have once
been libertarian-leaning but now writes only the most off-the-shelf
"liberal" commentary, decries the near racism of people placing personal
(i.e. sex) ads who specify the race of their desired paramour.  That's not
exactly precise.  Bugg decries *white *men who post ads saying they only
want to have sex with whites, and sheds his liberal tears for the poor
blacks and Asians and Latinos who must read these ads and feel shut out of
the sexual opportunity our modern society offers.  He doesn't actually
demand that whites on sex sites give sexual submission to men of color, as
some black men demanded in the 60s when they told anti-war women they could
serve the movement "on their backs" (leading to the founding of the old
radical feminist newspaper *Off Our Backs [*http://www.offourbacks.org/]).
 Though it is the conclusion of "liberalism's" statism and Procustean
egalitarianism.

What's even funnier is the hidden racism in Bugg's worldview.  He thinks
this is a hierarchy.  Desirable whites aren't sharing themselves with the
men of color.  Bugg reports he has an Asian husband and may feel he has a
superior perspective to parochial white people like the Southerners he so
often complains he grew up among and has now transcended.  (Note that Bugg
in his story below feels personally implicated by another white gay guy's
rude behavior, as representing the collective of white Volk.)  But I wonder
if this isn't in a way like Edina in*Absolutely Fabulous* suddenly excited
about becoming a grandmother when she learns it will be to a mixed race
grandchild, "this year's most must-have fashion accessory."

Perhaps Bugg can be forgiven for not knowing what type of ads people are
posting on line, since he is married.  There are some ads from white men
ONLY looking for men of color, or for men of specific colors.  There are
lots of ads from men who specify only certain type of white men (blonds,
redheads, Jews, Italians, etc.).  There are a few ads from black men who
only want to date other black men and a few from black men who are only
looking for white men.  If anything whites seem to be the *O-* blood type
of the dating world, the universal donors (with Latinos being a close
second):  most gay blacks, most gay Latinos, and most gay Asians will date
white men.  But unlike the heterosexual world, where black men marrying
Asian women is not unknown, black gays rarely seem to want to date Asian
gays, and vice versa (from what my eyes and my personal conversations with
black gay friends tell me).

Which brings me to another personal anecdote:

*I have a friend named Henry, who I mainly only see at gay Democratic
events, or now, since I abjure Democratic events, the gay and lesbian film
festival.  Henry is African American and is high in his field in one of
those nominally private multinational corporations that sponsor Sunday
morning political talk shows.  He is extensively educated at private
universities and graduate schools just below the Ivy League, and owns homes
near D.C. and on the Delaware beaches. There is no reason he cannot date
most people he'd want to take out.  Some years ago Henry told me he was
going to attempt to stop dating white men, because he was so very tired of
apparently always having to hear at some point in a relationship, "give me
that big black dick."  (For a whole blog post by someone traumatized by
encounters where someone wanted his BBD, see *
http://dlconfessionssequel.wordpress.com/.)

I think Mr. Bugg's article is based on his own assumptions about the world.
 He is on the precipice of calling it racism when people place sex ads and
then provide a wish list of dos and don'ts.  I find it rather easy to
imagine that what is going on specifically when white men place ads saying
they only want to go over to the home of a stranger to have quasi-anonymous
sex with another white man (or perhaps a white and/or Latino and/or Asian)
man, is that they are saying they are more comfortable, in this potentially
awkward situation, with dealing with what they imagine to be a more known
quantity.  I think that explains why we see men sometimes dating a broader
range of ethnicities (and ages, classes etc) as they age (as Bugg sort of
notes) -- they are just more comfortable and familiar with a wider range of
situations. (And very likely there is the same motivation when men of other
races place an ad only for their "own kind.")  (*Parenthetical joke:  a
white family tells their son it's just easier if one marries one's own
kind, and after college he brings home a (black) male friend and tells his
parents that is just what he has done*.)



If anything modern "liberals" have themselves to blame for this.  Under our
current "Cry racism!" culture if you are white and go to meet a person of
color for a date, but then don't want to stay the night (as it were), you
run the cost of being accused of racism.  I am reminded of the time in my
youth I went to the old Dupont Circle dance bar *Badlands*, and ended up
dancing with a tall gorgeous blue eyed brunette, who came home with me.  I
thought I had won the lottery.  Turned out gorgeous was both a borderline
rapist and a whiny baby, because I did not want to engage in the specific
sex acts he seemed fixated on.  In the bar and on the dance floor the din
had prevented me from hearing him well.  Back at my place it turned out he
had an accent, and as it happens, was from Mexico.  A very pale, blue eyed
Mexican, less dark than my own black Irish/Scottish/Cherokee mix.  He was
such a jackhole I insisted on his not staying the night (and ended up
providing him a ride to his home 2 counties away).  This pale skinned, blue
eyed, upper class boy whined at me that NO ONE ever let him stay over, and
what was it, "discrimination because I am Mexican!"  I suggest that the sex
ad posters Bugg is writing about are trying to avoid the same situation,
where they do not want their decision that a cup of tea or a beer is as far
as a date will go embroil them in defending themselves (even in their own
mind) against the charge of being racist.

It might be good for people on the leftover side of the spectrum, when they
aren't busy rounding up poor black and brown kids to sell to the educrat
cartels for campaign donations for Democrats, to think about how their easy
resort to racial guilt tripping affects African American's (and other
minorities, including gays') chances in getting a job interview or a job,
when it is viewed as a mine field should one not hire a "protected class"
or have to let them go when downsizing.


Foolish Thing DesireFor gay men, the intersection of sex and race brings
out the worst in a small number of people, who then make headaches for
everyone else
By Sean Bugg
Published on January 19, 2012<http://metroweekly.com/archive/?ad=01/19/2012>
 @MetroWeekly

A few years ago, before I began dating my husband, my then-boyfriend took
me to a summer cookout with a local gay Asian group. It was a fun Sunday
afternoon of volleyball, hotdogs and*chả
giò*<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ch%E1%BA%A3_gi%C3%B2>,
meeting new people, and all the enjoyment you're supposed to get out of a
Sunday afternoon party.

While scarfing down some pasta salad and Korean barbecue, I overheard one
of the few single white men in attendance, who'd been pretty openly
cruising around the party, lecherously questioning a guy across the picnic
table from me: ''So, what country are *you* from?''

*Dude, you're not doing white people any favors with that crap*, I thought.

The intersection of sex and race is just another of those things that
brings out the worst in a small number of people, who then go on to make
headaches for everyone else. I've been pondering this again lately, in part
because of sudden surge of interest in a 2010 *Metro Weekly opinion
column<http://metroweekly.com/news/opinion/?ak=5613>
*by Daniel W.K. Lee on sexual racism in the gay community, as well as
Alexander Chee's essay last week for *Out*, ''No
Asians!''<http://www.out.com/news-commentary/2012/01/11/no-asians>
both
of which delve into the increasing sexual segregation of the gay community.

It's of more than passing interest to me, given that my husband is Asian.
(If you're wondering ''What is he?," he's Vietnamese). So I tossed the
subject out on Facebook and a couple of email groups to see what my
multicultural circle of friends and acquaintances think about the issue.

The short and polite version: We seem to lack consensus.

On the one hand, people of color have a pretty strong case that dismissing
entire classes of people solely for racial and ethnic backgrounds is, at
its core, racist. (I would add that desiring people exclusively *because* of
their race is just as problematic.) On the other, there's an equally strong
case that you can't force people to experience sexual attraction, and it's
immoral to label as ''racism'' a response over which people lack any
conscious control.

Still, I'm more sympathetic to the former (although I pull back from
declarations of racism, because I understand the latter). During my days of
very enthusiastic dating and hookups — back in the earliest days of using
the Internet to find sex partners — I never had the experience of scrolling
through person after person declaring ''No whites!'' But black and Asian
guys? I can see exactly how they could walk away from that with a different
take on the racial harmony of the gay community.

The embarrassing thing is, back then I was skipping past most of those guys
who were black and Asian. My own history of sexual desire is a history of
change – I grew up where it was actually pretty rare to see anything but
white people, which I believe shaped much of my young gay life. It wasn't
until later that I understood that desire is fluid; what turns you on at 25
may not do it when you're 40.

I've learned a lot from being in an interracial marriage, the main thing
being that it doesn't make me a special snowflake. I'm just a guy who's
lucky enough to have found a good relationship. And I'm thankful that my
own youthful tunnel vision expanded to the point where I was open to it
when I found it. We all turn away too much happiness because of our own
unexamined expectations.

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