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Audible Audio
First published January 1, 1978


“What parade?”
“You know, man. Gay Pride Week? Every year. To celebrate 1969 when those drag queens threw their purses at the New York police."
“What really needed doing wasn’t parades and picket lines and protests. It was changing the laws. For twenty years we tried single-handed. Now and then some new assemblyman still wet from the egg would flitter into the lion’s den with a timid little bill. They always ate him.”This is a really fascinating look at gay culture and how it dealt with the politics and politicians at the time that doesn't come from a non-fiction source.
“People wouldn’t sign these petitions if they knew what homosexuals are really like. Police officers know that - how these weirdos lives their lives. Alleys. Public toilets. Back rows of dirty theaters. What they do - with men they never saw before. Anybody. It’s not just that they’re mentally sick. They spread germs. You get people like that in your police department locker rooms - you could have your police force down with venereal disease. Is that what the people want that are signing these petitions? Well, I can tell you, it’s not what the police officers want - or their wives.”
“We take - took - an intense interest in Ben Orton. This is salt-of-the-earth country. Ben Orton was it’s hero. Ben Orton wasn’t just a police chief - he was also a man.”
“What Ben Orton wanted kept secret was kept secret. He had what’s politely called power. There are nastier words for it.”
“He was protecting his image, the myth of Ben Orton, champion of law and order, the family, the flag - the things, as his wife told me this morning, that make America great. Which did not include adult movies, homosexual police officers, and most especially not an underground paper.”
“I have advice for women seeking husbands - with a law-enforcement officer, what you see is what you get.”This is the same shit that Lt. Col Grossman peddles - he just picked it up and gave a new spin on it.
“Including indifference to laws that don’t suit him,” Dave said. “Minor ones…slashing the tires of an unwanted stranger in town. Or major ones, like burning down the local radical newspaper.”
She cleared her throat and gave a recitation. “The courts don’t understand the problem. The legislators don’t understand the problem. The police officer has to deal with the problem, face to face, day in, day out. It’s often a matter of his life, a split-second decision. The judgment as to what he has to do can’t wait for laws to be written and pass a string of courts to make up their minds. He has to protect himself and the public who depend on him. Whether they like it or not.” Her mouth twitched. “End of creed.”