By now you've no doubt heard the flap about Senator Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania, who, in response to a question about whether homosexual persons should remain celibate, stated that "if the Supreme Court says that you have the right to consensual sex within your home, then you have the right to bigamy, you have the right to polygamy, you have the right to incest, you have the right to adultery. You have the right to anything."
The slippery-slope argument linking homosexuality with polygamy has become a familiar rhetorical move in antigay rhetoric. Unfortunately, its use is not limited to those (like Santorum) whose mouths clearly move faster than their minds: there are a number of smart, thoughtful people who believe that the case for one lends support to the case for the other, and not all of these people are anti-gay.
But Santorum's version seems to go further than most. And it's not just because he extends the list from polygamy to incest, adultery, indeed, to "anything." It's because the thing that initiates Santorum's parade of horribles is not "homosexual sex" but simply "consensual sex." According to Santorum, if the Supreme Court says you have "the right to consensual sex within your home ... you have the right to anything."
Okay, so not everyone speaks in final draft. Maybe the "you" here refers to "you homosexuals." Or maybe Santorum thinks no one has a Constitutional right to consensual sex, and thus that laws limiting such activity are all Constitutional (which is not the same as saying that they're wise or justified).
Attention to the full text of the interview, as well as to follow-up interviews, suggests that Santorum didn't really know quite what he was saying, jumbling together some defensible constitutional concerns with radical views on privacy rights and a clear antipathy toward all things gay.
Santorum went on to argue that polygamy, adultery, sodomy, "all of those things, are antithetical to a healthy, stable, traditional family." In his view, the state's failure to regulate people's sex lives - even when they are consensual and private - "destroys the basic unit of our society."
Santorum is the third-ranking Republican in the Senate, so you might think the president would be a bit concerned about the image he's creating for the party. And Bush, finally, has weighed in. The "compassionate conservative," the man who so ardently defends freedom from oppressive religious regimes (but only where oil is involved), has come out in support of Santorum, calling him "an inclusive man."
Excuse me?
And then I thought about it for a while, and realized that the president is right.
Recall that Santorum claims that right to consensual sodomy entails not just the right to polygamy but indeed, to anything. Anything. Rape. Tax fraud. Mass murder. You name it. That's pretty damn inclusive.
Or consider Santorum's position on gay marriage: "In every society, the definition of marriage has not ever to my knowledge included homosexuality. That's not to pick on homosexuality. It's not, you know, man on child, man on dog, or whatever the case may be."
So, according to Santorum, gays' interest in securing marriage rights for their consensual adult relationships is not merely akin to polygamists' doing the same. It's also akin to "man on child" or "man on dog." That's pretty damn inclusive too.
(Although if he were really inclusive, he would have included "dog on man" as well. Why should the man always get to be on top?)
Santorum's "man on dog" comment was so surprising, it prompted the reporter to interrupt, "I'm sorry, I didn't think I was going to talk about 'man on dog' with a United States senator; it's sort of freaking me out." Santorum's reply scaled new heights of inclusiveness: "And that's sort of where we are in today's world, unfortunately. The idea is that the state doesn't have rights to limit individuals' wants and passions. I disagree with that. I think we absolutely have rights because there are consequences to letting people live out whatever wants or passions they desire."
So Santorum thinks that the state needs to limit not just harmful behaviors, but "individuals' wants and passions." Lest you think this was a verbal slip, he repeated it again in response to the next question: "I've been very clear about that. The right to privacy is a right that was created in a law that set forth a (ban on) rights to limit individual passions. And I don't agree with that."
(If this is being clear, I'd hate to see what he's like when he's being muddled.) What is clear is that Santorum thinks that your bedroom should be included among the places the state belongs.
If this is inclusiveness, count me out.