Au nom de quoi devrais-je m'abstenir de penser que les oeuvres de Bach ou Mozart sont infiniment plus profondes, plus riches et plus précieuses à tous égards que le tambourin ou le flûtiau de ce que Lévi-Strauss appelle les "sociétés sauvages" ? Un tel jugement de valeur n'implique nulle xénophobie, pas davantage la moindre volonté colonisatrice ou impérialiste, simplement l'expression d'un choix dont on voit mal au nom de quelle morale débile il devrait être interdit. 
Luc Ferry, Le Figaro, le 9 février 2012.
Bientôt de nouveaux résultats !
REVUE DE PRESSE
40 ans après les débuts du mouvement gay contemporain (on fête ce week-end l'anniversaire des émeutes de Stonewall), Barack Obama est critiqué pour son manque de volontarisme sur les droits des gays. L'atteste cette longue enquête du New York Times qui décrit bien les attentes et déceptions de la communauté gay vis à vis du nouveau président. Et de la marge limitée qu'a la nouvelle administration sur ce sujet qui divise encore profondément l'opinion publique américaine.
Voici les principaux extraits (en angais) de l'enquête du New York Times, parue ce jour.
(Photo ci-contre : GayObama par ftachaser2007/Flickr - DR)
Par Adam Nagourney, New York Times (publié le 27 juin 2009).
WASHINGTON — For 15 minutes in the Oval Office the other day, one of President Obama’s top campaign lieutenants, Steve Hildebrand, told the president about the “hurt, anxiety and anger” that he and other gay supporters felt over the slow pace of the White House’s engagement with gay issues.
But on Monday, 250 gay leaders are to join Mr. Obama in the East Room to commemorate publicly the 40th anniversary of the birth of the modern gay rights movement: a police raid on the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar in New York. By contrast, the first time gay leaders were invited to the White House, in March 1977, they met a midlevel aide on a Saturday when the press and President Jimmy Carter were nowhere in sight.
The conflicting signals from the White House about its commitment to gay issues reflect a broader paradox: even as cultural acceptance of homosexuality increases across the country, the politics of gay rights remains full of crosscurrents.
It is reflected in the surge of gay men and lesbians on television and in public office, and in polls measuring a steady rise in support for gay rights measures. Despite approval in California of a ballot measure banning same-sex marriage, it has been authorized in six states.
Yet if the culture is moving on, national politics is not, or at least not as rapidly. Mr. Obama has yet to fulfill a campaign promise to repeal the policy barring openly gay people from serving in the military. The prospects that Congress will ever send him a bill overturning the Defense of Marriage Act, which defines marriage as between a man and a woman, appear dim. An effort to extend hate-crime legislation to include gay victims has produced a bitter backlash in some quarters: Senator Jim DeMint, Republican of South Carolina, sent a letter to clerics in his state arguing that it would be destructive to “faith, families and freedom.”
“America is changing more quickly than the government,” said Linda Ketner, a gay Democrat from South Carolina who came within four percentage points of winning a Congressional seat in November. “They are lagging behind the crowd. But if I remember my poli sci from college, isn’t that the way it always works?”
Some elected Democrats in Washington remain wary because they remember how conservatives used same-sex marriage and gay service in the military against them as political issues. The Obama White House in particular is reluctant to embrace gay rights issues now, officials there say, because they do not want to provide social conservatives a rallying cry while the president is trying to assemble legislative coalitions on health care and other initiatives.
Tony Perkins, the president of the Family Research Council, a group that opposes gay rights initiatives, said Mr. Obama’s reluctance to push more assertively for gay rights reflected public opinion.
“He’s given them a few minor concessions; they’re asking for more, such as ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ being repealed,” Mr. Perkins said. “The administration is not willing to go there, and I think there’s a reason for that, and that is because I think the American public isn’t there.”
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