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Keeping
society out of our bedrooms
Tapera
Kupuya
October 16, 2011
For a couple
of years running, gays, lesbians, prostitutes and other adults indulging
in one manner or the other of consented sexual gratification - between
adults of consenting age - have been subject of mass bashing. No
one can stand on their defence for fear of association. They are
a convenient distraction, an appropriable conversation initiated
by political leaders when they fail to provide solutions for the
country's problems. Or for religious leaders whose convoluted sermons
fail to hide the contradictions of their failure to side with those
demanding justice and dignity in this, their Lord's earth.
I am quite aware
of the non-contentiousness of this piece. We are all agreed on every
aspect I raise in it. Apart from perhaps my openness on the subject,
"sex and sexuality". And how this is a very private matter
for the citizen. And how social morality should never apply.
There is something
very wrong with collectivized morality, especially when it comes
to the subject of sex. For starters, it is one such issue that rarely
finds comfort in public conversation. Even in private, it sort of
has to wait till after a measure of some substance enhancer, insanity
or as part of delinquency. Even amongst those who have just had
it.
Words referring
to sex cannot be uttered without being offensive or socially inappropriate.
Even amongst those who do it in the acceptable setup: heterosexual
married couples. Unless one borrows the language of external societies
for whom sex and sexual expressions are not taboo. So whereas we
can say without shame words referring to our sexual organs by name
in English, Spanish or French, we couch in shame and contempt when
the local vernacular is used. We can freely describe objects or
those who look sexually appealing publicly as being 'sexy'
- with not consequences but for an envious stare - but the same
description or word would get you plucked horns should you give
it an approximate translation in our own languages.
It has been
argued, probably rightly so, that this moral 'correctness-
about the subject of sex, including subtracting it from acceptability
from general discourse, explains why our people, more than any other
race or ethnic group, have suffered the most from diseases that
are sexually correlated. Our intervention programs have tended to
be too moralized for quite obvious a subject. They are laced with
doses of contempt. Never an acceptability that sex is a fundamental
necessity for every adult, both for pleasure as for physiological
needs.
But even more
disturbing and in need for an unambiguous challenge is the whole
manner in which society has increasingly poked its head and now
finding comfort in the bedrooms of other adult citizens. Consenting
adults are deprived the freedom to choose how and with whom they
should have sex. There is always a moral police somewhere ready
to pounce on those considered sexual deviants. Even worse when these,
men and women, perhaps lacking enough gratification in their own
lives and therefore quite finding it vexatious that others can enjoy
it variedly, find themselves in positions of authority.
There is no
suggestion of names here. But if we look closer into the abuse of
religion and the State to brutally blackmail and attack those whose
sexual conducts they do not agree with. This is irrespective of
two fundamental codes: that those whose sexual preferences and acts
are consenting adults and, that their acts, privately engaged in,
have no physical effect on the persons who find these acts contemptuous.
The arguments
raised to criminalize sexual gratification of consenting adults
that is not deemed in synch with dominant views are just as ambiguous.
Ranging from religious ones concerning how God and nature made things
a certain way to an Afro-ethnic uniqueness of particular forms of
how to have sex. These arguments are often presented in a hacking
manner - where emotional and physical battery follows any attempts
to rebut these so dismissible rationalizations. This explains why
gays, lesbians, transgender and the women sexuality lobby demands
greater support from civil society, and protection by the State.
We might not
agree with other people-s sexual preferences. But where these
preferences are confined to consenting adults, they really are of
no business to any other person. That a woman, or a man for that
matter, chooses to charge another to have sex is their own matter.
Those who do not agree with paying for sex have a ready recourse:
not to seek those who sell it. Same applies with those who do not
agree with gays and lesbians: stick to your preferred sex. You should
not conflate your subconscious fears or ultra egos and imposing
your preferences on other persons.
As the new constitution
is being drafted, special thought should be paid to ensure that
the State and society do not become peeping Toms. Neither should
it allow society into the bedrooms of adult consenting citizens.
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