OCR Text |
Show Page 6 The UTAH INDEPENDENT January 31, 1972 The Homosexual Man of the Year? hensive scale to provide a sdentific rehabilitation for the deviate. Therefore, any experiments with a substantial pattern of success should be reported in hopes that one of them may turn out to be the needed Continued From Page 5 the wrong road for America, and I will not take the nation down that road. Thus spake Ricahrd Nixon before he decided to institute wage and price controls. Many shocked and alarmed Americans spoke out against this e takeover. One of these was Murray N. Rothbard, the respected professor of economics at Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute, who warned: On August 15, 1971, fascism came to America. . . . The word fascism is scarcely an exaggeration to describe the new economic policy. . . . The freeze spells the end of the free price system, and therefore of the end of the entire system of free enterprise and free markets that have been the heart of the American economy. And, on the negative side of the scale, there is more much more. In spite of all the assurances from the President that he has been winding down the war in Vietnam, it is clear that the Communists are still very strong there. As correspondent Bob Considine pointed out on January 5, 1972, the least reported fact of the war is that the Vietcong still rule huge sections of South Vietnam. Considine went on to lament the fact that: The new wave of air attacks . . . has cast further doubt on the fate of the breakthrough. is in this spirit that the following report is submitted. It is a preliminary report and the operating It and procedure no doubt requires further refinement the followup but it was remarkably successful during period it was allowed to be used. WHY THE EXPERIMENT WAS CONDUCTED wage-pric- POWs and increased their numbers. It has been a preview of what will come to pass when the American foot soldiers go home. . and . . Well still give air support probably still refrain from turning off the main supply spigot by wiping out the port of Haiphong. What more could we expect from a President who declared as far back as September of 1969 that it didnt matter to him if South Vietnam adopted a Communist form of government. One of Chou pet propais vice a president for the gandists En-la- is New York Times when not in Peking. He is columnist James Reston, who devoted his column Several years ago while this writer was serving as chief of police in a city of more than 200,000, it was by W. Cleon Skousen Reprinted from Law and Order Magazine Now that the novelty of the recent homosexual (Gay Liberation) epidemic has worn itself down and a more moderate and deliberate scrutiny can be directed to the problem, the fundamental question arises, What can be done about it? culSome have suggested that the rash of uni-se- x tures spawning around the country is merely one of of a sick society. They the symptomatic point out that it was so in ancient Greece, it was so in ancient Rome, and it is true today. Others point out that while homosexuality tends to thrive in a side society, it also helps create a sick society. They feel it is a mistake to wait for society to reform before expecting an improvement in the solution of this problem. They want to start with the individual deviate. If enough of them reform it should upgrade the whole spectrum of society. Of course, even when it is recognized that the approach must be with the individual rather than sotiety as a whole, the question still remains, What can we do? As soon as it was scientifically established that homosexuality is a character defect or a behavioral perversion rather than an inborn compulsion, authorities began looking for some type of therapy which would help the person who sincerely wanted to escape from his proclivity for deviate sexual behavby-produ- cts self-creat- ed ior. That search is still continuing. Authorities are looking for a program which can be adopted on a compre- - learned that the local judges were following the practice of placing homosexuals on six months probation with the provision that they must obtain regular psychiatric help to overcome their deviate behavior. Since the majority of these deviates were not repeaters it was assumed that. the treatment they were receiving was effective in changing their abnormal sexual appetites. Nevertheless, over a period of time, it was observed that while the recidivism rate among deviates was low cultures was high. the growth rate of the local uni-se- x A number of gay spots were attracting deviates from hundreds of miles away. It was finally decided to give this problem some concentrated scrutiny. A large number of those who were on probation were interviewed and it was discovered that the psychiatric help these deviates were supposed to be receiving was not attempting to change their behavioral pattern at all. If anything, it was galvanizing their practices. In nearly all cases they were being told that they were bom with their homosexual tendencies and it was therefore normal and right for them to seek to accommodate this tendency but that they should do it without getting involved with the police. Each deviate was then given some suggestions on ways and means of institutionalizing his sexual aberrations without running any serious risk of arrest. This explained why we were not getting uni-se- x community was repeaters even though the growing. It was decided to try a new approach. A LOCAL SCANDAL PROVIDES THE OPPORTUNITY Just about this time one of the most prominent members of the state medical profession was arrested for aggravated deviate behavior in a public place. A week later a prominent educator was arrested. The resulting publicity from these two arrests created a widespread awareness of the devastating impact Join the National Association to Keep and Bear Arms TRUCK PARTS Are Our Business "NAKBA for December 15, 1971, to lauding Mr. Nixon for his turn to the Left. But Reston makes some cogent observations nevertheless, A national organization that has as its primary goal noting that it is hard to remember any politician who reversed himself as often as Nixon or got so much credit for his switches in With his decision the process to devalue the almost mighty dollar, President Nixon has now agreed to do just about everything he insisted he would never do. And the odd thing is he hasnt been devalued in the process. On the contrary, he has made a virtue of inconsistency , and every time he reverses himself he is cheered for his rubbery flexibility: Better a political opportunist than a man of rigid principles. It is because of President Nixons political opportunism that Conservative columnist Anthony Harrigan, writing in the Houston Tribune for December 30, 1971, soberly observed that has been Nineteen seventy-on- e anything but a cheering year for Americans concerned that their NAKBA's monthly newsletter, the ARMED Continued On Page 8 the defeat of all anti-gu- n tutional legislation. politicians, and unconsti- CITIZEN NEWS, keeps its nation-wid- e membership informed and active. HELP us recall U.S. Senator Hart of Michigan. Sen. Hart introduced legislation to confiscate handguns from you and me and every g citizen. No U.S. Senator has more openly advocated a more obvious violation of the Second Amendment. Join us NOW! Support us NOW and we'll defeat Hart and many other anti-gu- n politicians together this election year. That way and only that way can the nefarious Gun Control Act of 1968 be REPEALED, and the present drive for confiscation law-abidin- TRAILER AXLE Models all with New Timken Rockwell Bud Hubs. 16ft"x7" P. Brake with - RH-RL-T- R 10-ho- le $36900 TIRE CHAINS Passengar, Track Tractor TIRES Rtcap 900x16 ALL SIZES - Military Typa Tread of our handguns be stopped. Yes, I want to join an action organization! Enclosed find my $6.00 membership fee. D Send more information about "NAKBA." Enclosed is my large, stamped self-addresse- moss's South 2nd DKie. 1563 West Salt lake City, Utah 84110 Phene: Serving the Intermountain West TOOLS TRUCK PARTS EQUIPMENT 801-487-64- - d, envelope. NAME ADDRESS Zip 74 - National Association to Keep 8i Bear Arms, Inc. P.O. Box 1189, Medford, Oregon, 97501 |