What Angelina Jolie
can teach us
by Trevor Thomas
September 18, 2007
Finally, something uttered from a
Angelina Jolie, in a recent interview, had some rather interesting things to say about sexuality. Now she was speaking only of herself, but I believe that what she revealed is very characteristic of many in her “lifestyle.”
Jolie shared with the French
magazine, Public, that since entering into a “relationship” with Brad
Pitt, she has given up lesbianism and what she called “S & M,” which is
short for sadism and masochism. In the interview Jolie
stated that, “I've never hidden my
bisexuality. But since I've been with Brad, there's no longer a place for that
or S&M in my life.”
So I suppose the
appropriate label for Jolie, at least the one that
the homosexual community would have us use is “bisexual.” Whatever one would
label her, I suppose she now is effectively declaring herself “straight.”
The ironic thing about Jolie’s declaration is that it flies in the face of what the homosexual community would have us believe about homosexual behavior: namely that it is an innate, genetically-determined, unchanging condition.
Jeffrey Satinover,
author of several books, including Homosexuality
and the Politics of Truth, has reported interesting things concerning
homosexuality that support Jolie’s declaration. Dr. Satinover is a graduate of M.I.T., Harvard, and the
University of Texas Medical School. He has practiced
psychiatry since 1986. Dr. Satinover is
currently in the doctoral program in physics at Yale.
Dr. Satinover,
based on scientific evidence, has concluded that the idea of “sexual
orientation” is fiction. He refers to a 1994
In 2003, testifying before the Massachusetts Senate Judicial Committee, as they were considering the legalization of gay marriage, Dr. Satinover stated that the belief that homosexuality is a genetic and unchangeable condition is not “even remotely true.” He continued, “however widely believed (these claims) may have become; the evidence of the kind that ‘everyone knows’ simply does not exist; even a cursory examination of the actual sources behind these claims will reveal a very strong preponderance of evidence to precisely the contrary; the claims are simply fiction.”
Until 1973 homosexuality was
classified as a “disorder” by the American Psychiatric Association. That year,
by a vote of 5,834 to 3,810, the APA removed the condition of homosexuality
from its Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual. Concerning this, Dr. Satinover testified
that, “the American Psychiatric Association, like most other
professional-practitioner associations, is not a scientific
organization. It is a professional guild and as such, amenable to political
influence in ways that science per se must not allow itself to be. Thus, the
decision to de-list homosexuality was not made based on scientific evidence as
is widely claimed.”
However, since there is no evidence
that homosexuality is “genetic,” many like to refer to homosexual activity as
“chosen” behavior. According to Dr. James Dobson this is typically not the
case. Dr. Dobson points out that, “Homosexuals deeply resent being told that
they selected this same-sex inclination in pursuit of sexual excitement or some
other motive. It is unfair, and I don’t blame them for being irritated by that
assumption. Who among us would knowingly choose a path that would result in
alienation from family, rejection by friends, disdain from the heterosexual world, …No, homosexuality is not ‘chosen’ except in rare
circumstances.”
Whether or not one considers homosexuality a “disorder,” Dr. Satinover states that it is a behavior that is undesirable to many, and it is susceptible to change (again, i.e. Angelina Jolie). However, he adds that, “The evidence for this fact should not be obscured by the false assumption that homosexuality is either innate and unchangeable, or a ‘lifestyle choice’ and changeable at will. It is neither: It is most often a deeply-embedded condition that develops over many years. It is, in other words, similar to most human characteristics, and shares with them the typical possibilities for, and difficulties in, achieving sustained change.”
It is rare that the lives of celebrities can point us toward the truth, especially concerning sexual behavior. Even in Jolie’s case, as we learn of her departure from homosexuality (which likely could be rather short-lived), the fact remains that she is in a sexual relationship and has children with a man to whom she is not married. In fact, Pitt has declared that they refuse to marry until, “everyone else in the country who wants to be married is legally able (to).” Oh well, I suppose a traditional view of marriage from the likes of these two would be asking too much.
Copyright 2007,
Trevor Grant Thomas