NPR Anchor Asks Barney Frank: 'Are You Heartened by the Distance America Has Come' on Gays?
Richard Harris wasn't the only NPR staffer wondering about the
backwardness of America on Tuesday's All Things Considered. At the end
of a completely supine interview with Barney Frank,
anchor Guy Raz asked Frank if he was pleased at how far America had
come from its backwardness on gay liberation from when he came out of
the closet in the Reagan years. "I want to ask you about a decision you
made in 1987," Raz declared. "You went public to tell people you were
gay...I was very frightened when I did it, it turned out unnecessarily.
Yeah, I think one of the great success stories in America is the extent
to which we have overcome prejudice based on being lesbian or gay,
bisexual, transgender...I think frankly coming out was a big part of it
because reality beats prejudice and by presenting people, those of us
who are gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender with the reality of who we
are, we give an alternative to the prejudice, and the prejudice loses."
Guy Raz (a former CNN correspondent) only asked four questions, all of
them softballs that he let Frank take paragraphs to answer: 1. "What
will be your top two or three priorities for your last year in office?"
Frank answered for 50 seconds about stopping right-wing "guerrilla
warfare" on financial reform and cutting the defense budget...On the
apparently glorious Dodd-Frank bill, "What in your view is it already
doing to prevent the kind of crisis that inspired its
implementation?"...If there was one think you could have included in
Dodd-Frank that you just couldn't put in there because it wouldn't have
been accepted, you know, by most members of Congress, what would that
have been?"...The gay question was fourth, and only took 34 seconds to
answer. On the NPR website, the headline was Barney Frank's Two Top
Goals: Protecting Wall St.