
March 2004 Cover
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By
Boyd McDonald
Both sides agree to this much: a young woman met three young cops in a night club on Douglas Avenue in Altamonte Springs, Florida; had drinks with them; repaired to their room in
the Sundance Inn on State Road 346, and had sex with them.
The woman claims it was rape-- that "the three officers assaulted her after forcing her into bed at the motel and binding her with belts," according to the Gainesville, Florida
Sun. The Orlando, Florida Sentinel puts the time of the alleged gang rape at 1:45 A.M. to 3:20 A.M.
But the cops claim, as usual in these cases, that she wanted it.
Juries circa 1991 are asked to believe that women like to be raped and humiliated by groups of men. Frequently, the juries do believe that.
The woman in this case, aged 27, "ran from the courtroom in tears after a grand jury decided not to indict" the cops, says the
Sun.
Perhaps both the woman's and the cops' versions of the story are at least partially true; perhaps she did want sex but became disappointed when the cops turned out to be fonder
of each other than they were of her. This is often true in gang sex.
Any way you look at it, the scene with three males and only one woman
is ipso facto more homosexual than heterosexual. The dominant quality of the scene is three men
naked together, seeing each other's hard ons, and seeing each other have sex.
The cops aged 22, 24, and 32, were sharing the motel room while participating in a police softball tournament. The arrangement is dripping with homoeroticism-- three males in
one room taking showers, drying their assholes, stripping for bed, lounging around naked or in their red slut panties, showing off and comparing their bodies and tools, and hiding their real
feelings under fag jokes. The more fag jokes there are, the more serious the feelings.
If the three lived up to the reputation of cops as being swinishly alluring, the dialogue in the motel room, with or without the token woman, would be of interest to those who are
not too sensitive to bear it. It is known that even higher ranking government employees such as former President Ronnie Reagan and his Cabinet told what Hunter Thompson, the
heavily-drugged journalist, calls "homo jokes."
That at least two of the three cops may have been rowdies is suggested by their personnel files reported in the
Sentinel. The 32-year-old has no less than 12 charges against
him, including "disorderly intoxication," "failure to appear in court," "vandalism," "whistling at women over a public address system while on duty," and "a history of bad judgment."
The 24-year-old cop has "a citizen complaint against him" and is charged with a "preventable" traffic accident.
No one appreciates male sluts more than I. The secret of liking them is the same as the secret of liking anyone (especially babies): not to expect anything from them. But in this
culture women can expect something from males since that is the official relationship of the culture. When males treat women as though they were male homosexuals, as is the custom
today, women should sue (unless they like it).
The apparatus who sent the Sentinel clipping wrote that the paper "is obsessed with sex, in a community obsessed with sex." This speaks well for the honesty and taste of the
Sentinel and of Orlando.
| Author Profile: Boyd McDonald |
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Born in 1925 in South Dakota, Boyd McDonald entered Harvard as a high-school dropout after serving in the army in World War II. Jobs with Time, IBM, and several Wall Street firms preceded Boyd's career as a chronicler of gay sex. He was the founder and editor of Straight to Hell (alternatively the Manhattan Review of Cocksucking), and later published a number of anthologies of true sex histories. Boyd died in September 1993, two months after completing his final book, Scum. |
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