Andrew Sullivan, Ph.D. (born August 10, 1963) is an English-American journalist, author, blogger, and former editor of The New Republic, known both for his heterodox personal-political identity (HIV-positive, gay, conservative, and practicing Roman Catholic) and for his efforts in the field of blog journalism. Sullivan has described himself as being a South Park Republican, a phrase he coined in 2001 and which has gained considerable currency since.
Andrew Sullivan is also a popular speaker at major universities and civic organizations in the United States and a frequent guest on many national news and political commentary television shows in the United States and Europe.
In that position, he expanded the magazine from its traditional roots in political coverage to cultural politics and the issues around them. This produced some groundbreaking journalism, but also courted several high-profile controversies.
Some longtime subscribers, who had never forgiven Sullivan for firing veteran political writer Morton Kondracke when he took over, regularly took umbrage at the articles written by Camille Paglia that he published.
Sullivan decided in 1994 to publish excerpts on race and intelligence from Richard Herrnstein and Charles Murray's controversial The Bell Curve, which argued that African Americans' lower IQ scores than whites' were, at least in part, the result of genetics. Almost the entire staff of the magazine threatened to resign if material which they considered racist was allowed to be published ; when the issue did come out, it ran with lengthy rebuttals from more than a dozen writers and contributors.
Sullivan's departure as editor of The New Republic is also not without controversy. Even among those who wrote for The New Republic at the time, opinions differ about whether he was fired or quit after losing a bitter power struggle with Leon Wieseltier, the magazine's literary editor and a longtime friend of Peretz's. In any event, Sullivan had only recently gone public with his HIV status, and was likely to be taking a break for treatment soon. Regardless, Andrew Sullivan is currently a senior editor of TNR.
Later, Sullivan wrote for The New York Times Magazine briefly. He left the magazine in 2002.
His article in The New York Times Magazine, about African American bisexual men, caused a controversy and is where the term "down low," considered offensive in the gay, bisexual, and lesbian community, came into the mainstream vernacular.
Sullivan is often compared to lesbian academic Camille Paglia, another gay intellectual, who argues from a nonleftist perspective and who wrote for The New Republic under his tenure as editor.
Sullivan's critics have argued that it was hypocritical of Sullivan to engage in this kind of sexual activity while arguing against gay sexual promiscuity; they claim that the vision of gay sexuality presented in Sullivan's writing is at odds with the activities he was said to be engaging in. They also charge that because Sullivan was HIV-positive, it was unsafe for him to engage in sex without a condom. Sullivan's critics argue that it is unfair for Sullivan to criticize Bill Clinton's sexual indiscretions as "reckless" while engaging in unprotected sex himself. This scandal was parodied in the popular gay television show Queer as Folk. In one episode, a well-known gay political commentator condemns a 30-year-old gay man for dating an 18-year-old, only to be later caught attending a bareback sex party.
Sullivan's defenders respond that the advertisement noted that Sullivan was HIV-positive, and that Sullivan only had bareback sex with consenting adults who were also HIV-positive. According to Sullivan, this significantly reduced the risk inherent in his behavior, and he has derided what he called a "thin reed of evidence" of the existence of "reinfection," which, according to medical professionals, heightens the destruction caused by the virus. His supporters have also argued that it was a violation of his privacy to publish information about his sex life. Sullivan has called the scandal "sexual McCarthyism." Sullivan supporters also argue that those who revealed the details about his sex life were motivated by a desire for payback because they disagreed with his politics and his comments about the gay community. In Sullivan's book Love Undetectable. published in 1999, Sullivan wrote:
His books have at times dealt with this issue. For example in Virtually Normal* he takes the position that the Bible forbids homosexuality only when it is linked to prostitution or pagan ritual. His ideas are perhaps influenced by the writing of fellow homosexual Roman Catholic John Boswell. Still, Boswell's views are generally not supported by mainstream Roman Catholic theologians. His views led him to have concerns about the election of Pope Benedict XVI. In Time Magazine for April 24, 2005 in an article entitled, "The Vicar of Orthodoxy,"* Sullivan stated his criticisms of the new pope. He expressed his view that the current pope is opposed to the modern world and women's rights, and deems homosexuals to be innately disposed to evil. His interpretation of the current pope's beliefs have been disputed by Michael Novak and criticized by many other conservative Catholics.
Sullivan's blog has been characterized by passionate argumentation and a willingness to admit doubts and entertain changes of mind. The blog's core principles have been fiscal conservatism, limited government, and libertarianism on social issues. Sullivan opposes government involvement with respect to sexual and consensual matters between adults (such as the use of marijuana). Sullivan believes recognition of gay marriage is a civil-rights issue, but is willing to promote it on a state by state legislative federalism basis rather than trying to judicially impose the change. * Most of Sullivan's disputes with other conservatives have been over social issues such as these and the handling of postwar Iraq.
Sullivan reluctantly decided to support John Kerry's presidential campaign due to his dissatisfaction with the handling of the postwar situation in Iraq by the Bush administration, their views on gay rights, and their fiscal policy. Sullivan is a supporter of John McCain and Arnold Schwarzenegger * and other fiscally conservative Republicans.
Sullivan also gives out "awards" each year on various public statements that parody those of people the awards are named. These awards include:
In February 2005 Sullivan decided to go on "hiatus for a few months" after nearly five years of continuous blogging. * By this time his blog was receiving over 50,000 visitors a day, and was among the most linked-to blogs in the world. Sullivan planned to work on a book, do some traveling, and focus on other projects. His plan is to return to blogging "full steam" in roughly nine months. In response to readers who asked whether his continuing blogging meant that he had given up on his "hiatus," he wrote:
He attributes his ability to "blog, write my usual columns and work on my book" simultaneously to an increase in energy after being fitted with a CPAP machine to help him sleep. * This has allowed him to return to blogging full time. His blog has remained very popular since then.
Sullivan has been very critical of civil unions, which he has dubbed "marriage lite." He has argued that civil unions will only serve to weaken the unique status of marriage, both for gays and heterosexuals.
In the 2004 election, Sullivan criticized the Republican Party for what he saw as political exploitation of a hated minority:
In three days, he wrote in three different places that "is a philosophy without a party in America any more. It has been hijacked by zealots and statists" *e're" target="_blank" >getting to the point when conservatism has become a political philosophy that believes that government — at the most distant level — has the right to intervene in almost anything to achieve the right solution. Today's conservatism is becoming yesterday's liberalism" *.
He has been particularly critical of some conservatives' defense of the administration's actions involved in the Abu Ghraib and other prison scandals. Sullivan criticized Instapundit, NRO, and other conservative groups for not speaking out on the issue quicker and more forcefully. Sullivan was especially critical of Power Line, Michelle Malkin, and John Derbyshire, whom he has accused of active support of such tactics. Sullivan accuses Power Line and Hugh Hewitt of completely partisan and unconditional support for the Republican Party (which has hurt conservative principles). Though Sullivan was very strong in his praise of George W. Bush immediately after 9-11, he has recently called such views "stupid and premature" in retrospect. He has simiarly since characterized the president as a "shallow, monstrous, weak, and petty man." *
Sullivan denounced Republican governor Haley Barbour for meeting with the Council of Conservative Citizens, a white separatist group. Some cried hypocrisy needed, as years earlier Sullivan had published a debate by other authors about whether genetics explains any of the disparity in IQ scores among racial groups above [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Sullivan#Biography)
His endorsements of Democrats have usually been hesistant. In the case of Kerry, he stated that his endorsement was primarily against Bush.
1963 births | Living people | Roman Catholic writers | People of Irish descent in Great Britain | English bloggers | Libertarian weblogs | Gay writers | Presidents of the Oxford Union | LGBT rights activists | Naturalized citizens of the United States | LGBT Christians | American journalists | English journalists | American columnists | English columnists | American magazine editors | British magazine editors | English Americans | Natives of Surrey
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