by Dave Sim & Gerhard
(First appeared in AARGH!, Mad Love Publishing, October 1988)
The following article first appeared in
Escape Magazine #15 in 1988. At that time Alan Moore had just set up his publishing company, Mad Love (together with Phyllis Moore and Debbie Delano), and was
working on its first release, a 72-page benefit comics-anthology of work
donated by the world's top comic creators: AARGH!: Artists Against Rampant Government Homophobia. All the profits from AARGH! were donated to the Organisation For Lesbian And Gay Action to safeguard the legal rights of Gay people persecuted by Section 28 of the Local Government Act.
This was a piece of legislation enacted in 1988 by the Thatcher
Government which stated that a local government authority "shall not
intentionally promote homosexuality or publish material with the
intention of promoting homosexuality" or "promote the teaching in any
maintained school of the acceptability of homosexuality as a pretended
family relationship."
NO MORE SEX
by Alan Moore
Firstly, forget God. If God exists, it's unlikely that SpaceTime's
creator worries about our love-lives. A God who'd forego super novas to
catch Sol III's microbes having oral sex is just plain creepy, and has
no place in this discussion. Neither do our Jimmy Swaggarts, claiming to
represent the deity between visits to the knocking shop. While
discussing human desire, let's ignore superhumans and subhumans.
Secondly, forget 'unnatural' sex. Most natural creatures, excluding a
few Presbyterian termites, will hump anything within reach if inclined,
ignoring gender, species and family relationship. Lacking a hunky tom
within pheromone-range, Tabby will back onto your winklepickers without
embarrassment. Besides, since when does humanity do things naturally?
Camels don't wear polyester slacks. Amoebas know nothing of Shake'n'Vac.
Every other human enterprise flaunts nature, so why is sex special?
Because it’s powerful. Along with death, it's life's propelling
force. Control sex and death, and controlling populations becomes
simple. Death's easily subjugated: William Burroughs observed that
anyone who can lift a frying pan owns death. Similarly, those owning
most the pans, troops, tanks or warheads own most the death, and can
regulate the supply accordingly. Death's a pushover, but how do you
control desire?
Well, fear and guilt packaged as religion ought to be good for a few
thousand years. When the ideology becomes threadbare, you simply employ
more forceful salesmen: Jimmy Swaggart, Jerry Falwell. Sex is also
restricted by self-policing family units: building blocks that, if
arranged into neat pyramids, form stable societies - providing the
blocks are the same size and shape (and colour, preferably). Despite
reducing relationships to Lego bricks, it's a serviceable theory. During
agricultural times, extended families proved most efficient for running
farms and paying tithes. Industrial times demanded different models,
producing the nuclear family, small and mobile enough to follow work
citywards and inhabit the limited space available. 2.2 children replaced
their parents on the production line, and the social engine trundled
onwards... until 1956.
In 1956, white collars first outnumbered blue in America's workforce.
Western societies entered its post-industrial mode, social structures
changing accordingly. The nuclear family gradually collapsed, to be
replaced by... the post-nuclear family? Post-nuclear families are
flexible. We divorce, remarry, stay single, childless or celibate,
living with partners of the same sex, the opposite sex, both, neither.
We raise children alone, with partners, in communes, or, increasingly
rarely, in traditional nuclear families.
Perceiving this shift towards multiple choice as chaos, many long for
simpler bygone times. Their leaders, like all good whores, willingly
accommodate these fantasies - Victorian nannies and grizzled cowpokes a
specialty. Canute-like, our leaders attempt to reverse society's tides;
retreating from the future towards an imaginary past; shoehorning women
back into the kitchen, gays into the closet, sex into the marital
bedroom. But those things have grown too big. No amount of pushing will
get those doors closed again. All we do is crush people.
Sex exceeds politics, right or left (assuming you still
differentiate). Mary Whitehouse or Andrea Dworkin may outlaw
pornography, but can't stop people wanting it, regardless of legality.
Similarly, Section 28 cannot remove the desire for homosexuality.
Consenting sex cannot be prevented. There's regrettably little evidence
that even un-consenting sex can be curtailed by legislation
alone. Perhaps desire is better comprehended than contained? Perhaps
sexual openness would mean less morbid longings, festering alone in
darkness?
Despite a panic-stricken 'moral' backlash, we progress slowly towards
tolerance, understanding. Our sexual turbulence and shattered
preconceptions may resolve themselves into a new approach to sex, more
various and humane, accepting different loves and lusts without
reshaping them into Meccano for our social scaffolding. Sexual awareness
rides an upward exponential curve, uncheckable by politicians, popes,
police-chiefs. But what of plague?
Is AIDS sufficient to keep the erotic genie in the bottle? Televised
health warnings seem increasingly less anti-disease than anti-sex. A
youth writhes, unnerved by the ominous soundtrack, while his fishnetted
date lounges invitingly. Rather than donning a condom and squelching
deliriously till dawn, it's implied that he should go home to sleep with
hands above blankets.
Novelists, who should know better, bemoan the inevitability of less
sex in fiction. Surely AIDS isn't transmitted by smut? The only virus
afflicting literature are viral ideas of censorship, spreading through
parliament, press, publishers and public, leading art towards the
terminal ward. Obviously this over-reaction doesn’t make AIDS less
terrifying. Quite simply, it will decimate us. While experts demand less
discrimination to facilitate monitoring the virus, our government
responds with Section 28. Remember that Britain is relatively enlightened concerning AIDS, and shudder.
So, no more sex? On screen, between soft covers or especially in
reality? I don’t believe it. Sex survived horrific syphilis epidemics,
aroused blood rushing from the brian, ensuring sex continues whatever
the dangers. We'll die of sex or live with it, but never stop it. Even
preventing all physical contact wouldn't prevent sex, which occurs more
in minds than mucous membranes. We think about sex approximately every
twenty minutes. Lacking physical contact, we’d just think harder.
Thermonuclear war would barely slow sex down. Within billennia,
cockroaches would rewrite the Kama Sutra.
AIDS may even hasten sexual enlightenment, this sexual crisis
mirroring similar crisis in our environment and economies, all forcing a
simple, brutal decision: change or die. Change our environmental
policies or starve. Change our sexual furtiveness or die, as they say,
of ignorance. Up in arms or down in flames, the choice is still ours.
Our bodies are ours. No more sex?
Don’t be silly.
6 comments:
HA! Great stuff. I see why some people suggested Dave take a hard line with the Tick.
Any chance there are copies of AARGH! in the warehouse that's being cleaned out? That's a book I've never even seen, and it's got a great creator lineup, from what I understand. Plus, yeah, I just read this, but I totally want it in print, to hold in my hands!
I second Travis' emotion. I have much of the Sim/Cerebus ephemera, including both True Norths, but pretty sure I don't have AARGH!
You can bet Dave wouldn't be involved in this today, the reasons for which which he explained in the Alan Moore episode of Cerebus TV.
Is that ep archived? Gotta link?
I have an AARGH that I was trying to collect autographs in for several years... Since many of the creators are on a different continent, I only did so-so. Stephen Bissette signed it for me and went on about how rare it was, particularly in the US. My memory is VERY fuzzy, but if I recall correctly, only something like 1000 made it to the US. Long story short, if you come across one and the price is reasonable, don't hesitate. It is magazine size, with a dark cover, so condition can be an issue, if you're fussy about that. Also, YES! The creator line up is terrific.
Was this reprinted somewhere? I know I've seen it, and I could swear I have it somewhere in one of my "longboxes" but I'm pretty sure I don't have AARGH.
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