Fox News contributor goes off on anti-gay rant

Radio host, Townhall.com columnist, and Fox News Channel contributor Sandy Rios wants to know if Rep. Mark Kirk is gay, or if Kirk's roommate is gay. Probably whether Kirk has ever even met a gay man, too, though she doesn't quite spell that out in her strange diatribe.

Nor is Rios entirely clear on why she wants to know if Kirk is gay. On the one hand, she keeps suggesting that as a gay man, Kirk would be vulnerable to blackmail, apparently for fear of being ostracized if he was outted. On the other hand, Rios writes “Homosexuality has now been mainstreamed and de-stigmatized. Any reason not to be open and honest has now been removed,” which would seem to undermine the whole “blackmail” fear.

One thing Rios is sure of: Being gay is just like sending sexually-explicit messages to teenagers working as congressional pages:

[P]ress and Republicans alike are rushing to pooh-pooh what, in spite of the weakness of the messenger, has been the topic of discussion in Washington and elsewhere for quite some time. So, where is the reporting? Where are the cameras? The gleaning of records? The follow up on accusations?

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Republicans did the same thing in the Mark Foley/Congressional page scandal. Republican leaders knew about Foley but for some inexplicable reason, covered for him. Do they want to repeat the same here?

The rest of Rios' anti-gay screed is just as spurious, like her claim that we need to know if Kirk is gay “Because we are at war” and a gay Kirk might vote to repeal Don't Ask, Don't Tell, “in spite of the fact that military experts from the top down have argued continually that open homosexuality will harm unit cohesion and have a detrimental effect on morale.”

That would be news to General John Shalikashvili, the former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who has said “if gay men and lesbians served openly in the United States military, they would not undermine the efficacy of the armed forces.” And to Charles Larson, a four-star admiral and former superintendent of the U.S. Naval Academy who joined more than 100 other retired Admirals and Generals in calling for the repeal of DADT. And to former Defense Secretary William Cohen and Colin Powell, both of whom have said the policy needs to be reviewed.