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Stephen Meyler

Monthly columnist with GCN magazine, Stephen Meyler isn't afraid to say what he thinks, or hit a nail on the head.


26 Mar 2009

The Gays in Recession

2 comments

There's nothing like a recession to get people reminiscing about the bad old days. The subtle conversations about guaranteed returns are once again limited to the places where they have persisted for centuries - where the real elites live. For those gilded demiurges, the property speculation bubble was a passing fad, a chance to dabble with someone else's money, but now that it's bust, they continue their progress into the future they have already mapped.

For the rest of us of course, the bust is having real effects, not least in the range of acceptable topics in the pub. Anyone who was an adult in the 1980s can now bore any young wans they manage to corner with 'it was much worse in the '80s' or less often, 'it's just like the '80s all over again'.

Now maybe it's because I was just a self-indulgent teen for most of the decade of giant hair, with no major decisions to make, but I think both of those phrases are true.

The 1980s were far worse than 2009 in Ireland. Apart from the statistics - unemployment, poverty and interest rates in the '80s were multiples of what we have so far had this time - the experience of life in the 1980s was a different world. That world was the damp and gloomy desert that characterised the Republic of Ireland pretty much since its foundation. Despite a short burst of optimistic sunshine in the 1960s, the first time the country tried globalisation, when it lowered the barriers that had defended DeValera's fantasy of a re-illuminated Celtic Twilight since 1922, Ireland in the 1980s was an inward-looking shithole, hidebound by its class system and by a fundamentalist state religion.

No surprise then, that being a gay in the 1980s was hardly a bundle of laughs. Aside from the democratically paradoxical condition of being an illegal identity (albeit one that the Gardaí rarely prosecuted anyone for), crimes against gays were acceptable. Gay men could be beaten to death in parks or in their homes and the Republic and the judicial system that interpreted its laws looked the other way. 'Queerbashing' was a word used by UK or US publications, while Irish gay men expected being beaten up, robbed and physically intimidated as part of their daily experience, it wasn't regarded as a separate set of crimes, akin to racially or gender-motivated violence. Indeed, the arrival of Aids and HIV in the late 1980s gave homophobes another horribly effective weapon, the accusation of being typhoid Marys. The only openly gays I can remember from the 1980s were Boy George and Mr Humphreys in Are You Being Served? and even John Inman, hilariously, was still in the closet.

The gay experience now is very different. Being gay is not illegal and there is protection against discrimination. Queerbashing still happens, but most people find it as acceptable as attacking people for being black or female. Gay-specific HIV and Aids services are effective, supportive and free. And the media often seems like they are coming down with gays, even if a lot of them are Perez Hilton.

Whether 'it's just like the '80s all over again' probably remains to be seen. One of the positive aspects of the '80s for gays was an effect of all that unemployment. Large numbers of energetic and increasingly educated young people, if they didn't go off to contribute to the US or UK economies, went on Fás or community employment schemes. The holes in the social fabric that currently make Irish society impoverished even before the recession's economic effects kick in, were for a time filled by those schemes, to provide services for disadvantaged areas and groups of people, including gays. Organisations like Outhouse, //GCN//, the HIV/Aids groups, all spent their early years relying on these people who the Irish economy was otherwise failing.

When the good times began, these people were drawn away by salaries and the chance to finally start the lives that the '80s stagnation had put on hold. Community organisations may have got higher funding from the property-swollen coffers, but they had to spend a lot of this money on big salaries to retain staff. They still do, even as the public purse rapidly becomes threadbare.

Will the Celtic Tiger babies rediscover community, now that a lot of them are likely to have some time on their hands? Will the neglected areas of fairness, social integration and the creation of welfare (in the original sense of the word) benefit from the energy and experience of the globalised, technophile unemployed who Ireland Inc. is currently failing?  


Add your comment


Peter B

This is an excellent article, with some excellent observations, particularly in the last paragraph. Throughout the boom years there was a move away from community to individualism, which was not positive for Irish society. I'm not sure there is anything to be gained from comparisions with the 80's. Apart from economics, there has been a massive cultural transformation and the response to, and outcome of, the current recession is likely to be very different. The one worrying aspect of this recession is the level of debt which individuals are carrying. Interest rates may be lower than the 80's, but the actual amounts people owe are huge by comparison. There is also the very real issue of negative equity, never before seen in Ireland. Personally I think the celtic tiger era happened by chance rather than by design, or as a result of policy decisions. It is going to require clever and innovative economic policies to push Ireland through this recession and I don't believe the present cr....

POSTED BY Peter B 27 Mar 2009


Peter B

op of TD's and senior civil servants have the required abilities.

POSTED BY Peter B 27 Mar 2009


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