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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
Human rights
人权
The gay divide
关于同性恋的分歧
Victories for gay rights in some parts of the world have provoked a backlash elsewhere
在世界一些地方同性恋人权的胜利招致了其他地方的不满。
THERE was a teenager in Arizona in the 1970s who “could no more imagine longing1 to touch a woman than longing to touch a toaster”. But he convinced himself that he was not gay. Longing to be “normal”, he blamed his obsession2 with muscular men on envy of their good looks. It was not until he was 25 that he admitted the truth to himself—let alone other people. In 1996 he wrote a cover leader for The Economist3 in favour of same-sex marriage. He never thought it would happen during his lifetime. Yet now he is married to the man he loves and living in a Virginia suburb where few think this odd.
20世纪70年代在亚利桑那州有一个少年“对渴望触摸女人的想象就像渴望触摸一个烤面包机”。但那时他确信自己是不是同性恋。渴望是“正常的”,他把这些对美貌肌肉男的痴迷归结于嫉妒。直到25岁,他承认了这一真相更别说别人。1996年给杂志领袖经济学人写了篇关于支持同性婚姻的文章。他从来没有想到这会在他有生之年实现。现在他娶了他爱的男人,生活在弗吉尼亚州郊区,这里没有人认为这是件奇怪的事。
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The change in attitudes to homosexuality in many countries—not just the West but also Latin America, China and other places—is one of the wonders of the world (see article). This week America’s Supreme4 Court gave gay marriage another big boost, by rejecting several challenges to it; most Americans already live in states where gays can wed5. But five countries still execute gay people: Iran hangs them; Saudi Arabia stones them. Gay sex is illegal in 78 countries, and a few have recently passed laws that make gay life even grimmer. The gay divide is one of the world’s widest. What caused it? And will tolerance6 eventually spread?
在许多国家不只是西方还有拉丁美洲,中国和其他地方态度上对同性恋的改变是世界奇迹之一(另见文)。本周美国最高法院通过拒绝几个挑战者对同性恋婚姻认可上有了另一个大的提升;大多数美国人生活是我州同性恋都可以结婚。但仍有五个国家对同性恋者执刑:伊朗的绞刑;沙特阿拉伯用石头扔他们。同性恋在78个国家仍然是非法的,最近有一些国家通过法律使他们生活更加快乐。同性恋将是世界上最大的分歧之一。这是什么引起的呢?宽容最终会蔓延吗?
The leap forward has been startlingly quick. In the 1950s gay sex was illegal nearly everywhere. In Britain, on the orders of a home secretary who vowed7 to “eradicate” it, undercover police were sent out to loiter in bars, entrap8 gay men and put them in jail. In China in the 1980s homosexuals were rounded up and sent to labour camps without trial. All around the world gay people lived furtively9 and in fear. Laws banning “sodomy” remained in some American states until 2003.
以惊人的速度发生着变化。在20世纪50年代的同性恋性行为在几乎所有的地方都是非法的。在英国,内政大臣发誓要“消灭”它,派出去卧底警察在酒吧闲逛,使同性恋者落入陷阱,把他们关进监狱。在中国20世纪80年代的同性恋者被围捕,不经审判就送往劳动营。世界各地的同性恋生活在阴暗和恐惧中。直到2003年美国的一些州法律仍然禁止“鸡奸”。
Today gay sex is legal in at least 113 countries. Gay marriages or civil unions are recognised in three dozen and parts of others. In most of the West it is no longer socially acceptable to be homophobic. Gay life in China is now both legal and, in cities, undisguised. Latin America is even more gay-friendly: 74% of Argentines and 60% of Brazilians believe that society should accept homosexuality. Thais are more relaxed about transgender people than Westerners are. South Africa’s constitution is remarkably10 pro-gay. The young have tended to lead the way: although only 16% of South Koreans over 50 think that homosexuality should be accepted, 71% of 18-to 29-year-olds do.
现在同性恋在至少113个国家是合法的。在30多个国家和地区同性恋结婚或从事民事工会都是得到认可的。在大多数西方国家社会完全接受同性恋。中国的同性恋生活不仅是合法的而且在一些城市城市中更加是光明正大的。拉丁美洲对同性恋更加友好:74% 的阿根廷人和60%的巴西人认为社会应该接受同性恋。泰国人对变性人比西方人更开放。南非宪法是非常赞成同性恋的。年轻人往往是主导:虽然50多岁的韩国人中只有16%认为同性恋应该被接受,但71%的18至29岁的人赞同。
Yet there are still parts of the world where it is not safe to be homosexual. Extra-judicial beatings and murders are depressingly common in much of Africa and in some Muslim countries. African gangs subject lesbians to “corrective rape”. In some countries persecution11 has intensified12. Chad is poised13 to ban gay sex. Nigeria and Uganda have passed draconian14 anti-gay laws (though a court recently struck Uganda’s down). Russia and a few other countries have barred the “promotion” of homosexuality.
然而,世界上仍有一些地方对同性恋是不安全的。司法外的殴打和谋杀在许多非洲和穆斯林国家都非常普遍。非洲集团倾向对女同性恋”纠正强奸”。在一些国家迫害不断的加剧。乍得将禁止同性恋。尼日利亚和乌干达已经通过了严格的反同性恋的法律(尽管法庭最近驳回了乌干达)。俄罗斯和其他一些国家已经禁止“促销”同性恋。
This is partly a reaction to the spread of gay rights in the West. Thanks to globalisation, people who live in places where everyone agrees that homosexuality is an abomination can now see pictures of gay-pride parades in Sydney or men marrying men in Massachusetts. They find this shocking. Meanwhile some homophobic Western preachers have gone to fire up anti-gay audiences in Africa, and American conservatives offer advice to countries thinking of drafting anti-gay laws.
这是对同性恋权利在西方国家传播的阻碍。由于全球化,只要是住在大家都憎恶同性恋的地方就可以看到这样的画面:同性恋在悉尼骄傲游行或在马萨诸塞州男人和男人结婚。他们发现这是令人震惊的事。同时,一些同性恋的西方传教士去点燃了非洲反同性恋观众的怒火,美国保守派建议国家考虑制定反同性恋的法律。
Revulsion against homosexuals is ancient, deep and, in its way, sincere, even if some of the politicians leading the backlash do so for cynical15 reasons. By taking up arms against an imaginary Western plot to spread perversion16, Vladimir Putin and Nigeria’s Goodluck Jonathan doubtless hope to distract attention from the corruption17 and incompetence18 of their own regimes. But they have picked their scapegoats19 shrewdly: 74% of Russians and 98% of Nigerians disapprove20 of homosexuality. In places like Indonesia, Senegal, Uganda and Malaysia the young are no more tolerant than the old—sometimes less so.
实话说,即使一些政客以愤世嫉俗的原因提出反对,对同性恋的反感是一个古老深刻的话题。拿起武器反对假象的西方阴谋,普京和尼日利亚总统乔纳森无疑希望从自己的政权的腐败和无能中转移注意力。他们精明的挑选了他们的替罪羊:74%的俄罗斯人和98%的尼日利亚人反对同性恋。在像印度尼西亚,塞内加尔,乌干达和马来西亚这样地方的年轻人不像老年人那么宽容,甚至更少。
Nonetheless, there are reasons for optimism, at least in the long term. Urbanisation helps. It is easier to find a niche21 in a big, anonymous22 city than in a village where everyone knows your business. Gay life in the Indian countryside is still awful; in Mumbai or Delhi it is much easier, despite being illegal. In rural South Africa, to be openly gay is to court death; yet half of South Africans now say that their neighbourhood is a good place to be gay. As people move to cities, old traditions lose their grip; and by 2050 mankind is expected to be 66% urban, up from 54% today.
然而,至少从长远来看还是有乐观的理由。城市化有助于它的发展。在大的城市中匿名的生活,比在每个人都了解你的村子里更容易找到一席之地。印度农村,同性恋者的生活仍然是可怕的;孟买或新德里会更容易,尽管也是非法的。在南非农村,公开的同性恋就是找死;然而,现在一半的南非人说他们的邻居是同性恋者的好地方。随着人们迁往城市,旧的传统失去控制;并到2050城市人口预计将从今天的54%将会上升到66%。
Emerging countries in Asia and Latin America have generally grown kinder to gay people as they have grown richer, more open and more democratic. The hope is that as Africa and the Arab world catch up, they will follow suit. Although religion is a barrier to tolerance—the more pious23 a society, by and large, the less enthusiastic it is about gay rights—it is not an insuperable one: plenty of devout24 nations, such as the Philippines and the United States, are friendly to gays these days.
在亚洲和拉丁美洲的新兴国家随着他们变得更富有,更加开放和民主,已经普遍的对同性恋者更加友好。我们期待非洲和阿拉伯他们将效仿,赶上步伐。虽然宗教是宽容的一个阻碍——但总的来说他们是一个更加善良的群体。对于同性恋权利缺乏热情不是不可逾越的:很多拥有宗教信仰的国家,如菲律宾和美国,现在对同性恋也是友好的。
Familiarity breeds tolerance
友好的接触会滋生包容之心
What could help spread tolerance? If the past half-century is any guide, the prime movers will be gay people themselves. The more visible they are, the more normal they will seem. These days 75% of Americans say they have gay friends or colleagues, up from only 24% in 1985. But it is hard to be the first to come out in a country where that means prison or worse.
什么东西能帮助传播宽容?如果过去的半个世纪里有任何指导,最直接的就是同性恋自己。表现的越明显,他们似乎看起来越正常的。现在75%的美国人说他们有同性恋的朋友或同事,而1985年只有24%。但在一个意味着监狱或者更糟国家很难站出来第一个人。
Some Westerners would like to use aid budgets as leverage25. That may have helped in Uganda, but attaching conditions to aid usually fails, and cutting it off may hurt the poor more than it helps gay people. It would be better to offer financial support to local gay-rights groups, to be generous when those persecuted26 for their sexual orientation27 seek asylum28, to shame Western conservatives who encourage bigotry29 abroad and to buttress30 tolerance at home.
一些西方人喜欢用援助预算为杠杆。这可能在乌干达有效,但有附带条件的援助通常是失败的,与之伴随的可能是相比它帮助的同性恋者而言,伤害到更多的穷人。当那些因为他们的性取向受到迫害寻求庇护时,大方的为当地的同性恋维权组织提供财政支持可能更好,并且在国外羞辱支持盲从的西方保守派,在国内鼓励包容。
For those who cling to the notion of progress, it is hard to believe that tolerance will not spread. After all, gay people are not demanding special treatment, just the same freedoms that everyone else takes for granted: to love whom they please and to marry whom they love.
对于那些坚持进步理念的人而言,很难相信宽容不会传播。毕竟,同性恋不是要求特殊待遇,只是希望享有其他人理所当然拥有的同样的自由:随心所爱,嫁心之所爱。
点击收听单词发音
1 longing | |
n.(for)渴望 | |
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2 obsession | |
n.困扰,无法摆脱的思想(或情感) | |
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3 economist | |
n.经济学家,经济专家,节俭的人 | |
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4 supreme | |
adj.极度的,最重要的;至高的,最高的 | |
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5 wed | |
v.娶,嫁,与…结婚 | |
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6 tolerance | |
n.宽容;容忍,忍受;耐药力;公差 | |
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7 vowed | |
起誓,发誓(vow的过去式与过去分词形式) | |
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8 entrap | |
v.以网或陷阱捕捉,使陷入圈套 | |
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9 furtively | |
adv. 偷偷地, 暗中地 | |
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10 remarkably | |
ad.不同寻常地,相当地 | |
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11 persecution | |
n. 迫害,烦扰 | |
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12 intensified | |
v.(使)增强, (使)加剧( intensify的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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13 poised | |
a.摆好姿势不动的 | |
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14 draconian | |
adj.严苛的;苛刻的;严酷的;龙一样的 | |
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15 cynical | |
adj.(对人性或动机)怀疑的,不信世道向善的 | |
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16 perversion | |
n.曲解;堕落;反常 | |
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17 corruption | |
n.腐败,堕落,贪污 | |
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18 incompetence | |
n.不胜任,不称职 | |
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19 scapegoats | |
n.代人受过的人,替罪羊( scapegoat的名词复数 )v.使成为替罪羊( scapegoat的第三人称单数 ) | |
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20 disapprove | |
v.不赞成,不同意,不批准 | |
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21 niche | |
n.壁龛;合适的职务(环境、位置等) | |
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22 anonymous | |
adj.无名的;匿名的;无特色的 | |
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23 pious | |
adj.虔诚的;道貌岸然的 | |
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24 devout | |
adj.虔诚的,虔敬的,衷心的 (n.devoutness) | |
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25 leverage | |
n.力量,影响;杠杆作用,杠杆的力量 | |
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26 persecuted | |
(尤指宗教或政治信仰的)迫害(~sb. for sth.)( persecute的过去式和过去分词 ); 烦扰,困扰或骚扰某人 | |
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27 orientation | |
n.方向,目标;熟悉,适应,情况介绍 | |
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28 asylum | |
n.避难所,庇护所,避难 | |
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29 bigotry | |
n.偏见,偏执,持偏见的行为[态度]等 | |
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30 buttress | |
n.支撑物;v.支持 | |
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