Howdy. The following is not good news. It is, however, entirely consistent with other findings for the past few years. The American National Election Study, conducted since 1948 by the University of Michigan, asks its cross-section of U.S. adults to rate several different groups or political figures using a "feeling thermometer," basically a scale of 0 to 100. If you're feelings toward a group are neither positive nor negative, you'd rate it "50." If you have the warmest possible feelings for the group, it gets a "100," wherease if you have the coldest possible feelings toward the group, it gets a "0." Most groups get overall positive median ratings, with a fairly random distribution and very few zeroes; George Bush was rated "0" by a relatively high 5 percent of the 2,487 respondents. Then there's us. "Gays and lesbians, that is, homosexuals," in the words of the survey form. Of those responding, 22.6% gave us positive ratings (51-100); only 1.9% gave us a "100" rating. 28.1% gave us a neutral rating of 50. 49.4%, almost exactly half the country, gave us negative ratings (0-49). Most depressing, 22.1% of the nation gave us a rating of zero--roughly ten times the average share of zeroes accumulated by the other groups. If you want to know what kind of political courage it would have taken for Mr. Clinton to have kept his promises, you need look no further. About one-quarter of American adults hate us outright, another quarter dislike us to varying degrees, and a third quarter are on the whole indifferent to us. Fewer than a quarter have generally positive feelings toward us, and only a fraction of our *own* presumed population regard their sisters and brothers with the warmest possible feelings. We've got a lot of work to do, folks. Peace, Mark