by Nicholas Ferroni
If you think that the title is a typo or error, you are mistaken.
President Obama may be the first president to openly support gay
marriage, but what many Americans don't realize is that America has
already elected its first gay president -- at least that's what many
scholars and historians, including me, believe.
Considering I was born and raised in New Jersey, I am very familiar
with politicians who secretly lead double lives. For example, a few
years back, Jim McGreevey, a popular governor who was married with
children, was exposed by a male former lover and then publicly came out
as gay. In the past and present, men (and even some women) have felt the
need to conceal their sexuality in order to maintain specific images in
their professions. I also have to imagine that gay athletes feel that
they have no choice but to conceal their sexuality until they are
retired, out of fear that, if their teammates and team owners found out,
they would be completely ostracized. Though politicians do not have
nearly the same alpha image as athletes, they still feel the need to
present the "traditional" family image in order to gain votes and win
elections.
With American sentiment slowly but surely shifting in favor of
same-sex marriage, many Americans may begin to call for a gay
presidential candidate. However, what they don't realize is that many
historians already believe we have had a gay president, and I am not
referring to Abraham Lincoln, who was known to share his bed with men,
especially his dear friend Joshua Speed. Nor am I referring to President
Chester A. Arthur, who earned the nickname "Elegant Arthur" for his
exquisite taste in décor and fine clothes, which included nearly 80
pairs of pants. Additionally, even though Bill Clinton definitely seems
to be the experimental type, we have no proof that he had any
"relations" with male interns. The president to whom I am referring is
James "The Bachelor President" Buchanan, who was the 15th president of
the United States, from 1857 to 1861, and preceded "Honest Abe."
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