September 10, 2009

Brian Brown’s Very Bad Week

By Fred Karger, Californians Against Hate

Poor Brian Brown. It has not been a good week for him and his Mormon front group, the National Organization for Marriage (NOM).

With two more states (Maine and Iowa) considering investigations of his organization for improper reporting of campaign contributions and money laundering, plus the on-going ten month investigation by the California Fair Political Practices Commission (FPPC Case #08-735), Brian went on the offensive on Friday and sent out the email below to all his supporters and the media.

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Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed Under: California, Catholicism, Civil Rights, Corruption, Focus on the Family/James Dobson, Guest Articles, Homophobia, Iowa, LDS/Mormons, Maine, Marriage, National Organization for Marriage/Maggie Gallagher, Proposition 8, Radical Religious Right


June 30, 2009

Federal Government is Best Excuse for Anti-Gay Companies to Continue Discrimination, Even in Iowa

For your consideration: the case of Messrs. Jacob Holman and Michael Walker, Iowa newlyweds who can’t get spousal health insurance, as long as our glorious federal government continues to provide an excuse for gay-un-friendly companies (in this case, Methodist Health System) to blithely and unassailably continue their policies of anti-gay discrimination:

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Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed Under: Homophobia, Insurance, Iowa, Marriage


June 16, 2009

So How Much Money Would Nationwide Marriage Equality Cost the Country? Actually, It Would Reap a $9.5 Billion Windfall

You read that right: nine-point-five billion dollars.

And when Forbes.com talks about money, everybody better listen:

The $9.5 Billion Gay Marriage Windfall

Howls of protest erupted last month when California’s Supreme Court upheld Proposition 8, stripping gay and lesbian couples of their right to marry. Adding to the din: all the disappointed planners, seamstresses, jewelers, travel agents and caterers who comprise the massive yet plodding American wedding industry.

There are 781,267 same-sex couples living together in the U.S., according to the Census Bureau’s 2005-07 American Community Survey. The Williams Institute, a research arm of UCLA’s law school, predicts that if gay marriage were legalized nationwide — only Massachusetts, Connecticut, Maine, Vermont, Iowa and (as of earlier this month) New Hampshire allow it now — about half of those couples would tie the knot within three years.

Talk about a stimulus package. While wedding-related revenues — snagged by small shops to giant corporations like Tiffany, Williams-Sonoma and Marriott International—

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Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed Under: Business/Economy, California, Civil Rights, Connecticut, Iowa, Maine, Marriage, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Proposition 8, Vermont


June 3, 2009

Dear DHS, Secret Service, and FBI: Dog Whistle Calls for Deaths of Two Presidents, Others

Would you G-men and -women kindly do something about Dan Holman before we have another catastrophe in this country?

At least put him under 24/7 surveillance — goodness knows Holman is a helluva bigger threat to domestic security than the targets of any of the wild goose chases your bosses sent you on during the Bush years.

By the way, do your bosses know what a dog whistle is?

Here’s the money quote:

Dan Holman [”Missionaries for the Preborn Iowa”]: I believe that all abortionists are deserving of death, and they are not the only ones. There are politicians and judges and others who support this murder that are also deserving of death.

Drew Griffin: Would you care to name names, Dan?

Dan Holman: George Bush, Barack Obama. Any politician that gives our tax money to Planned Parenthood and organizations that kill babies are participating in the killing of innocent children deserve the same penalty.

More from CNN.

Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed Under: Barack Obama, Choice, Christianity, Crime, George Tiller, George W. Bush, Homeland Insecurity, Iowa, Law Enforcement, Radical Religious Right


May 9, 2009

Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) Redeems Himself: “I’ve grown to think differently about how people — how we should live”

Tom Harkin voted for the anti-gay Defense of Marriage Act in 1996, but he’s since grown older — and grown up.

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Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed Under: Civil Rights, Democrats, Iowa, Marriage


April 29, 2009

New Hampshire State Senate Votes in Favor of Marriage for Same-Sex Couples

House approved similar legislation last month

The Human Rights Campaign, the nation’s largest lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) civil rights organization, praised the New Hampshire state Senate’s vote today in favor of legislation that would permit same-sex couples to marry. The Senate voted 13-11, on second reading, in favor of an amended version of House Bill 436, which would allow same-sex couples to marry under state law. The bill passed the House last month by a 186-179 vote. Since the Senate voted on an amended version, the bill will return to the House after third reading in the Senate.

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Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed Under: California, Civil Rights, Connecticut, Iowa, Maine, Marriage, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Press Releases, Proposition 8, Vermont


April 19, 2009

Frank Rich: The Bigots’ Last Hurrah

It is justice, not a storm, that is gathering. Only those who have spread the poisons of bigotry and fear have any reason to be afraid.
— Frank Rich

Backstory & Related:

Hugo Schwyzer Explains Maggie Gallagher and the “Increased Franticness of the Right”
Lavender Newswire, April 1, 2009

NOM Makes Super Scary Anti-Marriage Video
Gaytheist Agenda, April 9, 2009

NOM Gets Taken to Task
Gaytheist Agenda, April 10, 2009

Video: D.U.N.G.
Lavender Newswire, April 10, 2009

Video: Night of the Gathering GayStorm… Uh, Waitasec…
Lavender Newswire, April 11, 2009

NOM Gets Rachel Maddow Clip Yanked from YouTube
Lavender Newswire, April 14, 2009

Now, enjoy Frank Rich’s most excellent column in yesterday’s NYT:

The Bigots’ Last Hurrah

What would happen if you crossed that creepy 1960s horror classic “The Village of the Damned” with the Broadway staple “A Chorus Line”? You don’t need to use your imagination. It’s there waiting for you on YouTube under the title “Gathering Storm”: a 60-second ad presenting homosexuality as a national threat second only to terrorism. …

Far from terrifying anyone, “Gathering Storm” has become, unsurprisingly, an Internet camp classic. On YouTube the original video must compete with countless homemade parodies it has inspired since first turning up some 10 days ago. None may top Stephen Colbert’s on Thursday night, in which lightning from “the homo storm” strikes an Arkansas teacher, turning him gay. A “New Jersey pastor” whose church has been “turned into an Abercrombie & Fitch” declares that he likes gay people, “but only as hilarious best friends in TV and movies.”

Yet easy to mock as “Gathering Storm” may be, it nonetheless bookmarks a historic turning point in the demise of America’s anti-gay movement.

What gives the ad its symbolic significance is not just that it’s idiotic but that its release was the only loud protest anywhere in America to the news that same-sex marriage had been legalized in Iowa and Vermont. If it advances any message, it’s mainly that homophobic activism is ever more depopulated and isolated as well as brain-dead.

“Gathering Storm” was produced and broadcast — for a claimed $1.5 million — by an outfit called the National Organization for Marriage. This “national organization,” formed in 2007, is a fund-raising and propaganda-spewing Web site fronted by the right-wing Princeton University professor Robert George and the columnist Maggie Gallagher, who was famously caught receiving taxpayers’ money to promote Bush administration “marriage initiatives.” Until last month, half of the six board members (including George) had some past or present affiliation with Princeton’s James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions. (One of them, the son of one of the 12 apostles in the Mormon church hierarchy, recently stepped down.)

Even the anti-Obama “tea parties” flogged by Fox News last week had wider genuine grass-roots support than this so-called national organization. Beyond Princeton, most straight citizens merely shrugged as gay families celebrated in Iowa and Vermont. There was no mass backlash. At ABC and CBS, the Vermont headlines didn’t even make the evening news. …

As the polls attest, the majority of Americans who support civil unions for gay couples has been steadily growing. Younger voters are fine with marriage. Generational changeover will seal the deal. Crunching all the numbers, the poll maven Nate Silver sees same-sex marriage achieving majority support “at some point in the 2010s.” …

More crunchy goodness — including mentions of the latest hysteria from Moribund Mormon Glenn Beck, the Rick Warren-like one-eighty of “Dr.” Laura “Biological Error” Schlessinger, and the very fine takedown of Miss Maggie by the New York Post’s “invariably witty and invariably conservative writer” Kyle Smith — and much more, as well as one of the best closing paragraphs, ever, at the link.

Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed Under: California, Christianity, Civil Rights, Connecticut, Homophobia, Iowa, LDS/Mormons, Marriage, Massachusetts, Media, National Organization for Marriage/Maggie Gallagher, Proposition 8, Radical Religious Right, Republicans, Utah, Vermont


April 14, 2009

As If the Mormons Didn’t Have Enough of a P.R. Problem: Glenn Beck Regurgitates Anti-Gay Lies

Beck falsely claimed Iowa marriage ruling “is actually about going into churches”

Discussing the April 3 Iowa Supreme Court ruling striking down the state’s ban on same-sex marriage, Glenn Beck falsely asserted on the April 13 broadcast of his Fox News program, “I believe this case is actually about going into churches and going in and attacking churches and saying you can’t teach anything else.” In fact, the unanimous court ruling explicitly states that constitutional principles “require that the state recognize both opposite-sex and same-sex civil marriage. Religious doctrine and views contrary to this principle of law are unaffected.”

The Iowa Supreme Court further stated that the ruling does not affect religious institutions’ definitions of marriage:

A religious denomination can still define marriage as a union between a man and a woman, and a marriage ceremony performed by a minister, priest, rabbi, or other person ordained or designated as a leader of the person’s religious faith does not lose its meaning as a sacrament or other religious institution. The sanctity of all religious marriages celebrated in the future will have the same meaning as those celebrated in the past. The only difference is civil marriage will now take on a new meaning that reflects a more complete understanding of equal protection of the law. This result is what our constitution requires.

As Media Matters for America noted, media figures advanced similar falsehoods about the 2008 decision by the California Supreme Court that affirmed the constitutional right of same-sex couples to marry. That ruling was reversed by Proposition 8, the ballot measure that amended California’s constitution to ban same-sex marriage in that state. …

More at the link.

As my lovely wife just said as I read her the headline: “When are they going to realize we don’t care about their [expletive deleted] churches — we just want them to leave us the [expletive deleted] alone!

Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed Under: California, Civil Rights, Iowa, LDS/Mormons, Marriage, Media, Proposition 8, Radical Religious Right, Television


April 3, 2009

I Take Back Everything I Ever Said About the Way Iowa Smells in the Spring

This is the time of year, I was once told by an Iowa native as I traveled through the state wondering what that acrid, choking stench was, that the farmers open the barn doors and clean out the pig flop. In the more-than-twenty years hence, I’ve never been able to think of Iowa, especially in the spring, without that smell coming to mind.

But today, Iowa smells as sweet as a rose garden:

Iowa Court Voids Gay Marriage Ban

Iowa became the first state in the Midwest to approve same-sex marriage on Friday, after the Iowa Supreme Court unanimously decided that a 1998 law limiting marriage to a man and a woman was unconstitutional.

The decision was the culmination of a four-year legal battle that began with a suit filed on behalf of six same-sex couples in the lower courts.

The Supreme Court said same-sex marriages could begin in Iowa in as soon as 21 days, making Iowa only the third state in the nation, along with Massachusetts and Connecticut, to legalize gay marriage.

Same-sex marriages will be permitted in Iowa for at least two years, because the legislative process required to overturn the ruling would take that long. A constitutional amendment would require the state legislature to approve a ban on same-sex marriage in two consecutive sessions after which voters would have a chance to weigh in. Despite opposition to the ruling by Republican lawmakers, Democrats, who control the legislature, have given no indication that they intend to introduce such an amendment.

Iowa has no residency requirement for getting a marriage license, which some suggest may mean a flurry of people from other states. …

More at the link.

Me… This was the last thing I expected to wake up to this morning. Iowa? Iowa?

I can’t keep the grin off my face. Oh, yes, I know what happened here, in California — but look at the immediately obvious differences: Iowa, bless its little cornpone heart, doesn’t allow its citizens to change its constitution on a whim of bigotry; the state, only beginning with the legislature, has to make damned sure of what it’s doing before making any such radical changes.

But what’s really making me smile, to the point of near-giddy giggling, is this: “Same-sex marriages will be permitted in Iowa for at least two years, because the legislative process required to overturn the ruling would take that long.”

If only we’d had the luxury of that kind of time frame here in California (instead of a scant five months during which 36,000 people — including my wife and me — had to rush our wedding plans) to show the skeptics that the world was not about to end just because we were married, and happy for a change, Prop 8, I am certain, would never have had a chance.

So, while we wait for the California decision to come down (and, really, there’s no suspense, because we all know what that decision is going to be), and my stomach literally churns in the early morning as I toss and turn, trying to sleep, unable to reconcile the to-the-bone wound inflicted by the bigot brigades in a home state I barely recognize anymore, I couldn’t be happier today: This is an incredible, unexpected, monumental victory. I am overjoyed for our brothers and sisters in Iowa. Celebrate, all you newlyweds-to-be! This Californian is as happy as you are today!

And I take back all the jabs about the pig barns. ;)

Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed Under: California, Civil Rights, Iowa, Marriage, Proposition 8


March 15, 2009

I Used to Hate Iowa Because It Smelled Like Pig Crap in the Spring

But now…

Legislation that would make marriage gender neutral in Iowa appeared dead Friday after it was stripped from the list of measures to be take up by lawmakers this session.

While it remains possible the bill could reemerge near the end of the session, most political observers believe it has little chance of being taken up.

This “political observer” agrees. The haters are on a roll, folks, and they won’t stop until we have fewer rights than caged poultry. Oh, hey, wait— that already happened in California. Anyway…

The bill was sponsored by Sen. Matt McCoy. It would have replaced the words that define a couple as husband and wife under Iowa’s marriage law with spouse.

With the bill failing to be marked up, same-sex couples are now pinning their hopes on the state Supreme Court. The court late last year heard arguments in a challenge to the state ban on same-sex marriage.

Oh, FFS, don’t put your eggs in that basket! We had a fairly decent Supreme Court here in California, until at least two of them were replaced by lookalike pod creatures devoid of human emotion.

In 2007, Polk County Judge Robert Hanson struck down the state Defense of Marriage lawn declaring it to be unconstitutional. Later the same day Hanson stayed the ruling pending an appeal.

Arguing before the Supreme Court Assistant Polk County Attorney Roger Kuhle told the justices that Hanson had overstepped his authority.

Yeah, letting those judges you know, do their jobs is way out of line.

Kuhle also said that state support of same-sex marriage would damage traditional marriage, arguing that it would indicate to future generations that marriage is no longer about procreation.

Well, then, better annul all those childless-by-choice marriages, smart-quick, or people might actually start to think marriage has something to do with love!

Lambda Legal attorney Camilla Taylor, representing the six couples who are challenging the ban on gay marriage, told the court that the law violates Iowa’s constitution.

Yeah, and Roger Kuhle violates my idea of a decent, rational human being, but hey, whatcha gonna do? This slow torture of our minds and hearts is like Viagra to the Hate Brigades. Too much perverse pleasure isn’t healthy for anybody, but they’re addicted to the stuff.

A bit more at 365Gay.com.

Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed Under: Civil Rights, Homophobia, Iowa, Marriage, Radical Religious Right


December 9, 2008

Iowa Marriage: Varnum v. Brien Arguments Finished; Now We Wait

Attorneys conclude Supreme Court arguments
in gay marriage case

Arguments have ended today before the Iowa Supreme Court over a case involving gay marriage.

Varnum vs. Brien involves six same-sex Iowa couples who sued Polk County Recorder and Registrar Timothy Brien in 2005, after his office denied them marriage licenses.

Polk County District Court Judge Robert Hanson sided with the couples in a ruling last year, but suspended his decision until the high court reviews the matter.

The Polk County attorney’s office appealed the lower-court ruling to the Iowa Supreme Court on the grounds that Hanson erred in his 2007 ruling…

Oral arguments today pitted the Polk County attorney’s office against the couples, financed by the national gay and lesbian rights group Lambda Legal.

An attorney for six same-sex Iowa couples insisted that allowing gay marriage would not open the door to polygamous marriages, despite challenges from several Iowa Supreme Court justices. …

And, of course, the anti-gay hysterics tried to make it all about polygamy, and procreation:

Assistant Polk County Attorney Roger Kuhle … said Hanson had erred in his ruling, which declared the Iowa Defense of Marriage Act unconstitutional and threw out several expert witnesses that gay marriage opponents had hoped to use in a trial.

“The recorder has no say in this law,” Kuhle said. “He can no more give these plaintiffs a license than he could give a license to a man and three women, or a woman and three men.”

Kuhle continued his arguments beyond his allotted 30-minute limit, as justices grilled him on the potential impact of a ruling in favor of same-sex marriage.

Kuhle said that state support of same-sex marriage would teach future generations that marriage is no longer about procreation, one of its historic tenets. …

Kuhle should have watched the series finale of “Boston Legal” the other night. I certainly wouldn’t have objected to that marriage; people get married for lots of reasons, and — unless you’re, say, a Mormon who feels duty-bound to overpopulate the earth lest you kill your chances of getting into heaven — procreation is seldom the primary motive.

Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed Under: Civil Rights, Iowa, Marriage


November 26, 2008

Don’t Move to Iowa Just Yet, But…

60 percent in Iowa support gay couple rights

Two weeks before the Iowa Supreme Court hears arguments in a challenge to the state’s ban on same-sex marriage, a new poll indicates a majority of people in the state support gay couples, but are divided on whether they should be allowed to marry or have civil unions.

The University of Iowa poll found that 28.1 percent of those surveyed support same-sex marriage, while another 30.2 percent support civil unions, but not marriage. A third of those questioned oppose any recognition of same-sex couples, with about 10 percent having no opinion or refusing to answer.

The poll of 586 residents across the state was taken just prior to this month’s general election.

The Iowa Supreme Court will hear arguments Dec. 9 in a case involving six same-sex couples fighting for the right to marry. The lawsuit says state law limiting marriage to opposite-sex couples violates gay people’s rights to due process and equal protection established in the Iowa Constitution.

The court said that both sides will be given 30 minutes to make their arguments.

Huh? Is this an Iowa thing, restricting arguments to a time limit? Especially when basic, fundamental civil rights are at stake? Whoa, that’s harsh.

Overall, though, this ain’t too shabby, considering… well, considering it’s Iowa we’re talking about (sorry, Iowans, but come on, let’s be honest — your state isn’t exactly the San Francisco of the Midwest), and considering how well early California polls boded (er, “bade”? “bidden”? “did bode”?) for marriage equality — and look how that turned out.

Still, it’s encouraging that 60% didn’t just say, “Hang all the queers from the nearest scarecrow.”

That’s something.

I think.

Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed Under: Civil Rights, Iowa, Marriage


March 6, 2008

You Take the Good, You Take the Bad…

There is a great deal of activity right now across America in the ongoing battle for LGBT Equality. I’d like to say that most of the news is positive but unfortunately that’s rarely the case. Nonetheless there have been some strides forward, and that is something for which to be grateful.

 

The Washington Senate just passed a Domestic Partnership Expansion Bill that will substantially increase the number of benefits and protections same-sex partners are eligible for.

 

After already passing the Washington State House 62-32 back in February, the Senate today voted to 29-20 to pass a bill that would add roughly 160 rights, responsibilities and protection to same-sex couples and their families.

Washington’s existing Domestic Partnership bill currently consists of about a dozen rights and responsibilities.

 

The attempt to provide same-sex couples in Maryland any type of unions is proving difficult. Legislators have been forced to water things down repeatedly, and now are reduced to providing very limited benefits that they don’t even know what to call. Why? Because many bigots can’t handle the notion of same-sex couples having Domestic Partnerships or Civil Unions as they “would weaken the institution of marriage”. I myself would like to suggest an institution for those people…

 

Concerned that they won’t be able to muster the votes for a comprehensive bill on same-sex unions this year, state lawmakers are considering a tactical shift toward legislation that would grant a number of rights to gay and lesbian couples but stop short of full-fledged marriage or civil unions.

…..

The same-sex marriage debate has divided the State House, hampering efforts to build a coalition behind one legislative approach. Many lawmakers say they are uncomfortable with equating same-sex relationships with marriage but that they could back a piecemeal approach to grant some protections to those couples.

…..

Some lawmakers contend that civil unions are tantamount to marriage and would tarnish the institution. Sen. Bryan W. Simonaire, an Anne Arundel County Republican, said he would not support legislation that grants rights based on sexual orientation, though he would consider some rights for unmarried couples regardless of gender. He noted that two elderly people might be in a committed relationship but decide not to marry.

“If we’re going to start down this path, we need to make sure we’re making a comprehensive policy that affects everyone,” he said. “Why would we carve out rights for one single group if we’re concerned about equal rights.”

 

What do you mean “carve out rights for one single group”? If same-sex couples could get married (and do all of the other things you take for granted) there would be no need to “carve out rights” for them in the first place. Did you ever think of that?

 

The Maryland Court of Appeals, in its opinion, identified nearly 340 Maryland laws that provide for benefits and rights conditioned on marital status.

Equality Maryland, in a separate report, has identified 425 Maryland statutes that rely on the definition of marriage or a legally recognized family relationship, including the right to make burial decisions, mutual responsibility for debts, the right to file joint income taxes and protections for children.

It is unclear which rights and benefits would be included in the alternative bill and what the same-sex relationships would be called, if anything. Raskin said some suggestions that have been floated are domestic or household partners and mutual or reciprocal beneficiaries.

 

Strides have been made in Texas politics as four openly gay candidates are now advancing past the primaries to their runoff and general elections.

 

Lupe Valdez, known for being the first female, Latina and lesbian sheriff to ever hold the office of Dallas County Sheriff, took a big step toward re-election by defeating three opponents in her Democratic primary. More impressively, she won more than 50 percent of the vote, avoiding a potential runoff election.

Rosemary Lehmberg earned the most votes in the Democratic Primary in her bid to become Travis County District Attorney. Lehmberg got 35 percent of the vote, while her nearest opponent received 31 percent. Outgoing District Attorney Ronnie Earle, known for his prosecution of Tom Delay, has endorsed her. Lehmberg faces a runoff election for the Democratic nomination.

Additionally, two of Victory’s judicial candidates–Steve Kirkland (215th Civil District Court) and Andres Pereira (190th Civil District Court)–won their Democratic primaries and will advance to the Nov. 4 general election.

 

In Iowa an attempt to force a vote on a same-sex marriage ban failed. Although the measure had failed to gain approval in a House committee this year, Chris Rants (R) thought requiring a vote on it would achieve his desired results. He was wrong.

 

Rants tried a procedural vote that would have moved the measure, House Joint Resolution 8, out of committee and before the full House for a possible debate.

Rants’ maneuver failed on a 46-49 vote, with majority Democrats defeating it.

Rants said he was disappointed some Democrats, seven by his count, who have supported a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage in the past did not vote along with him this time.

“If those seven had voted with us, it would have passed, but I guess they will have to explain to their constituents why they flip-flopped on this issue,” Rants said.

Because the vote was a procedural vote, no debate was allowed, although the rhetoric surrounding the gay marriage issue has grown more heated in recent weeks at the Statehouse.

House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, D-Des Moines, said Democrats felt the issue should be settled in the courts before the Iowa Legislature might take action.

“It was primarily done to generate press, which I think it certainly served that purpose,” McCarthy said after the vote.

The issue currently is before the Iowa Supreme Court.

 

My, my, my. Some people are so anxious to enshrine bigotry into their state constitution that they have to grandstand in order to do it. Would it really kill Rants to wait for the Iowa Supreme Court to make the decision, or is he afraid the court might decide against bigotry?

 

So that’s the state of affairs across the nation for the present. It’s no surprise in my opinion that the debate over same-sex unions seems to be coming to a crescendo all at once. After all, we have a presidential election in a few months. Should the Democrats lose this one again, it can be conveniently be blamed on the LGBTs, as usual. The more things change, the more they stay the same.

 

 

 

Posted by: Buffy

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Filed Under: Iowa, Marriage, Maryland, Texas


January 16, 2008

The Great White Hype


We were wondering when we’d see the phrase “Great White Hope” headline an op/ed about Barack Obama (The Great White Hope was a play-turned-1970-film fictionalizing the life of black boxer Jack Johnson), and this past Sunday, we found it in the Washington Post: “Why Obamamania? Because He Runs as The Great White Hope.

David Greenberg recaps the “giddiness bordering on exhilaration among voters” following Obama’s win in Iowa, and utter intoxication among “voters and pundits … heady with the hope that he can deliver not just ‘change’ … but a categorically different kind of change from Clinton or the Republican candidates.”

For a moment, our hearts skipped at the possibility that Mr. Greenberg was about to explain the words “hope” and “change” — words rendered completely indefinable by Obama and his supporters. “Hope for what?” we keep asking. “Change what, exactly?”

Mr. Greenberg is to be forgiven for being as unable to define these words in the context of Obamamania; neither Obama nor his starry-eyed supporters have been able to define them either. Confront an Obama supporter, and you’ll likely hear (as we have, repeatedly) some inane, automated response as “You just don’t get it,” or “It’s a shame you don’t have hope,” or “Don’t you want change?” or (the most chilling we’ve heard lately) “There’s still time for you to catch up with the masses.” (Masses of what? And who wants to “catch up with ‘the masses’”? Whatever happened to thinking for yourself?)

This, however, is our current favorite: “Obama is the only way we’re going to throw those Bush thugs out of the White House!” Never mind that come January 20, 2009, Bush and Co. will be vacating the premises, no matter who wins the presidency in ‘08. But that’s the sort of answer you get when you press Obamaites too hard for a definition of “change.”

Still, Greenberg doesn’t need to define the words “hope” and “change”; he explains Obamamania by defining what they aren’t, beginning with the question, “So what explains the magic?”

The most obvious explanation is Obama’s stirring oratory, with its notes of generational change and unity.

Well, we already knew that: Obama’s charisma is undeniable, and he’s comparatively young (just six weeks older than yours truly, in fact); he represents the first post-Baby Boomer generation, the Baby Busters (perpetually confused with GenXers) — who, believe you me, have precious little in common with the “Howdy Doody” generation with which we’re so often lumped. Seriously: While a “generation” lasts 20 years, a “baby boom” just doesn’t — and yet every American born between 1945 and 1964 is thrown into the Baby Boomer pot. A “baby boom” is supposed to be the result of an event immediately preceding a spike in births; does anyone really believe that folks were still making babies in 1964 as a result of World War II?

But I digress, as usual. Still, Obama’s age, and, more striking, his tenuous ties to the rest of us Busters, are important considerations I’ll address in a moment. Right now, let’s get back to Greenberg’s herculean attempt to explain the Obama phenomenon (and note how Greenberg uses the word “seduction,” perhaps the most common word associated with the mystery of Obamamania):

The key to his seduction, though, resides not just in what he says but in what remains unsaid. It lies in the tacit offer — a promise about overcoming America’s shameful racial history — that his particular candidacy offers to his enthusiasts, and to us all.

Obama’s allure differs from the infatuations of past election cycles because it can’t be traced to what he has done or will do. In his legislative career, Obama has produced few concrete policy changes, and you’d be hard-pressed to find a rank-and-file fan who can cite one.

And there you have both the reason for Obama’s popularity, and the very thing that frustrates those of us not infected by the Obama bug to the point of distraction: His appeal lies in nothing he’s ever actually done, but in vague, feel-good… er, vibes. (Well, there’s one thing Obama may share with the rest of the Busters: I, too, once grooved on indefinable “good vibes.” Of course, it was the early 1970s, and I was about ten at the time.)

Not since 1896 — when another rousing speechmaker, William Jennings Bryan, sought the White House — has the zeal for a candidate corresponded so little to a record of hard accomplishment. But merely asking if Obama has done enough for us to expect he’d be a good president misses the point, because that measures the past rather than imagining the future.

Greenberg certainly has his finger on the pulse of the Obamanation: Asking about hard accomplishment misses the point — the point being: You’re killing my buzz, man — stop asking logical questions, and just get with the groove, baby.

Since when was it such a radical idea to demand that a potential President of the United States have a little more to fall back on than good vibes?

But that is another no-no question to the Obamaites: You’re not allowed to cite Obama’s distinct lack of experience in matters beyond the borders of the state of Illinois.

“Oh, sure,” the Obamaites cry, “Hillary has ‘experience’ — but do you want the same old corporatism that’s dominated the White House since the 1980s?”

(This is usually followed by “You’re just a Hillary supporter anyway!” Which is far from the truth — although the hostile fervor of the Obamaites has served to push many of us previously-anti-Hillaryites squarely into the Hillary camp — but that’s another thorn we’ve snipped before, and will no doubt snip again.)

Frankly, “the same old corporatism” under Bill Clinton worked just fine for me, thanks very much; despite Big Dog’s spectacular (and unforeseen) failures and downright betrayals in the area of gay equality, those eight years between 1992 and 2000 were the best eight years of my life, in terms of quality of life. Is it selfish to long for the days when I was making a very healthy paycheck in a field (I.T.) that has since dried up like Kakadu in July? Perhaps. But never lose sight of the fact that principles must come second to the little luxuries of life — like eating, and living indoors. The most principled civil-rights activist in the world isn’t much use to anybody if s/he’s on the street and starving to death.

Or, as one of my favorite guilty-pleasure-movie lines goes: “Honey, we gotta eat.”

Greenberg continues:

Yet if Obama charms us by pointing to tomorrow, he doesn’t come bearing a new ideological vision.

True. And that throngs of voters are willing to cast their lot for a candidate whose ideology changes with every shift in the wind should make us all very nervous. One thing I’ve said repeatedly throughout this long, long campaign, in regard to Obama’s calculated machination of pitting Southern religionists against gay and lesbian Americans: You have to give the Republican candidates some credit for honesty; at least I know Romney and Huckabee and all the rest loathe my very existence as a gay American, and will fight me head-on. In contrast, Obama’s talk doesn’t match his walk.

Don’t sing me that old song, “Obama is the best candidate for gay rights — just look at his voting record!” (This means you, Chris Crain, who, not-so-incidentally, keep harping on that stale old right-wing rumor that Hillary is a lesbian.) There’s little difference between Obama’s voting record on LGBT-equality issues and that of any other mainstream Democrat with at least two ounces of brain matter left in his or her skull.

Where Obama steps out of line — way out of line — is in his deceitful and downright mean campaign tactics, his shameless pandering to shameless bigots (particularly those who should know better), and his unwavering insistence that lesbians and gay men are simply not worthy of the same rights (or, more accurately, privileges) that he enjoys. See: McClurkin, McClurkin, McClurkin, and Barack’s latest hit with a bullet: “We Are All Sinners (a.k.a. The Wink-Wink-Nudge, Bush-Style Code Words for Religionists Song).”

Yet, believe it or not, I still don’t think Obama at his core is a raging homophobe. I believe he is completely indifferent to gay and lesbian Americans, and we pop up on his radar only as a commodity — or liability.

Obama is simply an opportunist — which again, is more worrisome: I know where all the Republican candidates stand on the issue of my rights; they make no bones about it. As Duane Wells wrote so very plainly and perfectly: “I never thought I’d say this, but Mr. Obama’s duplicitous stance on gay and lesbian rights circa the Donnie McClurkin controversy has given me something of an appreciation for George W. Bush’s no-nonsense approach to politics. I may not agree with a thing that comes out of curious George’s mouth, but at least he doesn’t piss in my cornflakes and tell me that he filled the bowl with whole milk. No sir. If there is a good thing to be said about President Bush it’s that he will tell you he’s going to piss in your cornflakes, then he will actually piss in your cornflakes and then he will hold a press conference defending his right to piss in your cornflakes. There’s no deception. It’s honest and clear… whether you like it or not. With Obama that is unfortunately not the case.”

And consider this: If Obama so readily and freely throws gay Americans under the bus for sake of cozying up to a contingent (whose votes he was almost certainly assured of anyway), who’s he going to throw under the bus next? He’s already told the Baby Boomers that they’re for all practical purposes irrelevant — will your particular demographic be the next rendered “irrelevant,” a mere monkey wrench in the Obama machine?

It appears that Obama’s only “ideology” is one of winning, at any cost. He doesn’t actually stand for anything, other than some fuzzy concept of “hope and change.”

And, to paraphrase Alexander Hamilton: If you stand for nothing, you’ll fall for anything. And Obama has proved, time and time again, that he’s susceptible to following, blindly, a lot of bad advice. That’s assuming, generously, that Obama is not the instigator behind the cruelest of his own campaign calculations; on the other hand, it’s Obama’s campaign, and Obama should be the one calling the shots.

Quite a dilemma, this: Should we be more worried by a candidate who surrounds himself with the most un-principled advisers and does whatever they tell him to do (a grim portent of the way President Obama will pick and choose his cabinet), or by a candidate who is himself so ruthlessly ambitious that he will discard the most faithful voting blocs in his own party in order to “reach out” to groups whose “principles” run counter to very idea of democracy itself?

“At crucial moments through his career,” writes Ed Pilkington, “he had what he calls the ‘audacity of hope’: where others might have stepped back, he reached out, both in terms of his personal ambition and in terms of his appeal to supporters outside the natural Democratic tent.

“When he made the Boston speech he was not even yet in Congress: He was a Chicago lawyer running at the time for one of two Illinois seats in the US Senate. That race was in itself a long shot: a black man, as he says in his first book Dreams from My Father, ‘without organizational backing or personal wealth, and with a funny name,’ competing to become only the third African American since the post-civil war period of Reconstruction to serve in the Senate. He won, galvanizing support in white areas as well as black.

“Look further back still and the pattern is repeated. In 1990, while a second-year student at Harvard, he had the audacity to stand for election to head the Harvard Law Review, one of the country’s most prestigious legal publications. He beat off 18 other candidates to become its president (savor the moment: He was elected president Obama).

“David Goldberg, a civil rights lawyer who was a runner-up in that poll, recalls that Obama won by reaching out to right-wing law students, several of whom went on to become key legal advisers in the Bush administration: ‘We were a really polarized group of students, and he managed to span us all.’”

Notice a pattern yet?

In his WaPo op/ed, Greenberg draws a parallel between Ronald Reagan’s empty, feel-good rhetoric, and Bill Clinton’s 1992 win due to being “the first Democrat since the 1960s to formulate a viable and vital new liberalism — one rooted in years of policy wonkery, a frank reckoning with his party’s failures and an early recognition of the importance of globalization.” But

…where Clinton converted voters to his philosophy with binder-thick proposals, from AmeriCorps to welfare reform to the earned-income tax credit, Obama fans rarely tout his specific ideas. No one claims his agenda entails radical innovation or differs much from Hillary Clinton’s. On the contrary, Obama’s ideology, insofar as he has articulated it, seems to be a familiar, mainstream liberalism, heavy on communitarianism. High-minded and process-oriented, in the Mugwump tradition that runs from Adlai Stevenson to Bill Bradley, it is pitched less to the Democratic Party’s working-class base than to upscale professionals.

The Obama phenomenon, then, stems not from what he has done but who he is. As the social critic John McWhorter has written, “What gives people a jolt in their gut about the idea of President Obama is the idea that it would be a ringing symbol that racism no longer rules our land.” He is the great white hope.

Greenberg delves more deeply into the race issue, then hits upon an idea that — commensurate with my encounters with the frenzied throngs — is a very uncomfortable idea to Obama supporters:

Obama’s rhetorical gifts clearly contribute to his allure. But that allure resides not simply in the mellow timbre of his larynx but, more deeply, in his near-perfect pitch in talking about race to white America. Obama doesn’t shun race altogether — if he did, he would provoke suspicions — and he certainly doesn’t “transcend” race, whatever that means. But neither, as the social theorist Shelby Steele has written, does he rub white America’s face in its corrupt history of slavery and segregation. Traditionally, whites have appreciated such gentleness.

History provides a precedent of sorts: In 1960, John F. Kennedy, a dashing, almost aristocratic figure who defied many nasty stereotypes of Irish Catholics, made Protestants feel not just safe in voting for him but downright virtuous. They could flatter themselves that they were not prejudiced while still choosing a candidate as cultivated as any Brahmin. Similarly, Obama — whose strongest appeal has thus far been to upscale white liberals — allows those whites to feel good about themselves and their country. He lets them imagine that a nation founded for freedom yet built on slavery can be redeemed by pulling a lever.

At the same time, Obama doesn’t threaten or discomfort whites. He doesn’t strike them as wronged or impatient, or as the spokesman of a long-subjugated minority group or even as someone particularly culturally different from themselves.

Ouch. In other words, white liberals may be leaping at the chance to finally alleviate all that deeply-ingrained white-liberal guilt without actually addressing the issue of race head-on.

This idea, whether correct or not, is one few Obamaites confront easily or willingly. Rather, many immediately discard it with the accusation that it somehow impugns Obama’s qualifications for the presidency (whatever those as-yet-unexplained “qualifications” may be). It doesn’t — nor it is a “racist” thought (the growing chorus of “Racism!” from the Obamaites every time The One’s suitability for the presidency is questioned, for any reason, is deafening). Rather, it is an idea worth consideration and discussion; if nothing else, the truth could provide some clues about the makeup of Obama’s base: What percentage of Obama supporters really are white liberals proud to say they support a man of color — and secretly relieved to support that man as an imaginary panacea for race conflict in this country?

Obama above all should be most interested in the answer to this question, if for no other reason than to attempt to dilute the potential “Bradley effect” (when white voters publicly espouse their support for a non-white candidate, but vote for the white candidate when alone in the voting booth), a phenomenon that appears to have some Obama supporters worried. Witness Obama’s projected win — and surprise loss to Hillary Clinton — in New Hampshire.

Greenberg addresses yet another issue Obama supporters are loath to confront:

As much Kansan as Kenyan, Obama does not descend from families who suffered American slavery or Jim Crow. His family tree has fewer slaves than slaveholders, fewer chains than Cheneys.

That’s what I meant by Obama’s “tenuous ties to the rest of us Busters.” As mentioned, Obama and I are the same age; neither of us can recall the Civil Rights era as clearly as our elders (Obama and I were both two-going-on-three in 1964), yet I, at least, remember dim news images of firehoses in the streets of Birmingham, and attack dogs unleashed — and, much more clearly, my first, timid step approaching a black child at a playground. While I didn’t understand what it was I understood, I understood there was a difference between us, and that there were some very bad people in this world who would be very angry about my playing with a black child (or, as we were taught was the proper word at the time, a Negro).

Despite his skin color versus mine, I am not at all convinced that Barack Obama’s ties to the Civil Rights era equate with mine; when my snow-white third-grade class was being introduced to our first black classmate, Obama was living in Indonesia. We both attended Catholic school — but somehow, I cannot imagine that young Barack was inundated by the issue of American race relations (on the news, in the movies, on the cover of newsweeklies, and in lengthy class discussions — yes, even before my age reached double digits) as I was.

The issue was all around me; no one my age was allowed to forget the vast divide between whites and blacks in the United States. Was Obama, insulated literally on the other side of the planet, as aware at the same tender age of the volatile schism between black and white “back home”?

I wasn’t quite four when the Watts riots exploded — and exploded with such repercussion that I remember them as well as I remember the endless news footage of the Vietnam War, and the nightly body count out of Southeast Asia.

Does Obama remember any of this? Did he even hear about it before he returned to the U.S. at the age of ten — when even the Summer of Love was a quickly-fading memory?

Greenberg continues:

This background may be what some people (mainly blacks) have meant when they asked the regrettable question of whether Obama is “black enough” to earn their votes. But Obama has always been black enough for his elite white enthusiasts, who would never presume to judge an African American’s racial authenticity — indeed, are all too happy to have such a question be kept, by prevailing norms, off limits to them.

Ouch, again.

Some pundits scratched their heads when Obama was trailing Clinton among black voters. (He’s now pulled even or ahead.) But it made perfect sense. Clinton had a track record of working for African Americans’ interests.

And yet it’s Clinton’s track record Obama supporters decry as the same old, same old — as opposed to, I guess, this hazy promise of “change” from Obama. No one put it better than Senator Clinton herself at the New Hampshire debate: “Making change is not about what you believe. It’s not about a speech you make. It is about working hard. …

“I want to make change, but I’ve already made change. I will continue to make change. I’m not just running on a promise of change. I’m running on 35 years of change. I’m running on having taken on the drug companies and the health insurance companies, taking on the oil companies.

“So, you know, I think it is clear that what we need is somebody who can deliver change. And we don’t need to be raising the false hopes of our country about what can be delivered. The best way to know what change I will produce is to look at the changes that I’ve already made.”

Clinton is a known quantity. We know what she’s accomplished, and she’s clear on what she intends to deliver. Obama is not.

Ultimately, concludes Greenberg, supporting Barack Obama…

…is a fantasy of easy redemption. America’s racial history — mixed into our culture at its foundation — will be with us always, even as personal prejudice recedes and inequality is chipped away. For all we know, a President Obama might make the so-called underclass his top priority. But Obamamania — the phenomenon, not the man — leads us to believe that if only we vote for an African American, an avatar of “change” and healing, we can slough off the burdens of our past — the burdens of finding answers to problems such as the rising number of out-of-wedlock births, the obscene size of the black male population behind bars, the rotten state of city schools, the simmering white resentment about affirmative action, the black-white gap in life expectancy and the cascade of government failures that turned Hurricane Katrina from a breakdown of emergency relief into a disgraceful racial scandal.

Obama’s boosters are not fired up about finally confronting those intricate and intractable problems, for which the answers lie not in identity but in politics and policy. Inspiring and exhilarating as it is, Obamamania allows us to sidestep the hardest challenges, at least for now.

That is what worries me the most: that Obama will be swept into the White House on a wave of “easy redemption” that “allows us to sidestep the hardest challenges, at least for now.”

I’m no fool: Any change would be welcome after seven years of allowing ourselves to be cowed into submission by a rogue administration with an out-of-control tinpot dictator in charge.

But do we want to “sidestep the hardest challenges,” now or in the future? Haven’t we buried our heads in the sand long enough?

Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed Under: "Ex-Gays", Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, Christianity, Donnie McClurkin, Election 2008, George W. Bush, Hillary Clinton, Illinois, Iowa, Mike Huckabee, Mitt Romney, Race/Ethnic Issues, Republicans, Ronald Reagan


January 3, 2008

Thanks, Dennis Kucinich, for NOTHING.

Sapph’s message to the Kucinich campaign tonight:

I sent this message when unsubscribing to the Kucinich campaign mailing list — and now I’m sending it to you (whoever fields these messages) in the faint hope that an actual human being might read it:

“HOW COULD YOU endorse Mister ‘Throw the Gays Under the Bus for the Southern Homophobes Vote’ Obama? Dennis, I have supported you unconditionally, and you were getting my primary vote in California. Now, tonight, after the Iowa caucuses, I may not vote at all — in the primary, or in the general election. What’s the point? I haven’t been so disappointed in a candidate (YOU) since Kerry so willingly conceded to Bush in 2004. I have NOTHING to look forward to now… except 1) a gay-hating Republican theocrat, or 2) a gay-hating Democratic neophyte. Thanks a lot, Dennis. Thanks a whole hell of a lot for throwing Iowa Obama’s way. Thanks for NOTHING.”

Addendum: I have been a yellow-dog Democrat since I could first vote, in the late 1970s. After this horrible fiasco in Iowa — for which I lay much of the blame directly at Dennis’s feet — I am finding it extremely difficult to come up with a good reason to ever vote again. The corporate suits are going to do what they want, the American people are going to continue to be blinded by the hype — and the one candidate I truly believed in appears to have succumbed to that same, starstruck blindness.

What’s the use in trying anymore? (Rhetorical question — there is none.)

Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed Under: Barack Obama, Dennis Kucinich, Election 2008, Iowa


October 31, 2007

Obama Won’t Budge on Marriage Equality

The man who says he’s the best candidate for LGBT rights still doesn’t want to give us the same rights he has.

Obama: No Gay Marriage

In two appearances on Monday [Barack Obama] said he still opposes same-sex marriage, preferring civil unions for gays and lesbians. His position is the same as the other Democratic frontrunners but the tone of the questioning is an indication the fallout continues from Sunday’s appearance at an Obama gospel rally that featured outspoken “ex-gay” Donnie McClurkin.

. . .

Obama said that he believed same-sex couples should have the same rights as married couples but that their relationships should be called civil unions rather than marriage.

He also said stressed the importance of his Christian faith, but said there has to be a clear separation between church and state.

. . .

Appearing at the Cedar Rapids Public Library, Abbi Swanson whose son is gay, asked what he would do to give him the same rights as opposite-sex couples.

“You want the word marriage and I believe that the issue of marriage has become so entangled - the word marriage has become so entangled with religion - that it makes more sense for me as president, with that authority, to talk about the civil rights that are conferred [with civil unions]” he told her.

Try telling that to the more than 300 same-sex couples joined in civil unions in New Jersey who have learned the hard way that civil unions just aren’t good enough.

Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed Under: "Ex-Gays", Barack Obama, Christianity, Donnie McClurkin, Election 2008, Homophobia, Iowa, Marriage


October 5, 2007

At Least We’re in Good Company — He Hates Immigrants Almost As Much As He Hates Us

Tancredo calls for federal ban on gay marriage

Republican presidential candidate Tom Tancredo today called for a constitutional amendment to ban same-sex marriages.

Tancredo held a press conference on the steps of the Iowa State Capitol building to denounce a decision made by Polk County District Judge Robert Hanson, who ruled in August that Iowa’s gay-marriage ban is unconstitutional.

The Colorado congressman argued a federal ban is necessary to ensure “activist judges” will not make similar rulings that pave the way for legal recognition of relationships based on bigamy, polygamy and incest.

. . .

Keller argued Tancredo’s suggestion that recognition of gay marriage could pave the way for other legally sanctioned, non-traditional relationships is unfounded.

. . .

Marriage is “all about protecting people,” he added. …

Notes Buffy:

Yes, Tom, marriage is about protecting people. And that includes GLBT people and their families.

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Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed Under: Election 2008, Iowa, Marriage, Republicans


September 28, 2007

So, When Did God Say “Persecute Thy Neighbor”?

America is Not a Religion.

Pastors plan rally on gay marriage

A group of central-Iowa pastors opposed to gay marriage announced plans Thursday for an Oct. 28 prayer rally on the issue.

The 14 church leaders showed their solidarity for a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage at a news conference at Maple Street Missionary Baptist Church in Des Moines.

“This is not about hate but about differences of beliefs,” said the Rev. Keith Ratliff of the Maple Street church. “God’s word is clear to us that marriage is only between one man and woman.”

. . .

Carolyn Jensen, executive director of One Iowa, a gay and lesbian advocacy group, said people’s civil rights are at the heart of the issue.

“Extending equal rights to all Iowans does not affect the practices of Iowa’s faith leaders and their communities,” she said.

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Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed Under: Iowa, Marriage, Radical Religious Right


September 25, 2007

As Long As It Keeps Them Too Busy to Bother Us for Donations

Abs
Here’s a picture of a dude with great abs, to take your mind off your abject disappointment in the utterly abysmal performance of the HRC.
 

PlanetOut tells us:

The Human Rights Campaign marked a first in its history this month when it opened a campaign office in Concord, N.H., a central hub for presidential candidates on the campaign trail.

The organization has also hired a full-time organizer and political operative, Heather Gibson, to help coordinate the efforts of LGBT groups and HRC members in New Hampshire.

National field director Marty Rouse said the move was part of a protracted campaign by HRC to have a presence in key states where the group can have an impact both locally and nationwide.

“We can’t be in all 50 states,” said Rouse, “so our goal has been to look across the country and see where we can be helpful in moving forward a GLBT agenda that, while important to the community members in that one state, also might have national implications.”

. . .

HRC has also been actively working in Iowa with gay rights group One Iowa, in June launching a campaign to highlight the military contributions of LGBT soldiers. The “Legacy of Service Tour” received extensive mainstream media coverage in Iowa.

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Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed Under: Election 2008, Iowa, LGBT Organizations


September 12, 2007

Everyday America Hates Everygay American

An illiterate anti-equality group calling itself “Everyday America” wants to impeach the judge who overturned Iowa’s unconstitutional ban on same-sex marriage.

Why do we say they’re illiterate? Because the very first line on the front page of their hysterical, homo-hating Web site begins: “Polk County judge Robert Hanson in affect passed his own law…” That should be “in effect.”

Anyway, here’s the poop on another group of poops who adore the system only when it agrees with their hateful homophobia:

Iowa Group Seeks Impeachment Of Judge Who Approved Gay Marriages

A nonprofit group is calling for the impeachment of a district court judge whose ruling overturned Iowa’s ban on gay marriage.

Bill Salier, a 2002 candidate for U.S. Senate, said that Polk County Judge Robert Hanson violated the state constitution by legalizing gay marriage. Salier is a founder of the group Everyday America.

In a statement, the organization said Iowans must stop officials from overstepping the constitution to change society as they see fit.

More from KCCI.com

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Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed Under: Iowa, Marriage, Radical Religious Right


September 5, 2007

Chet Culver: Spineless Traitor

Where's Iowa again?Well, that’s our opinion. Here’s why:

As Polk County [Iowa] attorneys were preparing their legal arguments appealing last week’s court ruling that struck down Iowa’s so-called Defense of Marriage law Gov. Chet Culver (D) was voicing his support for the law banning gay unions.

. . .

In voicing his approval of the law banning limiting marriage to opposite-sex couples Culver carefully avoided criticizing Hanson’s ruling.

“I respect the important role that the judicial branch plays in this issue and in many issues,” Culver tells the Des Moines Register.

The governor also was not ready to support Republican calls for an amendment to the state Constitution to specifically ban gay marriage. . . .

Culver’s support for the Iowa DOMA puts him at odds with the Iowa Democratic Party’s platform which calls for “equal marital rights for all consenting adults regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity.”

. . .

Gay Democrats said they were concerned that Culver appears to be backing away from the official platform. …

More from 365Gay.com

We wouldn’t be half so annoyed if Culver hadn’t shown some promise as a half-decent guy.

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Posted by: Sapphocrat

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Filed Under: Iowa, Marriage


 

 
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