Tag Archives: marriage equality

Why Marriage?

Whenever the topic of same-sex marriage arises, there inevitably has to be an explanation of why domestic partnership agreements and their cousins aren’t marriage. Even with a civil union, it can take time, lawyers, and money for a couple to duplicate the rights granted by traditional marriage.

In support of Pride month, the employees of LUSH Fresh Handmade Cosmetics offer this explanation.

Now that you’ve finished watching, go take a hot bath with a Butterball Bath Bomb and plan your dream wedding!

What Do Mormons and Gays Have in Common?

After the Mormon Church-funded debacle that started California’s continuing Prop. 8 battle, you’d think that the Mormon and gay communities would have nothing in common except a passion for unusual underwear.

However, it turns out that neither Mormons nor gays can lead a Boy Scout troop.

In the ironic cycle of hate, a straight, married Mormon couple in North Carolina has been told they can’t be Cub Scout leaders.

According to NPR, a Presbyterian church was happy to have Jeremy and Jodi Stokes as Cub Scout leaders until officials there found out they are Mormons. They were told they would have to step down because the church does not consider them “real Christians”. (Mormons consider themselves to be Christians.)

The Boy Scouts of America requires its members to swear an oath of duty to God.

Christ Covenant Church in Matthews, NC, about 10 miles from Charlotte, has about 2,350 members according to its website. It is part of the Presbyterian Church in America, a conservative Evangelical denomination. Evangelicals have consistently criticized the LDS church.

The LDS Church has consistently criticized gays, among other minority groups.

The Boy Scouts of America has legally discriminated against gays for a decade. In 2000, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the BSA has a constitutional right to exclude openly gay men from serving as troop leaders.

See how this big jamboree of hate works?

The Boy Scouts discriminate against gays and Mormons.

The Mormons discriminate against gays.

But Mormons and grown-up Boy Scouts are all welcomed into the gay community with open arms.

So, tell me. Who’s looking most Christian now?

There is a great movie about one young man’s battle against discrimination in the Boy Scouts called Scout’s Honor. You really should see it.

Yes to FCKH8! (NSFW)

Thanks to Dan Savage at the Savage Love blog for sharing this with me. Now I’m sharing this with my five (plus) friends. F-bombs abound… (Don’t waste a moment! Go straight to the website & buy the shirt here.)

Prop. 8 Trial Closes with a Lisp of Hot Air

Charles Cooper, the attorney defending Proposition 8

Of all the reports on the web today about the closing arguments in the trial contesting California’s Proposition 8 – the 2008 voter initiative that banned same-sex marriage – I really enjoyed this one by Roger Brigham, the San Francisco editor of EDGE.

Brigham did a fine job of conveying the absurdity of the 5-hour marathon of statements, at the peak of which, the attorney defending Proposition 8 actually minced and mimicked the defendants of same-sex marriage, using a falsetto.

This may be my favorite passage from the story:

The threat alluded to repeatedly by Cooper was the idea that by allowing same-sex couples to marry, heterosexual couples who would otherwise marry and breed would not do so. How this would happen Cooper did not explain and he offered no evidence.

Now, that’s showing us.

Take the time to read the rest of the story on EDGE.

This Pride, Commit to NOT Recommitting

Last weekend, I was at the Sonoma County Pride celebration in the sweet little, and oh-so-gay, river town of Guerneville. The parade was tiny but enthusiastic, the Dykes on Bikes could be counted on both hands, and maybe a toe or two. The local Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence rode Segways, courtesy of a tour company, waving regally to the crowd from their two-wheeled perches.

After the parade there was a gathering at a nearby resort. There was the usual collection of booths and vendors, and a stage featuring enthusiastic musicians of every ilk, from polka to drumming to rock-n-roll.

But at 3:15 p.m., the entertainment stopped for the annual spectacle known as the Commitment Ceremony.

Ack.

Described on the Sonoma County Pride website, the Commitment Ceremony is an en masse public event that “is a powerful statement about a couple’s relationship and their devotion to each other. Straight couples are welcome to participate, and in doing so, to show their support for all loving relationships.”

Ack. Ack.

Understand, I’m all for same-sex marriage, but I believe the time has come when our vows need to stop being a novelty act.

Getting married* or recommitted in the middle of a public festival during the band break, just yards from the beer and wine booth, isn’t sanctity. And, it’s not dignified, no matter how much Vaseline you smear on the lens.

After all, straight people don’t stand up at their events – county fairs, NASCAR races, hockey games, what have you – and get group committed. Hell, their friends would have them committed if they kept that up.

One of the best ways to show the world the lesbian and gay community understands the sanctity of marriage is to act like we’re serious about it – and that means no public pageantry, no using ceremonies for shock value, and reining in the urge to make our special days political press events.

Getting married on the steps of City Hall and having reporters show up is one thing (and hopefully the intrigue will wear off once we’re doing it in cities all over the state). Exchanging your vows with a whole group of tearful, beery, sunbathing, rainbow-clad dancing fools, is another.

In past years, there have been prominent newspaper pictures of this annual folly, and they make me cringe.

So, I’m requesting you to help stop the queer madness! This year demonstrate your belief in same-sex marriage by publicly committing not to publicly marry or recommit. When the moment comes, wear white, don’t wear white, be barefoot on a beach, be with family and friends, or be alone in a temple, but for God’s sake, do it like you mean it.

* Call it marriage if you want too, but California doesn’t recognize it unless you were part of the lucky group married between June 16 and Nov. 5, 2008, or were married in a state that recognizes same-sex marriage.

Parabéns! Lesbian Couple Marries in Portugal

This good news from the BBC:

The first same-sex marriage has taken place in Portugal, a month after a law allowing gay marriage came into effect.

Teresa Pires and Helena Paixao, both divorced mothers in their 30s who have been together since 2003, married at a Lisbon registry office.

The couple – who had campaigned for a change to the law – described it as a “great victory, a dream come true”.

The Socialist government had faced fierce opposition to the law in what is a mainly Catholic country.

But a petition against the change failed to gain enough support for a referendum.

The bill was passed by parliament in January and ratified by President Anibal Cavaco Silva in May – making Portugal the sixth European country to recognise same-sex marriages.

(These are my people!)

Kitty’s Wedding – A Creative Protest

My thanks to Dan Savage for the tip-off about this awesome video. Watch as two lesbians apply for a marriage license in New York state and are then refused. Then a gay man they’ve never met steps in for one of the women. They introduce themselves to each other and a license is immediately issued. Now that’s sanctity!

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The Little Ladies in Black Can Marry

My grandmother – my mother’s mother – emigrated to the United States from Portugal when she was a girl of 12. Accompanied by an older brother, she came through Ellis Island just after the turn of the 20th century. They were on the way to California, where they’d been promised a home with cousins. They were emissaries of parents that wanted to give their children a chance at a life better than the one they had known. Grams and her brother were the first to arrive in the United States. Others came later. They were sent first because, although young, they showed promise – promise the family hoped would be nurtured here. Their parents never emigrated.

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California Already Has Your Gay Divorce

rosie+o'donnell,+weddingIt was bound to happen. As soon as discussion about gay and lesbian marriage equality was starting to feel pretty commonplace, it seems everyone is talking about gay divorce.

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California’s Prop. 8 Back in Court Today

A federal judge today will consider whether to dismiss a lawsuit against Proposition 8, last year’s ballot measure that reinstated a ban on same-sex marriage in California.

U.S. District Court Judge Vaughn R. Walker, who will hear arguments in San Francisco, must decide whether to proceed with a trial scheduled for January or throw out the constitutional challenge on purely legal grounds.

Walker has previously said he believes a trial is needed to develop a factual record for higher courts. The case is eventually expected to reach the U.S. Supreme Court.

But backers of the ballot measure contend that a trial is unnecessary because the law is already clear.

Read more on the LA Times blog.

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California Continues to Muddy Same-Sex Marriage Laws

While across the country, people marked National Coming Out Day, and the LGBT community gathered in a show of strength in Washington, DC, at the National Equality March, in California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger quietly signed a bill adding new rights for gay and lesbian couples in the state.

However, the new rights only serve to add layers of complexity to the state’s already tiered marriage equality situation.

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Martina’s Ex-partner Makes End Run for Settlement

Because there is no same-sex marriage in Florida, the former partner of tennis legend Martina Navratilova is using an unusual legal tactic, arguing that the couple’s relationship was similar to a business venture.

Navratilova’s former partner Toni Layton is suing for half of the money and assets acquired during the couple’s relationship, which lasted from 2000 to 2008.

Layton claims partial ownership to vehicles, guns, African pictures, an Apple computer, pets, electronics, a Vince Salvati painting, Wyland animal sculptures, a porcelain cookie bowl, collectible “frog art,” and other property worth more than $1.5 million combined, according to Tampa Bay Online.

Legal experts say the case could have broad implications.

Raymond Rafool, Layton’s attorney, said Florida’s “archaic laws” regarding same-sex couples forced him to be creative.

“In the law, that’s what you have to do in Florida in order to receive fair compensation,” said Rafool, who has represented high-profile divorce clients, including Linda Bollea, former wife of professional wrestler Terry “Hulk Hogan” Bollea.

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I Am Protected… With Some Help From Microsoft

This heart-rending ad, “I Am Protected,” is running in Washington state in support of Referendum 71, which supports more partnership rights for Washington state’s gay couples.

In related news, Microsoft Corp. has donated $100,000 to the campaign in favor of Referendum 71.

That’s the largest single donation in favor of of the referendum. Microsoft is based in Redmond, Washington.

Considering that Alan C. Ashton, a co-founder of WordPerfect, gave $1 million to the campaign supporting 2008′s Proposition 8, the initiative that outlawed same-sex marriage in California, we can surmise that Microsoft’s Word is now the preferred word processing software of  gays and lesbians everywhere.

The “approve” campaign committee, called Washington Families Standing Together, has raised about $780,000 overall, and spent about $200,000. The “reject” campaign, called Protect Marriage Washington, has raised about $60,000, and spent about $35,000.

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Lesbian Marriage? Nyet!

A Moscow court has denied the request of lIrina Fedotova-Fet and Irina Shipitko to marry in Russia.

The two women appeared in court sporting the global symbols of lesbian solidarity – mullet haircuts and loosely tied neckties.

Despite these displays, the Tverskoi district court ruled against Fedotova-Fet and Shipitko, upholding the assertion by the city’s civil registry that marriage is restricted to opposite-sex couples in Russia.

The women and their lawyer plan to continue to fight the ruling, according to the Associated Press.

“The two women said they planned to fly to Canada later this month to marry and then return to Russia, in a bid to force authorities to recognize the marriage,” the Associated Press reported.

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A Case for Marriage Equality, Irish Style

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MA Shows Us “Defense of Marriage”

When I heard this on Rachel Maddow , I knew I had to track it down to share on GPG:

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Two Scoops for California, Please

hh-graphicI live in a region of the country where our local creamery is the venerable Clover, long celebrated with the tag line, “The Only Milk with Love in It”. Our sweet slogan doesn’t hold a candle to Ben & Jerry’s recent move.

The ice cream-making guys of Vermont have partnered with Freedom to Marry to rename their beloved “Chubby Hubby” flavor “Hubby Hubby” for the month of September. The flavor is a mixture of pretzels, peanut butter, fudge, and vanilla malt ice cream.

The company’s website says, “We are gathered here to celebrate Vermont and all the other great states where loving couples of all kinds are free to marry legally… and to raise awareness of the importance of marriage equality.”

Now if only we could get some of that sweetness in California!

Read the company’s press release.

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Prejean Who?

Does anyone remember Carrie Prejean? The pro “opposite sex” chick who was briefly Miss California USA?

(It’s a healthy sign if you don’t.)

Well, Carrie is still seeking attention, and unspecified damages.

Her career hasn’t taken off the way she’d like, even with the topless photo scandal, her mother’s rumored lesbian affair, and all the bells, whistles, cat-calls, and snaps.

She’s blaming the Miss California USA pageant (remember this isn’t the Miss California pagent).

And, she’s suing.

Prejean, who was stripped of her Miss California crown in June, has filed suit against two Miss USA California officials, claiming that she lost her crown solely for her religious beliefs. She is seeking unspecified damages.

“Over the past two months, we have worked hard to provide overwhelming evidence that Carrie Prejean did not violate her contract with Miss California USA and did not deserve to have her title revoked by Keith Lewis,” said the attorney who is representing Prejean. “We will make the case that her title was taken from her solely because of her support of traditional marriage.”

Oddly enough, on some level he’s right. It was Prejean’s unauthorized campaigning for National Organization for Marriage, a political organization that “supports traditional marriage”, that cost Carrie her job. If she had stayed in California and cut ribbons and supported politically neutral endeavors, she’d still be Miss California USA today.

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Gay Wedding Bells Ring in Vermont

Same-sex couples are now able to marry in Vermont (as of 9/1/09), but don’t expect a tidal wave of weddings, officials say.

“It’s not a weekend, it’s not a holiday,” say Willie Docto, who heads the Vermont Gay Tourism Association. “There are practical reasons why people aren’t getting married on September 1st. I think expectations are too high for that one day.’

The Associated Press surveyed several town clerks and found only a handful of licenses have been issued for gay marriages in the month of September, nothing like the rush seen around civil unions in 2000. But gay marriage advocates say there’s an easy explanation for this.

Greg Trulson, a Duxbury Justice of the Peace who says he is preparing to perform several same-sex marriages, said, “What I have found, that a lot of the gay marriages that I’m officiating starting September first are other civil unions that I have officiated in the past. And they’re coming back to get married. What we’re finding is they’re coming back on the day of their civil union, to keep the same day [as their wedding anniversary].”

Vermont Public Radio reports many couples are planning small, low-key ceremonies: “Some say they’ve already had several celebrations of their relationship over the years and don’t plan a big wedding.”

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Comments and Marriage Equality

I try to remember to write thank you notes for the comments people leave on this blog. Finding a well-thought-out or enthusiastic comment always makes my day. It lets me know what people are thinking, and it motivates me to keep writing.

There were some special ones this week. One woman, new to the site, wrote effusively to say;

Your blog is  fascinating, educational, hilarious, mesmerizing, intellectual, entertaining, inspiring and a bit naughty all at the same time.  I feel drunk now, thank you.

No, thank you. You made my day.

Another, a guy in Canada who follows me on Twitter and has been caring for his elderly father, wrote with kind words about the death of my friend, the veteran.

A regular reader, the author of many well-crafted comments, left her thoughts about the potential 2010 marriage equality push in California.

And, sometimes – in the way the best comments can – it motivated me to write more on the topic. One minute I was writing her a note of thanks, and in the next, I realized it would make an opinion post of its own:

Thank you for your thoughtful comment about the same-sex marriage push. I’m with you. I felt really disenfranchised through the last go-round – not by the idea of marriage equality, mind you – but by a campaign that appeared to be reactionary and fractured. Even at my local level, I wasn’t sure where money was going, or who was in charge.

The amount of money spent by both sides of the campaign – an estimated $73 million – is appalling, especially in light of the economy and all of the social and human services that are struggling or going unfunded. Church organizations who helped to fund Proposition 8 should be especially ashamed. When did God’s work become persecution and diverting resources away from the needy and the poor?

I think California marriage equality needs a better public relations campaign, one that starts at the grassroots level. Along with our rallies and fundraisers (which tend to attract our own and become media spectacles) we need more public speakers visiting service groups and churches.

We need to be reaching into communities up and down the state and talking about the economic impact of marriage equality to Realtors, Rotarians, and business organizations, about the need for recognized unions and families to educational and church groups. We need to talk about the potential impact of gay marriage on the state’s over-taxed adoption and foster parenting programs. We need to talk about civil rights to labor and ethnic organizations.

We need time to field questions and answers, to shake hands, and have rubber chicken lunches and punch in church halls. We need people to understand that marriage equality is about much more than government-recognized gay sex.

I love the queer craziness of our community as much as the next native California lesbian, but we have to remember that when we try to change the public mind by show up at rallies in flamboyant drag or holding kiss-ins, we’re going to lose as many votes as we gain. The same things that make great media images on the 6 o’clock news, and colorful photos on the front page of the newspapers serve to substantially increase the “ick” factor of homosexuality in communities that already aren’t voting with us. They can’t separate extremism from the core message.

Most importantly, we – the gay and lesbian community –  have to remember what we’re trying to sell. We’re trying to sell the conservative heartland of the state on the idea of equal recognition of loving relationships, not on the media reduction of the “gay lifestyle”. We’re talking wedding rings, children, Pottery Barn, and “until death do us part” – not leather parties and Dinah Shore.

I personally don’t think we can get it together for a 2010 election. I think it’s going to take a couple of years to gather resources, and most importantly, focus.

We need marriage equality to win big in California, not by two percent, or five percent. We need a landslide, an outpouring of support from people who understand and sympathize. We need unimpeachable language. We need a victory that won’t have to immediately be defended in court, or at the polls, yet again.

And that’s going to take some time, because first we need people to meet us and understand.

They don’t have to love us, but they do have to understand.

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