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Over The Moon

What can be said that hasn't already been said regarding marriage equality in New York. It's about damn time. I still can't believe it. I have to read a couple articles over and over again to believe it. Anyway, here is some of my favorite coverage of it. But before I get to that, the most significant thing to me were the tweets by my friends and comedians. They were clever and poignant at the same time. Here are some of my favorites:

Justin
Tyghe2
Tyghe
Bill
Bronxzoo
Anderson
Steve
Nph
Patton
Noh8
Noh82

And I LOVE this NY Daily News Cover. It really says it all:

History

And, just to make it pinch-yourself real, here are the NYTimes and Wapo stories:

 New York Allows Same-Sex Marriage, Becoming Largest State to Pass Law

New York legalizes same-sex marriage in win for gay rights advocates

 

Posted by Gabriel Hudson on June 27, 2011 | Permalink | Comments (0)

It's Comedy, People

It's been a week since the news broke. I haven't written anything because I've got too much real work to do. But, I think it deserves some comment. Last week, Tracy Morgan said some controversial things about gay kids, particularly gay youth. I understand the condemnation. But I also understand that Tracy is a comedian and not a politician. His whole shtick is that he seems somewhat crazy, or drunk, or mentally challenged all the time. I also want to stick to my guns about soft censorship. Censorship involves a governing body restricting speech. That's not the issue. Soft censorship involves social coercion. And, here is a test of my principles, because even though I disagree with the jokes and don't find them funny, I still defend him against the humorless and the would-be censors. For a comedian, artist, actor, etc., nothing should be off limits. Everything is fair game for ridicule - even ridiculously cruel ridicule. That's comedy.

I like the Superficial's take on it:

"Friday morning, news broke that Tracy Morgan made some violent, homophobic comments during his stand-up act that become an instant scandal because apparently we’re considering comedy clubs churches now and treating everything at face value. (In related news, the National Fruit Administration has called for an end to Gallagher’s 30+ year Holocaust and demand he face a military tribunal.) Since Tracy’s comments were reported in the news vacuum known as Friday, it was only a matter of time until Hollywood weighed in because, again, jokes are serious business."

And this from Tyler Durden:

"Okay, again, Tracy Morgan is insane, and you can’t give him a microphone and put him on stage and then criticize him for saying insane things any more than you can yell at a kid with Downs for making faces. Morgan could have easily had said the same thing about stabbing his kid because he thought he was a dragon."

I'm not defending the ideas expressed, merely the medium. Morgan makes jokes about women giving head, black people, Jews, Asians, doing crack, punching people out, and generally being insane. It's not political advocacy. It's not scholarship. It's stupidity for laughs. It's what Spike Lee has labeled "bafoonery."

Two problems I do have involve a time and place consideration. 1. He said it in Tennessee, one of the hardest states on LGBT people. TN recently passed a law outlawing even mentioning gay people in school. Medieval! 2. This year there have been several suicides related to anti-gay bullying. And family rejection has always been a problem for gay youth. But, again, it's comedy told by a crazy guy. He's supposed to get on stage and say ridiculous stuff. That's his job. Gilbert Gottfried made jokes about 9/11/01 on 9/12/01. He was fired for making Tsunami jokes earlier this year right after the Japanese earthquake. It's comedy. It's okay if it's insensitive.

This is not the same thing as David Tyree participating in ill informed activism with the National Organization for Marriage.

Again, I like The Superficial's take on things:

Because Tracy Morgan actually realized homophobia is fucking retarded, or at least requires better comedic timing, former New York Giants receiver David Tyree has stepped up by joining forces with the National Organization of Marriage and reminded everyone that some black people are still really religious and surprisingly unable to remember when it was legal to blast them with firehoses for being different. And now to make Republican heads explode because, once again, the colored man has dominated another one of their pastimes. TMZ reports:

During the interview, Tyree is asked about the push to legalize gay marriage in the United States — and says if it happens, “This will be the beginning of our country sliding toward … it’s a strong word, but anarchy.”
To reinforce his point, Tyree says, “You can’t teach something that you don’t have … so two men will never be able to show a woman how to be a woman.”
And the kicker, Tyree — who’s black — says, “How can marriage be marriage for thousands of years and now all the sudden because a minority, an influential minority, has a push or agenda … and totally reshapes something that was not founded in our country.”

An agenda that “totally reshapes something that was not founded in our country.” Interesting logic because you know what else our country wasn’t founded on? Letting black people speak, vote, look at white women and/or generally walk around freely without a pair of shackles on. But, no, you’re right, they totally had it figured out back then.

Tyree is saying ignorant crap but it's not for laughs, it's for real. Two men will never be able to show a woman how to be a woman? What does that even mean? Studies showing kids turn out just as well with same-sex parents as opposite-sex parents are passé at this point. How do two people committing their lives to each other provoke anarchy? Seriously, explain these brilliant, sophisticated ideas. And, while you're at it, ignore that the same things were said not too long ago about interracial marriage.

But see, Tyree IS engaging in political advocacy. He has inserted himself into NY's marriage equality debate at a critical moment when the vote in the state legislature is going to be close. He doesn't rely on history, or academic studies, or any sort of scholarship. He just spouts animus. That is completely different than comedy.

I think you should be able to joke about anything, even if it touches on touchy subjects. In fact, I think there is a value to joking about touchy subjects. Humor is a way of processing and overcoming difficult times, at a personal level and a social level. Let idiots make jokes. For that matter, let idiots make political statements. Just shrug off the former and actively oppose the latter.

Posted by Gabriel Hudson on June 17, 2011 | Permalink | Comments (0)

Perry et al v. Schwarzenegger et al: Initial Thoughts

Obviously, I’m thrilled with the decision because it went the right way.  But, there are additional things to point out to explain why the decision was even better than expected.  Nobody who followed the oral arguments would think Judge Walker, or any judge, would uphold Proposition 8.  But, he went further than just striking it down.

 

The reaction to the decision on the right has been shrill but stuck to a familiar canard.  Judges should not overturn the clear will of voters.  It is an indictment of judicial review rather than any real reason why California needs Proposition 8.  It is an interesting political strategy but not a valid legal one.  An attorney arguing before a judge needs to expand his or her argument beyond, “Your honor, you shouldn’t be hearing this case.”   

 

But, did they throw the case intentionally or were they subconsciously aware the case in favor of Proposition 8 was so weak.  Remember, it was the pro-Prop 8 side that fought over and over again to keep evidence from being released and to keep the hearings as secretive as possible.  They did not want the public to see the facts in the case.  Their call for the unchecked will of the majority is distorted by their efforts to conceal information from the public. 

 

They say now that they never had a chance because Judge Walker is gay.  Supposedly a gay sexual orientation robs a legal professional of his impartiality.  But, at one time during the trial, Judge Walker expressed concern that the pro-8 side had called just two witnesses and begged them to mount a stronger defense.  They didn’t.  And no prominent figure in California politics came forward to defend 8.  It was limited to far-right interest groups.  Even though Governor Schwarzenegger is the named defendant in the case, he wouldn’t come near it.  On the day the Perry decision was released he said,

 

"For the hundreds of thousands of Californians in gay and lesbian households who are managing their day-to-day lives, this decision affirms the full legal protections and safeguards I believe everyone deserves. At the same time, it provides an opportunity for all Californians to consider our history of leading the way to the future, and our growing reputation of treating all people and their relationships with equal respect and dignity.

"Today's decision is by no means California's first milestone, nor our last, on America's road to equality and freedom for all people.”

 

Then, Governor Schwarzenegger asked the judge to no stay his decision,

 

“Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger called today for the immediate restoration of same-sex marriage in California, urging the federal judge who overturned Proposition 8 to impose his ruling while the case moves through the higher courts. Allowing gay and lesbian couples to marry "is consistent with California's long history of treating all people and their relationships with equal dignity and respect," said a legal brief written on behalf of Schwarzenegger.” 

 

Oh my word!  So much for defending that terrible proposition.  The only groups willing to argue in favor of it are those that make a career out of anti-gay animus.  It further weakens their case that they cannot find a single politician or expert or anyone who isn’t already on the payroll of one of these groups.  If the harm they argue is real, one would think it would be apparent to someone outside the shrinking religious right echo chamber.

 

I am still perplexed as to what this meant.  There are possibilities:

  1. Their strategy all along was to lose and then blame those awful activist judges.
  2. They knew their side has weak arguments and delivering some of them in court and having them rebuked would hurt an overall political campaign against equality.
  3. Deep down they know there is no harm and that their position is based on animus.  You can translate animus into fear in a political campaign (the gays are taking over your children’s schools, etc.) but you’re unlikely to scare a judge that way.  You need actual facts, precedent, and legal theory to argue a case before a judge. 

 

It may be a combination of these and things I’m not even considering.  Jeremy Hooper ran a fascinating piece on Good As You called ‘Eating Their Own’ in which one anti-gay legal strategist criticizes another for their handling of Perry.  But, as I said in my letter to Peter LaBarbera, is it a question of strategy?  Is it really that they aren’t selling the product better or is it that the product is an empty can nobody wants to buy after looking inside?

 

One thing that was so amazing about Judge Walker’s decision in Perry is that he calls the can empty.  He looked at the arguments presented by both sides and realized, clearly, that one side just had more to say.  There was more substance including sound research, documentary evidence, legal arguments, legal precedents, on and on.  The other side had a nebulous claim of pending harm that – even when pressed very hard by Judge Walker – could not be defined.  Remember the “Coming Storm” ad from NOM.  The coming storm is a metaphor for… I’m not sure.  Apparently those who made the ad are not sure either. 

 

The decision in Perry was also great because it applied strict scrutiny and suspect class status to gay citizens.  Put too simply, that means California needs to have more than just a rational basis for Proposition 8 and the specific exclusion and political targeting gay people have endured for decades must be considered when reviewing a law that targets and excludes them.  This will make it virtually impossible for the Pro-8 side to win on appeal. 

 

So, the case will almost definitely be appealed to the 9th Circuit where I would be shocked if the decision were overturned.  Then the pro-8 side is likely to ask for it to be reviewed by all the justices on the 9th Circuit with a similar result.  The next stop is the Supreme Court, which doesn’t have to hear the case.  They grant cert to a very small number of federal cases that request it.  But, this one will be a big one and by that time the roster of the Court might have changed.  So, either the 9th Circuit’s decision will become the law of the land for that region or the Supreme Court will take up the issue.  Who knows what the outcome would be at that point.  However, if gay marriage was considered by the Supreme Court I would want it to be within the context of a case about Proposition 8 because, as Judge Walker pointed out, the Proposition 8 campaign was so seedy and had so much willful misinformation that the Supreme Court would have a hard time justifying reinstating it. 

 

There is another option that is extremely unlikely.  The pro-8 side might stop at the trial court level, where the fallout is limited to California.  They may even try to fight the political battle again rather than a legal one.  I don’t think this will happen but it’s possible.  If so, they can contain the damage from Prop-8 and lose the issue in a state that was likely to overturn 8 via voting next election cycle anyway. 

 

That brings me to a final point.  Part of me wishes there had been a political victory rather than a judicial one.  I think the “activist judges” crap is nonsense from the right.  But, I can remember election night watching the Presidential election get called quickly for Obama only to focus, nervously, on California’s election returns.  The final vote took days to be announced and I kept refreshing my computer as hope faded.  I want to see the rights of a minority – my minority – win in a political arena.  And it’s happening.  It will happen some more. 

 

Those that argue against “activist judges” need to be questioned on the major civil rights cases of the 20th century.  Were those also not the purview of the courts and instead the sole domain of a panicked and bigoted public?  They should also answer larger questions about how a liberal democracy is to protect against tyranny of the majority or guarantee equal protection without courts playing such a role.  There’s a discussion to be had there and there are solid arguments against judicial review.  But they do not make those.  They cry about judicial activism but run to those same “judicial activists” to overturn majority based policy whenever some kid isn’t allowed to wear an offensive t-shirt at school or when college Christian clubs intentionally exclude some members of the student body while taking activity funding from everyone. 

 

They don’t really want to argue against judicial review.  They want to cry about gays being treated as equal to them because they don’t have much of an argument to make other than a guttural aversion to that form of difference.  And they know that doesn’t play well in courts no matter who the judge is. 

 

One thing is sure.  Times are changing.  They are changing quickly.  They are changing because animus can be stimulated for short-term political gains but is not a long-term education, political, or legal strategy.  And, though the right refuses to admit this, there are just too many parallels with previous civil rights battles.  We’ve seen this movie before and the movie always seems to go by quicker with subsequent viewings.  It’s an exciting time to be alive! 

Posted by Gabriel Hudson on August 08, 2010 | Permalink | Comments (0)

Letter To Peter LaBarbera following the Prop. 8 decision.

This is the letter I emailed Peter LaBarbera after the decision in Perry et al, v. Schwarzenegger et al (the Prop. 8 decision) came out.  Perry was released on the eve of Peter's "Truth Academy".  LaBarbera claims the point of the academy is to train people better in countering the "lies" of the "homosexual agenda" and provide a venue to discuss issues in a way disallowed by the "Gay Thought Police" in academia.  But, one should note that the people in charge of the political campaign and judicial defense for Prop. 8 had the most training in countering the so-called agenda.  And, LaBarbera took CIA-worthy measures to screen students for his "academy" out of fear a "homosexual activist" would sneak in.  So much for free thought, but what about training?

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

I take a lot of solace that your “Truth Academy” is happening right after the Prop. 8 decision was announced.  You purport to teach people how to counter the “homosexual agenda”.  However, the people in charge of the Prop. 8 campaign in 2008 and the legal team established to defend it were educated people extremely skilled in their various professions.  Skilled politicians tasked with selling a message and skilled attorneys experienced at litigation went before the judge.  And still, Prop. 8 was called what it is, irrational discrimination. 

 

“It [California] has already issued 18,000 marriage licenses to same-sex couples and has not suffered any demonstrated harm as a result, see FF 64-66; moreover, California officials have chosen not to defend Proposition 8 in these proceedings.”

 

You can claim that there is harm.  However, when forced under oath to demonstrate harm it is impossible because there IS NO HARM.  The problem for your side isn’t a lack of training.  The people working to sell Prop. 8 to California voters and defend it in court have a lot of training.  The fault is a fundamental flaw in your position. 

 

You can blame “activist judges”, as I’m sure your side will do.  You never once look at your losses and blame inadequate argumentation.  You continue to lose in court over and over again and fail to realize that the argument is the problem rather than a lack of training or obstinate judges. 

 

All your side had to do was go into that courthouse and demonstrate the harm.  The National Organization for Marriage had an ad about a coming storm.  It’s a nice metaphor but if there really were some coming threat or harm that should have been easy to explain in court.  Instead, Judge Walker saw both sides present their best arguments for and against Proposition 8 and concluded:

 

“Proposition 8 fails to advance any rational basis in singling out gay men and lesbians for denial of a marriage license. Indeed, the evidence shows Proposition 8 does nothing more than enshrine in the California Constitution the notion that opposite-sex couples are superior to same-sex couples. Because California has no interest in discriminating against gay men and lesbians, and because Proposition 8 prevents California from fulfilling its constitutional obligation to provide marriages on an equal basis, the court concludes that Proposition 8 is unconstitutional.”

 

Simple.  Straightforward.  Correct.

 

Proposition 8 was about discrimination and saying, without any basis, that one group of people is better than another.  Your Truth Academy can train people in messaging but the facts behind the message do not change.  It’s not a matter of training to sell something better or get better at arguing the ridiculous.  When given equal time for two sides to make their case, one side wins and the other side loses because only one side is grounded in rationality while the other relies on subjective religious interpretation that is unconvincing in court. 

Posted by Gabriel Hudson on August 08, 2010 | Permalink | Comments (0)

Sodom in the Nation's Capital: Understanding Logic 101

I usually follow much of the religious right rhetoric from a place of detachment like Jacque Custo marveling at sealife.  Sometimes I will engage someone in an email back-and-forth but the conversation is never very deep.  But this week, Star Parker posted an article that appeared on Townhall, WND, and AFTAH’s web sites, just to name a few.  It is utterly bananas.  One reason I think this issue has been so intractable is because of the tenor and irrationality of some of the rhetoric.  It transcends disagreement to an Alice In Wonderland level of absurdity.  Here, I respond to and critique Ms. Parker’s bizarre, scattered column.  It will not move her opinion nor convince anyone to make a coherent argument.  But it will provide some relief even if it is nothing more than screaming into the darkness.  Because I’m a gentleman, her words are in bold. 

Sodom in the Nation’s Capital

- Star Parker [cut and pasted, with spelling and grammatical errors left intact]

There is a centrality of the traditional family to the American dream of opportunity and a centrality of family breakdown to poverty.  At a time when our country is sick, it shouldn’t surprise that one our sickest places is our nation’s capital.  The poverty rate of Washington, D.C., almost 20 percent, is one of the highest in the nation. Its child poverty rate is the nation’s highest. D.C.’s public school system, with a graduation rate of less than 50 percent, is one of the worst in the country.

Ok, these are all bad things to point out.  But, oddly enough, guess who is to blame for poverty and bad schools… 

According to D.C.’s HIV/AIDS office, three percent of the local population has HIV or AIDS. The Administrator of this office notes that this HIV/AIDS incidence is “…higher than West Africa…on par with Uganda and some parts of Kenya.” And the principal way that HIV is transmitted continues to be through male homosexual activity.

Is she saying Africa is mostly gay?  If you take her “facts” at face value, and you think there is a role for government to play, wouldn’t you want legislation that encourages fidelity and discourages promiscuity?  Wouldn’t you want the segment of the population that you blame to view long-term relationships as an option?

Amidst this dismal picture, the D.C .City Council, perhaps on the theory that serving up another glass of wine is the way to help a drunk, is scheduled to vote on December 1 to legalize same-sex “marriage” in America’s capital city.  Looking at realities in Washington, D.C. should make clear why George Washington said, “Of all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity, religion and morality are indispensable supports.”

What does the Washington quote have to do with the DC City Council vote?  How does legalizing same-sex marriage increase poverty or make the public school system worse?  Where’s the logical chain of events here. 

But the America that our first president had in mind was very different from the vision of our DC government officials.

Yeah.  There’s no 3/5 of a person compromise anymore and the majority of people no longer believe in abiogenists, the understood “science” of the 18th Century.  What is your point? 

George Washington’s America was one in which the point of freedom is to allow Man to rise to what he can become. To do this, the greatest challenge he faces is conquering himself. To rise above his baser instincts, to rise above the many temptations that lead him astray. And to achieve this end, as Washington said, “religion and morality are indispensible supports.”

First, why is man capitalized?  More importantly, if the purpose of morality is to help humans rise above their baser, animalistic instincts, again, shouldn’t the law encourage fidelity and the development of long-term relationships?  Is it fair to say to an entire group that you believe they have no chance of ever forming meaningful, intimate, loving relationships and then condemn them for promiscuity?  I should also point out that painting a group of people as uniformly promiscuous in order to justify legal obstacles for their relationships is circular and counter productive.  Finally, and I haven’t forgotten about this, I still have yet to see the connection to poverty and bad public schools in D.C. 

In left-wing America, of which the D.C. government is a poster child, freedom means to indulge every instinct that the tradition and religion of George Washington would have us overcome.

Who says this?  What self-described lefty, liberal, or progressive person summarizes their worldview in terms of uninhibited hedonism?  It’s a case of refusing to argue the merits of the case, equal treatment under the law, by universally labeling the opposition with absurd baseless claims. 

Where does it lead? Well, look at D.C.  It is tempting to look at D.C.’s realities and just call this a black thing. And by and large it is.  DC is largely black — almost 60 percent. Its poverty is black poverty. Its public school system serves mostly black children. And its AIDS crisis is mostly among blacks.

Ok, it is at this point that I am completely lost.  I’m also uncomfortable with the unnecessary racist turn the column took for no reason.  Let me get this straight; two people of the same sex should not have any legal recognition of their relationship because there are bad schools in D.C. and this is largely because of black people.  Where is the connective thread?  We should have a 10mph speed limit in Tulsa because some peanut butter was contaminated with salmonella. 

But the pathologies that strike the weakest parts of our population most brutally are nonetheless pathologies of the nation.

Now we’re into pathologies.  What is the pathology?  Based on the organization of this column is she saying that there’s a black pathology or a gay pathology?  And how do we expand the problems of a large city to the nation?  Gay people should not have legally recognized relationships because there is poverty in D.C. and that signals some as yet unnamed national pathology that spreads like swine flu. 

The Brookings Institution is one of our oldest policy institutes and certainly no bastion of conservatism. But in a recently published volume, Brookings scholars Ron Haskins and Isabel Sawhill point out the centrality of the traditional family to the American dream of opportunity and the centrality of family breakdown to poverty.  Reporting data showing the general breakdown of the traditional American family, they say, “Some claim that anyone who is concerned about these trends is simply out of touch with modern culture; we respond that, if that be the case, then, “modern culture is out of touch with the needs of children.”

Ok, here’s a clue as to how she connects all this in her mind.  Because too many families are not intact in D.C. there is a higher level of poverty.  But how is the solution to discourage long-term relationships?  It would make more sense that children being raised by same-sex parents would have their family recognized in law and both parents acknowledged as parents.  Do children need homes in which repressed gay men instead enter into loveless faux unions with clueless straight women and then pretend until daddy is caught tapping his foot in a public restroom?  Is this her application of the Brookings Institute?

I am still not sure what gay people have to do with bad public schools but apparently to Ms. Parker the solution to poverty is stopping gay marriage.  You see, if you scapegoat one segment of the population then it’s easy to blame them for all problems.  Then you can use examples of problems to justify legal discrimination!  It’s perfect!  You never have to address an actual problem or contribute to its solution.  You just find some unpopular group and connect them to it. 

The Catholic Archdiocese of D.C. announced that legalization of same sex marriage would make it impossible to continue its relationship with the D.C. government and require termination of the social services it provides to some 68,000 of the city’s poor — including about one third of its homeless. The reaction of D.C. Council member David Catania was essentially “so what.” According to him, “their services are not indispensable.” Is Catania out of touch with the needs of D.C.’s poor?

No, I think the Catholic Church in D.C. is out of touch with the poor and with their role as a CHURCH.  Threatening to remove all charitable community services if you don’t get your way on a City Council vote is not exactly what Jesus had in mind when he commanded his follower’s to feed the hungry and clothe the poor.  Nothing about same-sex marriage would make it impossible to feed homeless people.  The church is using this threat to bully a governing body. 

No. He just has different priorities. More important to him, and more important to D.C.’s left-wing city council, is advancing moral relativism and the indulgences it feeds. This is more important to them than feeding the poor or recognizing the values that would get them out of poverty.  It should concern every American as we watch our nation’s capital city transform officially into Sodom.

No, the Catholic Diocese in D.C. prioritizes anti-gay discrimination over their obligations to the poor.  Also, how is any marriage “moral relativism” or an “indulgence”?  I’m missing something here.  And because the capital of a liberal democracy operates from the standpoint of equal treatment under the law and a lack of an established religion, D.C. magically transforms into an ancient desert civilization? 

To review, poverty and poor public schools are bad.  These problems are exasperated by same-sex marriage.  Two guys get a marriage license and someone loses their job or fails a standardized test.  This epidemic of gay-induced poverty catches on nationwide in the form of a vague, unnamed pathology.  Eventually, life-long commitments to the person you love and families become signifiers of moral relevancy and indulgence.  Then, after the pathology has infected enough areas, the capital city falls into a primitive state of sandy hedonism based on the story of a city told in Sunday school that probably never really existed.

I get it now. This makes perfect sense!  

 

Posted by Gabriel Hudson on November 24, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (0)

Holding My Breath

Although I voted in VA this morning, I am more concerned about electoral outcomes in Maine and Washington.  If we lose I will shrug it off with the assurance of inevitability... i.e. it's not if but when.  If we win I will be elated because it will show we are on the other side of the apex while I am still relatively young. 

Posted by Gabriel Hudson on November 03, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (0)

Blunt Marriage Protection

Roy Blunt is at the forefront of "defending" marriage by sounding the alarm following Obama's promise to the HRC to overturn the Defense of Marriage Act.  Blunt is quite concerned with the institution of marriage in the abstract but less concerned in the particular.  You see, Roy Blunt cheated on his wife, repeatedly.  The last straw was when he carried on an affair with a lobbyist who he later also helped legislatively.  You see, the institution of marriage needs to be protected from those seeking legal recognition because it's a sacred institution in society.  However, a man's individual marriage is not so sacred and it's perfectly fine to defend marriage in Congress while disposing of your marriage with congressional staffers, and a lobbyist!  Marriage is a sacred institution between one man, one woman, his former employees, some colleagues, and who knows who else.  Then it's not so sacred when you're ready to more on.

This is why I support real marriage protection.  We need to protect the institution of marriage from Roy Blunt and men like him.  These men make a mockery of our religious heritage.  When they cheat on their wives and attack the family - their own families - they attack a timeless cornerstone of civilization.  The heterosexual agenda these men have is literally ripping this country apart.  Many might argue that the government should stay out of the moral condemnation business and not get involved in people's private lives.  To them I say, what about the children?  Who protects them from heterosexual activism?  If Roy Blunt was serious about the "defense of marriage" he would support legislation like the marriage protection act in California and similar legislation in his home state of Missouri.  



Posted by Gabriel Hudson on October 14, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (0)

Equality March Recap

The Equality March was pretty incredible and inspiring today for the usual reasons such events are.  There were tons of people from all walks of life.  There were unexpected allies and celebrities there.  There was moving music and some really clever signs. It was a good pick-me-up but I'm not sure how useful it is.  I don't mean to always play the cynic but I question how effective any such march is.

When I worked in downtown DC near the White House there was some sort of protest or demonstration every single day.  Granted, few were as large as this but I think politicians understandably build up an immunity to demonstrations.  A large crowd of people carrying signs and chanting rhyming slogans only does so good.  The follow-up is what's important.  It's heartening to see so many people so frankly pissed off by the administration's inaction.  But I wonder how many of them are also going to make a donation to the fight in Maine or Washington. 

I find a lot more value in making a donation or calling or writing a representative than marching and chanting.  The latter makes the participant feel better.  The former makes the contributor's life better.  

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Posted by Gabriel Hudson on October 11, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (0)

BTB Exposes "Marriage Defender's" Own Marriage

She gets to pick and choose which parts of the Bible to follow in her own life and which ones to make law for everyone else. 

Maggie’s Anti-Biblical Marriage

Timothy Kincaid

Maggie Gallagher, as the head of the National Organization for Marriage, is quite fond of extolling the virtues of “traditional marriage.” And, for those uncertain as to what “traditional” means, her protege Carrie Prejean, lets us know that it is marriage which is “biblically correct.”

Well, when I was growing up in a “biblically correct” family, one of the scriptures often quoted to Christian kids of dating age was 2 Corinthians 6:14

Do not be yoked together with unbelievers. For what do righteousness and wickedness have in common? Or what fellowship can light have with darkness? What harmony is there between Christ and Belial? What does a believer have in common with an unbeliever? What agreement is there between the temple of God and idols?

And lest any kids have any uncertainty about the application of that scripture or the meaning of “unequally yoked”, they were told in no uncertain terms that they were to only date other Christian kids. Marrying a non-Christian would be tragic.

It’s un-Biblical!
It’s un-traditional!
It’s Maggie’s marriage!

It turns out that for the last 17 years, Maggie has been married to Raman Srivastav, who just happens to be Hindu. Oh, my.

Well I guess we now know why Maggie un-traditionally uses her maiden name and why her husband is kept invisible.

Now I have no problem with Maggie being married to a person of any faith or no faith at all. But, then again, I don’t demand that marriage laws in this country be based on the Christian Bible.

Posted by Gabriel Hudson on October 06, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (1)

Gore Vidal Interview

Gore Vidal: ‘We’ll have a dictatorship soon in the US’

The grand old man of letters Gore Vidal claims America is ‘rotting away’ — and don’t expect Barack Obama to save it.  - Tim Teeman

full (excellent) article: 

“I’m not into partnerships,” he says dismissively. I don’t even know what it means.” He “couldn’t care less” about gay marriage. “Does anyone care what Americans think? They’re the worst-educated people in the First World. They don’t have any thoughts, they have emotional responses, which good advertisers know how to provoke.” You could have been the first gay president, I say. “No, I would have married and had nine children,” he replies quickly and seriously. “I don’t believe in these exclusive terms.”

Impaired mobility doesn’t bother him — he “rose like a miracle” on stage at the National — and he doesn’t dwell on mortality either. “Either you accept there is such a thing or you’re so dumb that you can’t grasp it.” Is he in good health? “No, of course not. I’m diabetic. It’s odd, I’ve never been fat and I don’t like candy, which most Americans are hooked on.”

There is a trace of thwarted ambition about him. “I would have liked to have been president, but I never had the money. I was a friend of the throne. The only time I envied Jack was when Joe [Kennedy, JFK’s father] was buying him his Senate seat, then the presidency. He didn’t know how lucky he was. Here’s a story I’ve never told. In 1960, after he had spent so much on the presidential campaign, Joe took all nine children to Palm Beach to lecture them. He was really angry. He said, ‘All you read about the Kennedy fortune is untrue. It’s non-existent. We’ve spent so much getting Jack elected and not one of you is living within your income’. They all sat there, shame-faced. Jack was whistling. He used to tap his teeth: they were big teeth, like a xylophone. Joe turned to Jack and he says, ‘Mr President, what’s the solution?’ Jack said, ‘The solution is simple. You all gotta work harder’.” Vidal guffaws heartily.

Posted by Gabriel Hudson on October 06, 2009 | Permalink | Comments (0)

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