Posts Tagged ‘TheoFascism’

The Quotable Joe Jervis

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

“In response to the attempt to televise Perry vs. Schwarzenegger, Tony Perkins’ Family Research Council has issued a typically bombastic press release citing 16 pages of harassment Christians suffered at the hands of same-sex marriage proponents during the 2008 Prop 8 campaign. But after complaining about boycotts, stolen yard signs, and egged cars, they make zero mention of the Christianity-fueled anti-gay incidents that occur every day of every year, including non-Prop 8 years. Because Christianist privilege means stolen yards signs trump beatings, bashings, and murder every time.”

— Joe Jervis, American blogger at Joe. My. God.,
from Stolen Yard Signs: Worse Than Murder

Maddow: Prop 8 is enough

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

The case for gay marriage (video: The Rachel Maddow Show)

On The Rachel Maddow Show last night:

David Boies and Ted Olson, former adversaries on the 2000 election, now colleagues in opposing California’s Proposition 8, talk with Rachel Maddow about about the case they plan to make in support of gay marriage in America.

If you missed it, unmiss Ted Olson’s piece in Newsweek called The Conservative Case for Gay Marriage — Why same-sex marriage is an American value. Olson maintains, “The very idea of marriage is basic to recognition as equals in our society; any status short of that is inferior, unjust, and unconstitutional.”

Here’s more:

Many of my fellow conservatives have an almost knee-jerk hostility toward gay marriage. This does not make sense, because same-sex unions promote the values conservatives prize. Marriage is one of the basic building blocks of our neighborhoods and our nation. At its best, it is a stable bond between two individuals who work to create a loving household and a social and economic partnership. We encourage couples to marry because the commitments they make to one another provide benefits not only to themselves but also to their families and communities. Marriage requires thinking beyond one’s own needs. It transforms two individuals into a union based on shared aspirations, and in doing so establishes a formal investment in the well-being of society. The fact that individuals who happen to be gay want to share in this vital social institution is evidence that conservative ideals enjoy widespread acceptance. Conservatives should celebrate this, rather than lament it.

The United States Supreme Court has repeatedly held that marriage is one of the most fundamental rights that we have as Americans under our Constitution. It is an expression of our desire to create a social partnership, to live and share life’s joys and burdens with the person we love, and to form a lasting bond and a social identity. The Supreme Court has said that marriage is a part of the Constitution’s protections of liberty, privacy, freedom of association, and spiritual identification. In short, the right to marry helps us to define ourselves and our place in a community. Without it, there can be no true equality under the law.

There is much more at the link.

The Quotable Frank Kameny

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010

“Your claim that advancement of the gay agenda would deprive you people of your religious and other rights is flatly untrue. If you disapprove of homosexuality, you will remain free to abstain from involvement with it. That is the proper limit of your freedoms. You do not have a valid right to impose your disapproval upon those of us who disagree with you, as you people endlessly seek to do. Those whose beliefs in a round earth prevail do not in the least deprive the Flat Earthers of their rights to believe and speak as they wish. So with gay rights and you homophobes. You can continue freely to make intellectual and rational fools of yourselves, just as the Flat Earthers continue to do. — and, in your case, un-American and anti-American ones as well.”

— Frank Kameny, American gay rights pioneer and atheist, from a screed by the anti-gay bigot Peter Labarbera called Homosexual Icon Frank Kameny Calls
the God of the Bible a ‘Sinful Homophobic Bigot’ who Needs to Repent

(tip: Peter LaBarbera, Americans for Truth about Homosexuality)

Prop H8 on trial: pride v shame

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010

Gay marriage opponents win the right to hide (video: The Rachel Maddow Show)

The anti-gays must be so very proud of themselves. It’s a crying shame that they’re forced to celebrate their tremendous victory in a darkened closet with a media blackout, so nobody finds out who they are or how much they hate a select class of their fellow citizens.

Yesterday, following the US Supreme Court’s ludicrous decision to allow the cowardly fundies to essentially show up in court decked out in their starched white sheets and pointy hoods, veteran activist Robin Tyler, at The Huffington Post, wrote:

The ‘Yes on 8′ people maintain that it might affect their ability to be open in the courthouse, backed up by the excuse that they are afraid that our community might commit violence against them.

Excuse me?

This is akin to someone stepping on our head and then telling us their foot hurts and it’s our fault.

Tyler continued:

In the past few years, The ‘Yes on 8′ people have appeared all over television, including but not limited to news shows, talk shows, CNN, and so forth. We know who they are. So, why don’t they want to be filmed in the courtroom? Because they don’t want the cameras on them when they are ‘under oath,’ because under oath, and cross-examined by great attorneys, they may have to tell the truth. These bigots don’t want the cameras on them when they are questioned about the lies and misinformation they put out about same-sex marriage.

[ ... ]

The bigots and liars who led the ‘Yes on 8′ campaign want to hide behind their religious beliefs in order to justify discrimination against our community, just as they did in 1948 when they unsuccessfully tried to prevent interracial marriage. “It will ruin marriage.” “It is against God’s plan,” and so forth.

Tyler expressed her hope that the Supreme Court will do the the right thing on Wednesday and flood that courtroom in San Francisco with sunshine.

Should the US Supreme Court not do the right thing, no matter. We’ll take it from there. Those of us who write and blog and photograph and shoot and cut video and cartoon and publish are going to wallpaper every corner of the vast internets with every photo and every word and every lie and distortion that comes out of that darkened courtroom. The anti-gays are never going to make this go away. Their children will read about it and their children and so on.

+++++++

Those interested in following the trial on the constitutionality of Proposition 8, can watch the cowardly blow-by-blow of the trial’s progress from the perspective of the radical religious right or watch Courage Campaign’s live-blogging.

Ringing in the new year at the Hyatt

Sunday, January 10th, 2010

Papa Doug Manchester’s worst nightmare (all photos: Mike Tidmus, fair use encouraged, drop me an email for larger sizes)

Close to 300 LGBT activists, union workers and allies descended on Doug Manchester’s Grand Hyatt in Downtown San Diego yesterday afternoon. The demonstration and rally were staged to commemorate the anniversary of Manchester’s donation of $125,000 in seed money to jump start California’s 2008, anti-marriage-equality ballot initiative, Proposition 8, and to protest the decision of the American Historical Association to hold its annual convention at the hotel.

The AHA booked the convention in 2003 and, rather than lose roughly $800,000 in fees, opted to go ahead with the convention, in violation of a boycott by the LGBT community and labor that began in July of 2008. Sensitive to the situation, the AHA set up a free convention within the convention that focused on the history of marriage through the ages.

That decision, however, was described by veteran LGBT and labor activist Cleve Jones as “the wrong decision.” During the two hour rally, demonstrators and many conference attendees listened to passionate speakers from the labor and LGBT communities and twice marched boisterously around Manchester’s property.

Here’s a small collection of photographs from the event.

Note: Be sure to also check out the coverage by veteran journalist and fellow San Diegan, Rex Wockner.

Sprucing up the property. The yellow and black caution tape has become a familiar element in the boycott of Doug Manchester’s hotel holdings

The rally kicked off with an exuberant introduction to the history of the Manchester boycott by veteran LGBT and labor activist Cleve Jones.

Cleve Jones: “Yes, we have an agenda. Labor has an agenda here today. It’s not a hidden agenda. It’s not a secret agenda. The agenda is loud and clear. The agenda of this union is equality. The agenda of this union is fair wages, safe working conditions, access to health care and equality for all workers, including lesbians, gay men, bisexuals and transgender people.”

Fred Karger was on fire. Cleve Jones introduced Karger and told the crowd about the religious right’s attempt to silence the founder of Californians Against Hate by dragging him into a costly court battle and demanding the same kinds of materials, related to the Prop 8 campaign, that they themselves are fighting in court to keep hidden from California voters. Learn more here

Fred Karger: “This is historic. You are part of history, and you’re pointing out to the American Historical Association that they are on the wrong side of history.”

Three abused and dismissed Hyatt workers traveled to San Diego from San Francisco, Long Beach and Boston to tell their stories and to stand with their union and LGBT brothers and sisters

Rick Jacobs, Chair of Courage Campaign, recounted the history of Manchester’s contribution, that put Prop 8 on the ballot, and the establishment of the coalition between organized labor and the LGBT community

Rick Jacobs: “Doug Manchester and his spokespeople don’t understand that equality in the workplace, equality in California, and equality across the nation is our fight together.”

The demonstrators circled the hotel property a number of times as nervous hotel security looked on, perhaps fearing a repeat of the invasion of the hotel’s lobby that occurred during last August’s Great Nationwide Kiss-In

The demonstration drew veteran activists and first-timers. Equality California arranged for a bus from the Los Angeles area

Brigette Browning, President of UNITE HERE Local 30, spoke passionately about protecting the rights of both the LGBT community and union workers

Brigette Browning: “I want you to know that we’re going to stand with you here at the Manchester Hyatt in San Diego and in California until we have equality for everybody.”

Community activist and former San Diego City Council candidate Stephen Whitburn spoke fervently of the value of coalition building between communities

Stephen Whitburn: “Let me say that we have a responsibility beyond this rally and the next rally and however many rallies it’s going to take. We have a responsibility to go out into our communities and make sure that those of us who get it, who understand the importance of coalition building, explain to the rest of our communities how important this coalition is, how we advance LGBT equality by working together with the labor community, how we advance the rights of working people by working with the LGBT community. We can do so much more, and so much more powerfully, when we work together. This is what we’re doing today. And let me tell you that, as a member of the LGBT community, we’re going nowhere until we have rights for working people at this hotel.”

What will history say about the American Historical Association?

Cleve Jones said, “If [the recently divorced] Doug Manchester is so concerned about preserving traditional marriage, maybe he ought to start with his own.”

The demonstrators were described as the real face of California