Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Old Bloggers' Home

Is it time to fold the tent? I mirrored the relief expressed a couple of days ago by occasional and always insightful commenter Likes Bikes 2. Four years of emotional and intellectual extremes on marriage equality came to a great and satisfying denouement last week.

On a post about lessons learned from the anti-equality amendment battle, Likes Bikes 2 asked some of the same questions I and others have:
Mike,

I am just now learning to exhale. I feel like I had been holding my breath for so long over this issue.

What does it feel like to not worry about the Kris Mean-o and his friends, lurking in the bushes, saying mean and nasty things about my family?

Thank you. For providing a place of sanity, for your analysis, for your clarity. For your steadfastness to this issue.

Maybe we'll find ourselves on the same bike ride someday, and I'll get to thank you in person.
Those are fair questions, no matter who's asking. I suspect quite a few bloggers, as well as rights activists, are rethinking their roles and directions.

In the next few days, I'll post a bit on Terminator-style I'll-be-back proclamations of the anti-gay and anti-marriage-equality folk. They too offer lessons learned for us as well as for themselves. Once I got over the feeling that we should just ignore them, I admit that they still bear watching out of the corner of one eye.

The answer for Marry in Massachusetts includes:
  • The commonwealth's marriage-equality fight has dominated posting and commenting here because it is where the threats, promises, hopes and action have been.
  • The considerable cleanup of marriage-related and ballot-initiative laws is crucial, long overdue and needs some prodding. I've been hitting on many of these in the last couple of years, while many pols have hidden from them, particularly with the ongoing fight over this amendment. Only a handful, notably Rep. Byron Rushing, target bad laws.
  • There are other aspects of marrying in Massachusetts that are not contentious but still worthy of commentary. I need to revisit the one-day designated solemnizer for one.
  • Also if we can get rid of those dreadful laws forbidding out-of-state same-sex couples from marrying here, I want to perform marriages for some friends from Florida and elsewhere. It's been a couple of years since I solemnized a marriage.
  • The progressive political aspects beyond marriage have other outlets, including occasional posting to Blue Mass Group, but regular work with Ryan and Lynne on our Left Ahead! blog with weekly podcast.
  • I'll be putting more other stuff -- photography, JP and larger Boston color, and rants -- on Harrumph!.
As Likes Bikes 2, I do feel a strong sense of relief from last week's victory. I wish the legislature could have simultaneously addressed related issues. Expect less posting here, but more targeted subjects, like specific laws.

Sunday, June 17, 2007

Marriage Battle Lessons

In my pedantry, I'm fond of asking my three guys, "What can we learn from this?" I hate to glide over possible lessons from important events.

This week's delightful and surprising victory in keeping same-sex marriage in Massachusetts is a case to consider. Many are the lessons for civil-rights and other political and social activists, as well as our politicians.

Coming from print media years ago, I have carried over some of the lingo, including post mortem for such an analysis. A friend from my professional society objects to the connotations. Taryn says, "Nobody died here. What we need to come away with are lessons learned."

For the past couple of years on this blog, I have suggested and specified laws that should change. This affects ballot initiatives as well as marriage. Expect me to revisit and expand on those here and in our Left Ahead! podcasts. Meanwhile, I am very pleased to see that some are already calling attention to those dreadful 1913 antimiscegenation laws that then Gov. Willard Mitt Romney and then AG Tom Reilly used to keep out-of-state same-sex couples from wedding here.

Today, I promise not to detail laws. Instead, let's consider some broad lessons learned.
  • Have a great slogan. As Mark Snyder wrote a long time ago at Queer Today, "The slogan, 'let the people vote,' regardless of how disingenuous and cynical it is, is actually powerful and, at least according to several people on our side, is swaying many legislators." In the end, MassEquality came up with the only-okay "It's Wrong to Vote on Rights," but that came late and was not as punchy. It worked in the end only because both reason and emotion were behind it, backed with extremely active marriage-equality lobbying from ordinary citizens.
  • Feet on the street and hand on the phone. Over at BMG, Charley nailed up some impacts of the campaign and vote to defeat the amendment. The most salient is that this was a great model of civic engagement, as just mentioned. The anti-equality side sounds like bitter baseball fans after a World Series loss. Somehow the other side cheated, bribed the legislators or something, for sure, man. Instead, it was the faces across the desk and the voices on the phone.
  • Leaders must lead. Both the executive and legislative branches here have been afraid to act for decades. This illegal, dishonorable and fraud-ridden initiative would never have gotten to the State House at all if we had enacted marriage equality or its asthenic sibling civil unions long before Goodridge. One anti-gay Senate President followed by a gormless and gutless one did not enable full marriage equality throughout the legal system as mandated. Don't even start on Reilly. Leaders must be ahead of the public, not hiding being the lowest common denominator among us.
  • Processes often evolve. Variables from new technologies to new players to outside laws and events mean we should constantly re-examine how we make and enforce laws. Future posts will deal more with changes to the initiative process, to marriage laws, and other unpleasant aspects of commonwealth processes uncovered in this three-year struggle.

Double Serving of Crow

You don't have to look very deeply in this blog to read indignant attacks on new Senate President Therese Murray and Speaker of the House Salvatore DiMasi. She was unproven and outwardly timid; he had a long history of equality support, while seeming to have had a failure of will on this issue.

They both and each came through, matching Gov. Deval Patrick and Lt. Gov. Tim Murray in the crucial private lobbying. The legislative leaders proved my doubts unfounded. They did the right thing, many times over.

What a great state to live in!


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Thursday, June 14, 2007

Same-Sex Marriage Spooks


The marriage-equality losers, embittered and bruised, live to spook and shriek. Think of the hand rising from the grave at the end of Carrie.

Our own bad horror movie seems to have ended today with the stunning, sweeping, surprise victory for marriage equality. The Vote On Marriage gang and their dupes such as Sean Cardinal O'Malley, ex-mayor/ex-liberal Ray Flynn, and thousands of sincere suburban theocrats failed utterly. They tried every rotten and dishonorable trick and pushed the legal process to its limit -- and beyond -- to try to strip rights from a minority group here.

It was like another style of movie in the end though, like the Westerns I grew up watching. In the end, the good guys won and morality and the American ideals of fair play and liberty won the day.

Process Demons


It would have been a dreadful disgrace for Massachusetts to vote on whether to amend its constitution to 1) define marriage for the first time in theocratic terms, and 2) take away existing rights from homosexuals. Our peculiar laws were set up to act as a safeguard against an impulsive legislature. Instead, the bad guys tried to use that process to reverse a court decision (counter to our constitution) and say for the first time that minority rights are temporary and subject to a plebiscite.

We can thank the lobbying of individuals, MassEquality, legislators and other public officials for the result. In the end, the strident lie about this campaign being about democracy was unbelievable to over three-quarters of our combined legislature. Indeed, the people have spoken. They said, "Go back to your hole and leave freedom and democracy lovers alone!"

From the Grave


Yet, like those horror movies, this has not quite played out. Those monsters who cannot tolerate the idea that people they don't like might have equal rights, fair civil rights are not finished with us.

The rushes in the news predict that those who would overturn same-sex marriage here are in their hole, but they are peeking and ready to grab.

In theory, the anti-SSM folk could start today for the 2012 general election with the same tack. They have to wait three years before trying a similar initiative. Then, it would have to pass two ConCon sessions with a 25% vote of the combined legislature. Only then could it be on the next ballot.

Yet the people here are weary, very weary of the hate, mean spirits, lies, fraud and manipulation. They also see that SSM here has hurt no one and helps many. The polls show that legislators and voters alike are ever increasingly in favor of marriage equality. Finally, as everyone from Gov. Deval Patrick up and down has noted, zero of the terrible things the false prophets opposing SSM predicted happened.

Every Which Way


So, what's a villain to do in defeat?

The hater in chief at VOM, Kris Mineau, immediately made his threats. He said:
"The Governor and House Speaker have been unrelenting in fighting the natural course of advancement on the marriage amendment and the people’s right to vote," said Mineau. "We will look very closely at the circumstances by which legislators switched their vote for ethics violations or improprieties."

"Citizens in 45 states have weighed in on the definition of marriage either through the legislative process or by constitutional amendments. VoteOnMarriage.org vows to continue the fight for the people of Massachusetts to be heard on this issue."
The Boston Globe's conservative clown columnist, Jeff Jacoby had the bigger view. He wrote this proved that some of those dreadful Massachusetts SSM couples might sneak out of state and sue for marriage equality elsewhere. "Only a federal marriage amendment can keep that from happening" was his solution. That's right, boys and girls, change marriage from its form of civil contract into a religious definition, write theology into federal law and redefine marriage for everyone nationwide.

We have seen this on both coasts and occasionally in the rest of the nation. When the anti-gay/anti-equality folk campaign, they promise that they'll go quietly if they lose. If California, if the legislature passed SSM, that would be it. Instead the governor vetoed that, referring to an old DOMA-style ballot initiative and telling representative democracy to take a hike.

Here, when the high court ruled that we have equal rights and that means equal rights, the bad guys said, only if we can't get this on the ballot. After they gave it their very best, totally dishonorable abusive of the process shot, they aren't done. Now the legislature has handed them their hats.

You'd think that they'd have the decency to do as they said. The people spoke. Their elected officials said no dice.

Their response surely will include some lame and doomed court action. It will likely involve another lame and doomed initiative as soon as they can manage it.

For VOM and their ilk, this makes perfect sense. It's their livelihood. By rousing the gullible, they raise money, pay their salaries, and seem to feel important.

Good Riddance


Fortunately, they are a dwindling party. They may soon be reduced to the muttering few, as their tired and defeated supporters turn to other, possibly achievable tasks.

From their self-dug grave, the hands have not stopped reaching out. The legislature and citizens here surely have learned in the past three years to side-step them and soon will learn to ignore them.

If you are of a Christian bent, you might pray for them. They are sorely in need of a change of heart.

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151 Good Ones for Marriage Equality

Mass Equality tabulated the votes today defeating the initiative to stop same-sex marriage here. The votes by house and member are here.

Just in case they get clogged, I'll duplicate it here. Credit goes entirely to MassEquality.

My version has just the legislators with their votes. See the link above for phones and emails for thanks...and other messages.

FINAL TALLY: 151 to 45




State Representatives


Name 6/14/7 Vote
Salvatore DiMasi N
Geraldo Alicea N
Willie Mae Allen N
Cory Atkins N
Demetrius Atsalis DNV
Bruce Ayers Y
Ruth Balser N
Jay Barrows Y
John Binienda Y
Daniel Bosley N
Garrett Bradley N
William Brownsberger N
Antonio Cabral N
Jennifer Callahan N
Thomas Calter N
Christine Canavan N
Stephen Canessa N
Paul C. Casey Y
Cheryl Coakley-Rivera N
Thomas Conroy N
Robert Correia Y
Michael Costello N
Geraldine Creedon Y
Sean Curran Y
Steven D'Amico N
Linda Dean Campbell Y
Robert DeLeo N
Vinny deMacedo Y
Brian Dempsey N
Stephen DiNatale N
Paul J. Donato Y
Christopher Donelan N
Joseph Driscoll N
James Eldridge N
Lewis Evangelidis Y
James Fagan Y
Christopher Fallon N
Mark Falzone N
Robert Fennell N
John Fernandes N
Michael Festa N
Barry Finegold N
Jennifer Flanagan N
David Flynn Y
Linda Dorcena Forry N
Gloria Fox N
John Fresolo Y
Paul Frost Y
William Galvin N
Colleen Garry Y
Susan Gifford Y
Anne Gobi N
Thomas Golden N
Mary Grant N
William Greene Y
Denis Guyer N
Patricia Haddad N
Geoffrey Hall N
Robert Hargraves Y
Lida Harkins N
Brad Hill N
Kevin Honan N
Donald Humason Y
Frank Hynes Y
Jim O'Day N
Bradley Jones N
Louis Kafka N
Michael Kane Y
Rachel Kaprielian N
Jay Kaufman N
John Keenan N
Thomas Kennedy N
Kay Khan N
Peter Kocot N
Robert Koczera N
Peter Koutoujian N
Paul Kujawski N
Stephen Kulik N
William Lantigua Y
Stephen LeDuc N
John Lepper Y
David Linsky N
Barbara L'Italien N
Paul Loscocco N
Elizabeth Malia N
Ronald Mariano N
James Marzilli N
Allen McCarthy N
Paul McMurtry N
James Miceli Y
Michael Moran N
Kevin Murphy N
Charles Murphy N
James Murphy Y
David Nangle Y
Patrick Natale N
Harold Naughton, Jr. N
Robert Nyman N
Eugene O'Flaherty N
Matthew Patrick N
Sarah Peake N
Vincent Pedone N
Alice Peisch N
Jeffrey Perry Y
Douglas Petersen N
George Peterson Y
Thomas Petrolati Y
Anthony Petruccelli N
Smitty Pignatelli N
Elizabeth Poirier Y
Karyn Polito Y
Denise Provost N
Angelo Puppolo N
John Quinn N
Kathi-Anne Reinstein N
Bob Rice N
Pamela Richardson N
Michael Rodrigues N
Mary Rogeness Y
John Rogers N
Richard Ross N
Michael Rush Y
Byron Rushing N
Jeffrey Sanchez N
Rosemary Sandlin N
Tom Sannicandro N
Angelo Scaccia Y
John Scibak N
Carl Sciortino N
Stephen Stat Smith N
Frank Israel Smizik N
Todd Smola Y
Theodore Speliotis N
Robert Spellane N
Christopher Speranzo N
Joyce Spiliotis Y
Marie St. Fleur DNV
Harriett Stanley N
Thomas Stanley N
Ellen Story N
William Straus N
David Sullivan N
Benjamin Swan N
Walter Timility Y
Stephen Tobin Y
Timothy Toomey N
David Torrisi N
Eric Turkington N
Cleon Turner N
James Vallee N
Anthony Verga DNV
Joseph Wagner N
Brian Wallace N
Patricia Walrath N
Steven Walsh N
Martin Walsh N
Marty Walz N
Daniel Webster Y
James Welch N
Alice Wolf N


State Senators


Name 6/14/7 Vote
Therese Murray N
Robert Antonioni N
Edward Augustus N
Steven Baddour N
Jarrett Barrios N
Frederick Berry N
Stephen Brewer N
Scott Brown Y
Stephen Buoniconti N
Gale Candaras N
Harriette Chandler N
Robert Creedon Y
Cynthia Stone Creem N
Benjamin Downing N
Susan Fargo N
John Hart N
Robert Havern N
Robert Hedlund Y
Pat Jehlen N
Brian Joyce N
Michael Knapik N
Thomas McGee N
Joan Menard N
Marc Montigny N
Richard Moore Y
Michael Morrissey N
Robert O'Leary N
Marc Pacheco N
Steven Panagiotakos Y
Pamela Resor N
Stanley Rosenberg N
Karen Spilka N
Bruce Tarr N
James Timilty N
Richard Tisei N
Steven Tolman N
Susan Tucker N
Marian Walsh N
Dianne Wilkerson N

Heroic Nonet


A Boston Globe staff short not long after the vote identified nine -- 7 in the house and 2 in the senate -- who changed their votes to ensure the victory. Whether it was for enlightened self-interest (or fear of voters) or love of equality, we should each and all thank:
  • Rep. Christine Canavan, D-Brockton
  • Rep. Paul Kujawski, D-Webster
  • Rep. Paul Loscocco, R-Holliston
  • Rep. Robert Nyman, D-Hanover
  • Rep. Richard Ross, R-Wrentham
  • Rep. James Valee, D-Franklin
  • Rep. Brian Wallace, D-South Boston
  • Sen. Gale Candaras, D-Wilbraham
  • Sen. Michael Morrissey, D-Quincy
I'll ink up a fountain pen for my version. They deserve more than an email each.

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A Dance to Equality

Everyone here and maybe everywhere knows that Byron Rushing was right -- Massachusetts is the place where we favor marriage-equality by 75%, plus 1.

In the case of today's Constitutional Convention vote, it was 75% and then some by default. Apparently at least four of those who people expected to vote to advance the amendment to stop same-sex marriage here did not show at the State House.

Perhaps it was time for a manicure and shave instead.

Let us dance a languorous waltz to equality. Let us dance a spritely jig, just because.

There's lots of coverage on this, but right now, I'm feeling drained and relieved. I had trembled that we would even consider putting existing rights of a minority on the ballot to overturn.

On the dark side Voldemort Kris Mineau of Vote on Marriage told reporters:
I don't believe it's dead because the people have not had the opportunity to have their vote. This will not go away until the citizens have their opportunity to decide what the definition of marriage is.
This is what I and others have said and predicted numerous times. No matter how they are defeated -- courts, legislature, plebiscites -- the anti-gay/anti-SSM crowd will not honor the process, much less the rights of others. Here again, the people voted, representative democracy and all that. Even with this incredibly low bar of 25%, they could not trick, bully or cajole enough legislators to advance this toxin.

We have every reason to believe that this is their last stand in Massachusetts. I'll dance to that.

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Nearly Live: Mass. State House

At a quarter to 7 a.m. today, the good guys had claimed the best turf (or concrete) on the steps in front of the State House. The anti-marriage-equality amendment may come to a vote before the ConCon and the pro-equality forces are showing.

I biked on the way to work in near Southie and detoured. I guess I expected noise already. I was not surprised at the news crews, but didn't see any of the Dark Side. It was not until I got past the talking heads on wheels that I could see demonstrators.

I counted six TV trucks from different stations. A few were sound checking, but no one was with the people outside.

The pro-equality folk had their table out and there were piles of hand-made signs for those who did not bring their own.

The anti-gay, anti-SSM folk had not been bused in from the burbs yet. As befitting machine, programmed politics, they get handed professionally printed signs with identical colors and slogans. Don't think. We'll tell you what to think.

Word from the assembled pro-equality folk was that people were lining up inside to get gallery seat tickets. That's likely where the TV reporter-like-objects were.

I am not sure I can get back for action, particularly if the ConCon quickly goes into recess or votes. I advise checking at Ryan's Take and BlueMassGroup for possible live blogging where there's news and noise.

Mini-Update: BayWindows is live blogging.

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Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Endorsement — Eldridge for Congress

Last evening, during the Left Ahead! weekly podcast, the three of us formally endorsed Jamie Eldridge for U.S. Congress to replace Rep. Marty Meehan in the 5th Congressional District. I would like to iterate that here. I'm the last of the three of us to announce for him.

Actually, I never wavered. Of the candidates, he is the only one with the broad spectrum of progressive positions and policy plans to back them up. He has by far the greatest legislative experience. He also shows the leadership and courage that makes him more than adequate to carry on and surpass Meehan's crusades.

Future posts will compare and contrast candidates. You can get more than your fill of that right now at Dick Howe's excellent site.

The fact of it is that for progressives there really is no comparison or choice. Jamie Eldridge for Congress.

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Sunday, June 10, 2007

The End Cannot Come Soon Enough


Woe befalls those of the small brains and tiny hearts. Surely, yesterday's Pride parade and celebration saddened and further confused them.

Grinning, embracing, loving friends, spouses, lovers, all living loud and above everything happy. How hard it must be for those who hate and fear the other to see the rest of the world advancing while they fester.

With the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention reconvening Thursday, this sad little group is in its death throes. Even if it wins, in the sense of 25% of the combined legislature to advance its anti-marriage-equality amendment, it is denying and delaying its demise.

How unfortunate that the threshold for survival of the anti-gay forces is so low. In this case, a large majority of the public and 75% of the legislature doesn't even want to give these folk a shot at continuing their quest to strip marriage rights from homosexuals. Indeed if this odious attempt at legislating personal religion had been a legislator-generated initiative, it would have required 50% plus one of the ConCon to advance. Not bloody likely.

The pity is that they are willing to push this to the very bitter end. Without the nobility of soldiers in a lost war, they are more the Blanche DuBois of politics. In this case though, there's no nice mental-institution caretaker to take their arm on the way.

We saw more of their position again this week, but not from their usual lobbying arms. Rather the local archdiocese paper, The Pilot, ran another of its specious and spurious editorials in preparation for the ConCon.

This was one of the most embarrassing ones yet. It recapped the illogical and simply wrong arguments that it and Sean Cardinal O'Malley have been offering for the past couple of years. It is worth reading to remind yourself of how unfortunate and silly these folk can be.

The VoteOnMarriage sorts love to niggle with the MassEquality slogan that "It's Wrong to Vote on Rights." That could well be expanded into the more accurate but less powerful "It's Wrong to Vote to Remove Rights from Any Minority." That's the intent, the VOM folk know that, and they are dead wrong while MassEquality is dead right.

The anti-marriage-equality folk would also have legislators as well as their own minions believe that marriage is a religious institution, authorized by churches, legalized with a cleric's blessing, and not a right at all. Here I am appalled by even the Democratic Presidential hopefuls, all but one of whom seem to agree. Even those who favor civil unions and claim to support gay rights use phrases like "marriage is between a man and a woman; that's the way I was raised."

To the issue at hand and particularly the ConCon, that is not the way it has ever been in Massachusetts, not from colonial times. The Puritans escaped from theocratic intolerance and the mingling of government and religion. Here, while claiming personal religious fervor, they set church here and state there, with tall boundaries of law, regulation and custom.

The colonial governors went so far as to forbid ministers from performing marriages and only later let them speak at weddings. In Massachusetts, marriage has always been a civil contract.

The only role a cleric has in weddings here, even today, is the same as a Justice of the Peace, and one-day designated solemnizer, a town clerk, a judge or the governor has. They can act as an agent of the commonwealth in signing the government-issued marriage license.

For example, the editorial cites incest restrictions on marriage. Various states have different definitions of consanguinity. Those that permit closer ties decidedly do not have more birth defects, higher divorce rates, or laws permitting the evils irrationally linked to permitting same-sex marriage. As the pathetic Pilot piece put it, "Once marriage becomes a personal right, the institution of marriage fades. It is only a matter of time before polygamy, polyandry, incestuous relations and all other manner of partnerships will be accepted as marriage."

It speaks to the poverty of their position and their diminished numbers that they contend first that marriage is not a civil right, second that it is a religious institution and not a government controlled civil one, and three that no one has a right to marry, per se. All of those are wrong and each shows a willful denial of many centuries of history and culture, of hundred of years of Massachusetts history, government and culture, of the laws of both the commonwealth and nation, and of the simple reality that the vast majority of locals and Americans wed civilly with not even the veneer of a cleric signing the state issued document that makes a marriage.

We can understand why the VOM and archdiocese leaders play those games. We are not quite over the hump on this type of civil-rights issue. They hope to be able to twist 25% of the legislature one more time to put removing civil rights from a minority on the ballot for 2008.

Yet, we hear echoes of this in such theaters as the Democratic Presidential candidates' debates.

We have seen popular votes on stripping rights before. Sometimes it was for the majority, such as in Prohibition -- the 18th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, rejected only by Rhode Island, and repealed by the 21st. In various states after reconstruction, we also saw repressive legislation such as poll taxes and literacy requirements that effectively removed voting as a right from Black Americans. To our national shame, none of these worked and all eventually were voted out by more rational and compassionate generations that followed.

Here we are again, with a 21st century version. It is difficult to believe that anyone who can function day to day could buy into that tripe. Perhaps they are not so far from Blanche DuBois as one might suppose.

If we have four or five legislators who find that reason, compassion and courage now, we won't have to endure the bitter campaign to drastically alter our commonwealth's marriage laws to conform for the first time to narrow religious doctrine. We won't for the first time in Massachusetts join the list of repressive and regressive states that try to strip small groups of citizens of existing rights.

A word to the wise...a word to the compassionate...a word to the lovers of liberty...no on this hateful amendment.

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Saturday, June 09, 2007

Black Church Walking Equality Walk

Now in its eighth year as a reconciling church, Union United Methodist on Columbus in the South End is quietly showing the bigots -- black and white -- how to behave, how to be, well, Christian. This year, it's hosting the interfaith prayer service before the Pride parade.

We should pause for a moment to be grateful for those who stand up against easy bigotry. The stereotypical response to calls to welcome homosexual or support their efforts for equality is far too often to reject them. Far too often, even ministers in the African American communities will select some old testament verses to condemn this minority.

The article in today's Boston Globe seemed to want to use this tension to stir a bit of Boston Herald-style sensationalism. However, the Black Ministerial Alliance, home to the anti-gay clergy here, wouldn't bite. No comment. No returned calls.

This blog has cited the conflicts between those clowns and Union United's Rev. Martin D. McLee. Future generations will surely not treat the Gilbert Thompson hate faction respectfully.

In contrast to them, McLee said simply, "Gay folk have always been in the black church and the white church -- that's not new -- but we don't require folk to pretend that they're not who they are." Then in reference to the anti-gay ministers, he added, "I don't want this to be divisive, and I don't choose to be a part of side-taking. This is just one church living out its journey."

Let the people say amen.

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Friday, June 08, 2007

Deval Call for Marriage Sanity

Defeat the amendment that would strip existing rights from a minority...this coming week and not after over a year of turmoil and waste money and energy. In his weekly podcast, Gov. Deval Patrick joins me in this call.

For those who find me a bit too abrasive on this, like here or here, you are likely to appreciate his reasoned and smooth style more.
In case you have friends who are confused or know of a legislator (including a senate president) who needs some clarification before the June 14th ConCon session, Patrick's views will come in very handy.

He calls for defeat of the amendment drive to take away homosexual couples' rights for civil marriage:
First, the court has not granted gay and lesbian couples any right different from anyone else. The court has affirmed the principle that people come before their government as equals, that’s all, saying simply that if the government is going to give marriage licenses to anyone, it has to give them to everyone, regardless of whether the spouse you choose is of the same gender.

Second, we have never in this state used the ballot process to limit individual freedoms and personal privacy. Our constitution is designed to protect freedom and stand against discrimination. Yet with this proposal we are being asked to take freedom away from some people and to insert discrimination into our constitution. Where then does that stop? Shall we take away the freedom to worship in religions that the majority does not approve of? Of course we shouldn't.

Third, even if you don’t support marriage equality, you have to realize that if this issue is placed on the ballot for a vote in 2008, for the next two years little else we need to do will get done. If we don’t lay this question to rest at the constitutional convention on June 14, a toxic debate will eclipse all the other business that you and I care about and drive us apart, just when we most need to work together. Instead of advancing our agenda in Massachusetts, we will spend the next two years surrounded by advocates from all over the country trying to make Massachusetts a political circus.
His call for activism is something we all can and most certainly should do. (What did you do in the fight for marriage equality?, your children may well ask.)

His call is:
I ask you please to stand with us. Whether you support the right of adults to make private choices about whom to marry or just feel that we have bigger challenges to face together, call your State Reps and Senators and tell them it’s time for us all to move on. Ask them to vote to defeat the ballot initiative once and for all in the constitutional convention on June 14. Ask your friends, your family and your neighbors to reach out as well.
As the expression goes, what could be fairer than that?

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Thursday, June 07, 2007

Two for the SSM Road Show


Ooo, the slugs are crawling around the Boston Phoenix today. They haven't slimed their way to the website to load up today's issue.

When they do (or before if you are near a Phoenix street box), go to David Bernstein's Power Hungry? feature. He provides the background and conventional wisdom on next week's Constitutional Convention.

Note: The Phoenix critters woke up, Power Hungry? has a link now.

The short of it is as so many of us been whining. With only 50 of 200 votes needed to advance the amendment to strip the right to marry from our homosexual couples, it looks like it would take some real courage by the leaders to stop it.

This piece provides commentary on the pro-marriage-equality efforts, including what the governor, attorney general, speaker of the house and senate president are doing, what they aren't doing and why.

Bernstein can't find out any better than the rest of us which pro- and anti-equality sides think they have in terms of votes.

Bernstein doesn't have the answers either, but he lays out all the info you need to become a pundit yourself.

Armed with the facts and opinions, you should head over to Bay Windows, where boss lady Susan Ryan-Vollmar's lead editorial makes the salient issue plain for all elected officials. Not only because she agrees with me (but more gently), I like the candor and insight here. This is the vote that will determine the legacy of legislators.

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