Activists say there are lessons to be learned from ‘Milk’

January 4, 2009 by Gay News  
Filed under News Bites

Movies may be just entertainment. But the film “Milk” has taken on another role — that of a rallying point for gays and lesbians dismayed by California voters’ rejection in November of gay marriage.

The Focus Features release starring Sean Penn as groundbreaking homosexual politician Harvey Milk is viewed by some in the lesbian-gay-bisexual-transgender community as a textbook on gay activism, one that should be studied and emulated to prevent further setbacks.

In many locations, activists have used the opening of “Milk” as an occasion to pass out literature on upcoming city, state and national legislation.

In Rhode Island, Susan MacNeil saw “Milk” as an opportunity to demonstrate for gay rights. The executive director of the state’s marriage equality effort, MacNeil expected 20 people to show up for a rally on a recent rainy night in Providence.

“We got 500,” she marveled. “We’re feeling this groundswell of urgency to protect our civil rights. If the gay community can have its marriage rights ripped away in California, then who’s next?”

“Lots of people I’ve spoken to in recent weeks are eager not just to see the film but to bring family members, neighbors, fellow worshippers to a screening,” said Hans Johnson, president of the political consulting firm Progressive Victory and a contributing editor to the Web magazine In These Times. “The movie reinforces their sense of engagement and connection to the broader LGBT community, and it seems to give permission for further activism.” See Activists say there are lessons to be learned from ‘Milk’
Kansas City Star, MO

Can novice group pull off march against Prop 8 in nation’s capital?

January 3, 2009 by Gay News  
Filed under News Bites

An advocacy group formed in response to the passage of California's Proposition 8 is among those calling for a national march in Washington, D.C., to advance the marriage-rights issue. But other veteran activists question whether it's necessary to have yet another national group in the mix and whether Yes on Gay Marriage has the experience to organize a major rally. See Bay Area Reporter (San Francisco) (1/1)

Anti-Gay Leaders Continue to Seek Ballot Measures to Repeal LGBT Rights

December 31, 2008 by Change.org  
Filed under Change.org

Equal rightsIf Prop 8’s passage woke the LGBT community up and told us that we need to learn how to organize better, it also reaffirmed a core belief among anti-gay forces that the ballot box can be used as a weapon to repeal gay rights.  Anti-gay activists have never been a stranger to ballot measures that seek to repeal civil rights.  From Anita Bryant’s crusade in the 1970s to repeal Miami-Dade’s anti-discrimination measure, to the infamous Briggs Amendment, to the whirlwind of anti-gay marriage measures on the 2004 ballot, to 2008, which saw anti-gay ballot measures pass in four states.

Sadly, it’s a trend that’s going to continue into 2009, most likely.

Here’s a brief tale of two recent gay rights initiatives that are facing backlash from anti-gay groups.  The first is a Kalamazoo, Michigan ordinance passed earlier this month that expands civil rights protections to LGBT citizens in regards to housing and employment discrimination.  It’s a simple anti-discrimination bill, but conservative activists, led by the American Family Association of Michigan (AFAM), are seeking to repeal the ordinance. Apparently discrimination is still fashionable for the AFAM.  Activists with the AFAM need to get 1,300 signatures by today to put a repeal of the ordinance on the ballot.  (Note: Read this article for a recap on how folks with the AFAM are lying and manipulating voters in order to get their needed signatures.  They’re actually appealing to fears that residents will have to share a bathroom with someone of the opposite sex if the ordinance is allowed to stand.  Ridiculous.)

The second tale is from Cleveland. Earlier this month, the City Council of Cleveland voted 13-7 to establish a domestic partnership registry. It’s a largely symbolic act, since the registry is non-binding, but the hope is that the registry fosters an inclusive reputation for Cleveland and provides a space where other businesses and employers might feel welcome to provide health care benefits to the same-sex partners of their employees.  But now a group of pastors are pushing back against the registry, and are trying to obtain 11,000 signatures by next Wednesday (January 7) to put a repeal of the registry on the next municipal ballot. Their reasoning for wanting to repeal a non-binding, largely symbolic registry?  Well, according to Pastor C. Jay Matthews, “that [homosexual] lifestyle goes against God.”

Both of these examples are frightening, in that in both cities you have radical conservative elements waging a fight not over the issue of marriage, but on the basic issue of whether LGBT persons deserve basic civil rights.  But this is also a moment to show that the movement for LGBT rights can fight fire with fire.  The evidence?  Both AFAM and the pastors in Cleveland are in the minority in their opposition to these measures, and LGBT rights groups will be better organized in 2009 than they’ve ever been before.

Right now, 87 percent of U.S. citizens think that LGBT people shouldn’t be discriminated against in the workplace.  And 73 percent favor some sort of domestic partnership that allows same-sex couples to share benefits, Social Security, health visitation privileges, and inheritance rights. That’s not only a majority of the country, that’s a landslide of the population.

Pastor Matthews and the AFAM are just simply wrong on these issues, both politically and religiously.  Let’s hope their signature campaigns fall flat.  But barring that, if it’s a fight they want, it’s a fight they’ll get on these issues.

Religious Business, Public Access, and Discrimination

December 29, 2008 by Gay News  
Filed under Gay Marriage

The recent campaign against civil marriage equality for gay people was rife with misinformation, spin, falsehoods, and downright lies. And one story which was repeated to great effect was a legal dispute over the use of a privately-owned public pavilion in New Jersey.
Seldom were the claims accurate.
Take, for example, Charlene: a single-mother [...]

The Pope Takes a Swing at LGBT’s Again

December 29, 2008 by Gay News  
Filed under Religion

That’s right, the Pope is at it yet again, with his third strike against gays in just weeks.  This time it was at a
pro-family rally in Madrid, Spain this past Sunday.  Spain is one of the few countries which has legalized same-sex marriage.
The pope spoke in front of hundreds of thousands of people who were [...]SHARETHIS.addEntry({ title: “The Pope Takes a Swing at LGBT’s Again”, url: “http://www.gayagenda.com/2008/12/the-pope-takes-a-swing-at-lgbts-again/” });

Gay groups angry at Pope remarks

December 26, 2008 by Gay News  
Filed under Religion

Gay groups and activists have reacted angrily after Pope Benedict XVI said that mankind needed to be saved from a destructive blurring of gender.
Speaking on Monday, Pope Benedict said that saving humanity from homosexual or transsexual behaviour was as important as protecting the environment.
The comments were “irresponsible and unacceptable”, the UK’s Lesbian and Gay Christian [...]

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