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I learned something today. Relearned, that is. I don’t know anything.

I read an op-ed piece in the New York Times, Gay Marriage and a Moral Minority by Charles M. Blow, and my eyes opened, looking out on what should not have been new information.

Kiss kiss kiss, will make this earth quake.
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Complexities of the Heart

I want to start by saying I have always had this sense of a female’s power. Truly, I think the realized female is the most powerful person on the planet. Women are the backbone of society. You are the teachers (71% in 2004), you are the mothers and grandmothers (by default of course, but also in action. You more profoundly embody those roles than anyone else in their respective roles), you are the missionary models, and even when not on the pulpit (either because you are not allowed, or just not there yet) you are the ministers. Women made up 92.3% of nurses in 2005.

I am guessing you made up most of the the black voters this year, too. In 2004, you were 58% of the black vote (60% in 2000). So your voice and your concerns matter. This year, 70% of black voters supported Proposition 8 in CA and 75% of black women voted for it (Mr. Blow points out there weren’t enough black men in the survey to provide a reliable percentage for them. However, one can mathematically deduce that of the raw number of survey respondents, nearly twice as many black women said that they voted for it than black men). He goes on to offer theories for why that may be: (excerpting from the article)

  1. Blacks are much more likely than whites to attend church, according to a Gallup report, and black women are much more likely to attend church than black men … weekly church attendance among black 12th graders rose 26 percent from 1993 to 2006 … it is probably safe to assume that many of them were going to church with their mothers since Child Trends reported that around the time that they were born, nearly 70 percent of all black children were born to single mothers.
  2. This high rate of church attendance by blacks informs a very conservative moral view.
  3. Marriage can be a sore subject for black women in general. According to 2007 Census Bureau data, black women are the least likely of all women to be married and the most likely to be divorced. Women who can’t find a man to marry might not be thrilled about the idea of men marrying each other … comparing the struggles of legalizing interracial marriage with those to legalize gay marriage is a bad idea. Many black women do not seem to be big fans of interracial marriage either. They’re the least likely of all groups to intermarry, and many don’t look kindly on the black men who intermarry at nearly three times the rate that they do.

The article goes further into the effectiveness of religious debate, the cruel irony of ardent sexual morality vs. pregnancies and STD infection, and abortion rates.

There are no coincidences, no mistakes, and there is a gift and opportunity in everything, even seeming bad news. For the last few weeks I have been focused on this gay marriage issue. It affects me a lot. This article reminded me that there are other forgotten populations, too. We cannot afford to disparage them either.

So, as gays and allies across the country get together to organize our new efforts (here in Miami it is a “Hearts and Minds” campaign), we will surely consider what this kind of information means in terms of how, where and to whom we deliver information. Still, I see greater opportunity.

One way I will have to look at this issue is understanding that the hearts and minds of my sisters may have been affected by my request to validate a commitment to another man. I had never considered that. On some level, I am an example of what has eluded them. One of my closest friends, a beautiful black woman that a colleague described as “Michelle Obama-like,” frequently calls me a “waste.” I get that. And on some level, I wish I could be that figure in a black community of heterosexual marriage, family, and life-building; however, that is not my call (nor my choice, but that is a different article).

So what I cannot give in terms of physical presence, provision and expression, I must give in attention. I must give in education and support, to make sure you remain the strong, infinitely and (I insist!) specially powerful creatures you are. I think we all must, but I have to start with me. You remain our mothers, our grandmothers, our teachers, our caretakers, our hope and so much a part of my strength. As much as I deserve the right and the choice to have my love and commitment solidified and recognized by the government, you deserve the resources and a pool of eligible goodness to go along with the access to those rights. You deserve a goverment and leaders who recognize that education gaps and a prison mentality does not contribute to anything, and definitely not your dreams. It is time we all stood up for you, too. No life, no love, no hope left behind.

Part of an email I received from a friend right after Obama won:

I’m still not safe in my country … my state … my city … my county … my polling place. America has indeed spoken. On a night when so much of my history was celebrated, perhaps vindicated, so much of me was mutilated and discarded. That’s what it feels like. I would be remiss, however, not to remember much of that history was spent enduring extreme suffering and hate. I accept that this is sometimes a part of the process and I recognize that many have endured a lot more than I have. I fully appreciate the role I must always have in being and demonstrating love and acceptance. I jokingly call myself the “Gay Obama: disarming white people and heterosexuals since 1980.”

Last night I cried for my friend in California who contributed half her salary last month to help defeat Proposition 8. Who has worked tirelessly and effortlessly to reduce the need for gays and lesbians to pay (expensive) lawyers like her exorbitant amounts of money to contract what meager rights they can. Last night I cried for all the people who stood on street corners with signs that asked that discrimination not be mandated. For the men and women who want to be legally recognized parents, but can’t.

I did some more digging and found this opinion over at the Atlantic (the comments get kind of heated, but the point is understood):

It’s disgusting. And we need to let this shit go. There may be great, sound reasons beyond–the blacks are pathological!!–to explain this. But there are no great, sound reasons that excuse it. Cut this shit out. We know better. Even if other people didn’t.

I’m going to throw my centrist hat in here and whole-heartedly agree.

Wedding Cake Figurines
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The Homophobia Has to Stop

First of all, historically, the institution of marriage was about the distribution of property. Two parties signed a legal contract and established ownership. If the contract was breached or if one party wanted out, the property was dispensed properly.

Second, this argument that because the Bible defines marriage between a man and woman is flawed on two fronts. Yes, our country is founded on the inalienable rights outlined in the principles of the Bible, but what happened to the separation of church and state? Why is this not applicable to the legal definition of marriage? The Bible also states the principles of ‘eye for an eye’, yet it is highly discredited in the principles of capital punishment, especially in the disproportionate enforcement to Black inmates. Is it possible that the outdated mandates of the Old Testament have expired?

Finally, and this is what really gets me, is how anyone can sit atop their soap box, in a glass house, and support a law that regulates a way of life for ANYONE. While its debatable that the equality struggle of our homosexual brethren relate to the historical struggle of our racial past, the principle is simple.

Love is love.

The fear exhibited within parts of our culture and parts of our church is a giant mistake I know our kids and grandkids will be looking back on us and hang their head in shame. The fear that irradiates from many spiritual leaders, masked behind literal interpretations of scripture, is sad. The Bible, for me, has always been a book of philosophical awakening and challenging principle. While it is a tool towards the path of grace, I think the lessons and words defined in it are convexed enough that any man believing that ‘they understood what God meant when these words were cast’ is arrogance in its highest form.

Of what is even more disturbing is this projection that heterosexual Black men have of gay Black men fostered from how they treat and view Black women. The idea that gay Black men would treat them remotely the same is really the true story.

It’s equivalent to how some white people feared the election of Obama and the prominence of the minority community. If in one breathe you could convince yourself that there was no racism and that ‘Black people needed to get over it’, why then are you so afraid of a Black man being in power? If everything was so great, why would you fear retaliation or reciprocal treatment?

This argument that gay marriage is against the Bible and your principles isn’t really about you. It’s about the rights of others who are different.

In the end, for all of us, who has the final judgement call anyway? Last I checked, it wasn’t the preacher.

We need to challenge ourselves, long and hard, to break this tide of misinformation and fear. While I know not everyone has to agree on the ‘right and wrong’ of homosexuality, one must look past themselves and dig deeper. Do we really believe disallowing anyone basic human rights is the right thing to do? Since when is it ok to enforce your beliefs through law in this melting pot of America?

What say you, community?

Florida, California, Indiana, and Arizona have gay marriage ban amendments on their ballots this year. Senator, and presumptive Democratic Presidential nominee, Barack Obama told Florida Red and Blue (organization spearheading opposition to the amendment in Florida) that he opposes the amendment.

Tolerated, Not Accepted.
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Ignorance = Tolerated, Not Accepted

Though backers contend that the amendment does not affect domestic partner benefits (extended to partners both gay and straight, young and old by companies like I.B.M. and 86% of the Fortune 500), a ruling in Michigan last month makes clear that these divisive and unnecessary amendments can have far reaching effects. The Michigan Supreme Court ruled that the language of the amendment prohibits public employers such as universities and cities from extending benefits to domestic partners. It would limit the rights of unmarried, committed adults involved in domestic partnerships, and eliminate their ability to share health care and pension benefits (read here). This affects seniors seeking the tax benefits of not being married but living together, University employees and any one else who should be able to make these decisions for themselves.

So, if you are in one of these pivotal states, or just care in general, please inform yourself and anyone else not interested in protecting bigotry. The Defense of Marriage Act and multiple laws on most States’ books already prevent gay marriage. Perhaps the time, money and effort could be better spent.

In the meantime, check out these 6 reasons to Say No 2.

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