November 22nd, 2009
 

365 Gay: News

Gay rights leaders express hope for future


(Denver, Colorado) Some 2,000 LGBT civil rights activists from across the country are headed home with a new sense of propose following a four day national conference in Denver.

The Creating Change conference sponsored by the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force is the nation’s largest annual convening of LGBT rights activists. It came amidst a national sense of letdown and finger pointing over the passage of Proposition 8 in California which overturned a state Supreme Court ruling allowing same-sex marriage. In addition to the ban in California, voters also passed anti-gay marriage amendments in Florida and Arizona and approved a ban on gay adoption in Arkansas.

The conference looked at ways of reversing constitutional bans on gay marriage and promoting LGBT rights at the state level.  It also included sessions geared toward effecting change at the federal level, including passage of the Matthew Shepard Hate Crimes Act, and inclusive ENDA and repeal of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.

“It has been a bittersweet year, but the state of our movement is engaged,” said NGLTF Executive Director Rea Carey in her “State of the Movement” address.

“You know, there are years when our movement for full equality jumps by leaps and bounds and other years when we toil to gain every inch of ground. This year has been a bit of both in which we made progress on the local and state level and our country elected its first person of color to the presidency! Yet our love for each other was attacked again by the majority at the ballot box; our right to marry was taken away in California; our transgender brothers and sisters were denied much needed protections; and federal policy continued to elude us under the evil empire… I mean the Bush administration.”

Among those who spoke at the conference was U.S. Rep Jared Polis (D). The openly gay member of Congress from Colorado said that the country is on the “threshold of making tremendous progress.”

“Americans are a good people who want to be fair. It’s up to your work every day in your communities to show people the way,” he told the convention.

Among the speakers were Dolores Huerta, the Co-founder of the United Farm Workers Union; Dr. Marjorie J. Hill, the Chief Executive Officer of Gay Men’s Health Crisis; and Rea Carey, Executive Director, National Gay and Lesbian Task Force.

But there also was time for some levity with participation from comic Kate Clinton and drag performers The Kinsey Sicks.


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  • Morgan Said: February 3rd, 2009 at 7:18 am
    • I guess the staff meant to say “headed home with anew sense of purpose” not a “a new sense of “propose” an expression we don’t have in the English language. Guess the editor was missing in action when that snuck by him/her.
      The staff probably doesn’t proofread its stuff. They likely just pump it out and hope for the best.

  • mark snyder Said: February 2nd, 2009 at 6:27 pm
    • It is a shame that the priorities in this article do not adequately reflect the most pressing needs of our community – eradicating violence against those who do not conform based on gender norms, housing and violence issues among our youth, and the AIDS epidemic.

 
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