Corvino: Stand up for Maine – and for marriage
As much as I aim to seek common ground, some aspects of the marriage debate make it impossible. Consider, for example, the Maine campaign.
If you haven’t been following the campaign, you should. To my mind, our side has done a model job in framing the debate, telling our stories, responding quickly to opponents’ false messages, and perhaps most important, tailoring its own message to the local climate rather than simply going with stock arguments. Check out the ads at http://www.protectmaineequality.org/.By contrast, the other side is essentially a re-run of the California Prop. 8 campaign (which is not surprising, as they’ve hired the same mastermind, Frank Schubert).
Of course, the other side won Prop. 8. Polls in Maine had us trailing until recently. But if ever there were a campaign that could come from behind, the Protect Maine Equality campaign is it. If you don’t believe me, compare their website to the opposition’s (http://www.standformarriagemaine.com/), and see if you don’t come away impressed and encouraged.
You are also likely to come away angry with the opposition. Good. Channel that anger into action by going back to http://www.protectmaineequality.org/ and making a sizeable donation.
Of all the things that irk me about the other side’s ads—and there are plenty—what struck me the most was Boston College law professor Scott Fitzgibbon’s claim that if marriage equality stands, “It will no longer be live and let live. Homosexual marriage will be the law whether Mainers like it or not.”
Let me repeat that, in case you didn’t get it the first time. Allow gays to marry, and “It will no longer be live and let live.”
If someone were awarding prizes for bizarre commentary in the marriage debate, this claim would be a formidable contender. The statement is so self-contradictory that it’s hard to discern its intended meaning.
But I’ll try. For marriage-equality opponents, “live and let live” must mean something like, “You are free to live as you please as long as I am free to live in a world in which you are not free to live as you please.” (Ouch. My brain hurts.)
If there’s anything worthwhile about the Fitzgibbon ad, it’s that it sharply exposes our opponents’ real intentions. They don’t merely want the freedom to marry whom they love, to worship as they choose, to raise their children as they see fit, and so on. They want the freedom to live in a world where those who differ don’t get the same freedom. In short, they want the exact opposite of a free society.
Whenever an educated person (like Fitzgibbon, who is a law professor) says something so bizarre and stupid, I assume that there must be something true somewhere in the neighborhood. If not the neighborhood, the county, perhaps.
In this case, the truth lies in the fact that freedom has a flip side, so to speak—namely, that other people may freely choose to do things that you don’t like.
Whether Maine retains marriage equality or not, our opponents are free to teach their children (and anyone else willing to listen) that same-sex relationships are wrong, that our marriages are not “real” marriages, that our families are not “real” families, and so on. They are free to do the same with respect to interfaith marriages, second marriages, whatever. You and I are free to tell them why they’re wrong.
What they are not free to do is to live in a world where everyone agrees with them. Nor are they free to live in a world where marriage between two men or two women is unthinkable, unspeakable, or legally impossible. Even if we lose Maine, we will still have marriage equality elsewhere.
And there’s the crux of the matter, and the point at which the debate really becomes a zero-sum game. Our opponents want a world where same-sex marriage is not even an option. In particular, they don’t want their kids—some of whom might be gay—to see it as an option.
By contrast, I want every gay and lesbian child to know that when they grow up, they deserve someone to have and to hold, for better or worse, ‘til death do they part.
I want them to know that when they fall in love and seek commitment, their love is real, and worthy, and good. I want them to know that marriage IS an option.
If you want that, too, support marriage equality in Maine and elsewhere.
******
P.S. And while you’re at it, don’t forget Washington State, where a nasty campaign is aimed at taking away domestic partnerships. See http://approvereferendum71.org/. If we lose Maine, gay Mainers get civil unions instead of marriage. If we lose Washington State, Washington gays end up with nothing.
******
John Corvino, Ph.D. is an author, speaker, and philosophy professor at Wayne State University in Detroit. His column “The Gay Moralist” appears Fridays on 365gay.com.
For more about John Corvino, or to see clips from his “What’s Morally Wrong with Homosexuality?” DVD, visit www.johncorvino.com.
His upcoming speaking appearances include:
October 13: Wisconsin Indianhead College
October 14: Western Tech College (WI)
October 15: Northcentral Technical College (WI)
October 20: Illinois State University
Check school websites for rooms and times.





I think the Obama and the Democratic Party in Washington are also our opponents now. Obama was elected a year ago. The Democratic Party controls the entire legislative process from soup to nuts. The focus needs to turn away from the right wing, and look to the West Wing. Why? Well, they are the government now, and have the power. The right wing in not in power any more. GWB is gone, in Crawford. Maybe the Washington and NY gay elites have become too inbred with the Democratic Party, and need to wake up: guys, you have been dumped. Who is to say the Democrats will retain power after the midterms? Don’t they have the duty to act now?
Excellent points! Contrary to the propaganda of those who want marriage rights restricted to heterosexual couples, we support marriage equality for same-sex couples because we believe in and support the right of loving couples to choose marriage and to have the support to live in a successful faithful marriage for life.
Well said, John, as usual. Especially important is the explanation you provide in the “live and let live” paragraph, which is the point that our opponents can’t seem to grasp. No group that enjoys certain rights should be able to proscribe those very same rights as they apply to another group.
I visited the Protect Maine Equality website, and made a donation, after reading your article.
Corvino as always your words are exceptional.
But if we lose the Washington referendum, the existing domestic partnership laws stand. The same story with Maine, only we have a chance of keeping a marriage state.
Sent a donation today, and I hope others do too.
John, Maine doesn’t have civil unions. OK, we do have Domestic Partner Registration but it is limited to inheritence rights and medical power of attorney. Not even close to all the rights and responsibilities of marriage.
Thank you for posting this. It is important to dissect the opponents views and understand them. If nothing else it gives us a better place to debate from.
What I truly wish, because I think it is the best place to debate these opinions from, is that people would stop asking for marriage. We need to start getting married even where it’s “not legal”. It is important to realize that it’s not illegal to hold a ceremony, and call yourself married, and have a wedding registry, and use the words husband/wife. It’s not illegal to do these things and then raise a fuss over not getting the same rights as other married couples. The fact is that conversation puts the opposition at an inherent disadvantage because it removes the argument that “if” gay marriage happens something adverse will come of it. We need to reclaim the word and remove it from it’s legal place. When we remind people that we’re having a legal argument and like it or not conservative christians have no control over the multitudes of people who do choose to support us and love us, and facilitate our families then the stark ugly truth of this only being about our rights comes into focus. It’s time to start having that conversation.