November 21st, 2009
 

365 Gay: Opinion

Corvino: The other gay ballot battles

, columnist, 365gay.com

I’ve spent the last week traveling through rural Wisconsin for a series of diversity lectures at small technical colleges. Lecturing on gay issues at such venues can be eye-opening. It’s a big country out there, and while students today may be a good deal more gay-friendly than they once were, not everyone shares the views of a typical liberal-arts major at NYU or UC-Berkeley.

Of course, there are pleasant surprises along the way, like the scraggly welding major who came up after one talk and said, “I’m a former homophobe. Thanks for being here.” On the other hand, it’s hard not to react visibly when an audience member tries to establish his scholarly bona fides by announcing, “My views on this are very well thought out. I studied the Bible carefully when I was in prison.”

My travels through the Midwest got me thinking about national LGBT movement’s tendency to focus on California and the Northeast. There are good reasons for this bias, insofar as these are populous and influential regions. But having discussed Maine in my last column, (http://www.365gay.com/opinion/corvino-stand-up-for-maine-and-for-marriage/), I decided to spend this week discussing the other two gay-related ballot initiatives currently going on—in Kalamazoo, Michigan and in Washington State. They both deserve more attention than they’re getting.

Kalamazoo:

The Kalamazoo initiative is close to home for me—I live in Detroit, about two-and-a-half hours away. Kalamazoo is a small town in a conservative part of the state. Nevertheless, as the home of Kalamazoo College, Western Michigan University, and the Arcus Foundation, it has a vibrant progressive streak.

About three years ago citizens began discussions with city representatives about expanding Kalamazoo’s non-discrimination ordinance (which prohibits discrimination in employment, housing, and public accommodations) to include protections for sexual orientation and gender expression. In December of 2008, the Kalamazoo city commission unanimously approved the expanded ordinance, but opposition forced the city to subject it to public review.

As a result, in June of this year a new ordinance was introduced with stronger exemptions for churches and other religious organizations. Once again, the ordinance passed unanimously, and once again, opposition groups derailed it, this time by collecting enough signatures to suspend the ordinance until it can be put to a public vote in November. A YES vote would preserve the ordinance prohibiting discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender expression; a NO vote would strike it down.

Opposition has largely been organized by the Michigan American Family Association (AFA)—a small-minded, sex-obsessed group that even some right wingers I know prefer to steer clear of.  (See http://www.afamichigan.org/)  They’ve been trying to instill fear in voters by raising the specter of men with “psycho-emotional delusions” preying on women and children in restrooms.

Reasonable minds can differ about whether, and to what extent, legal action is the right response to discrimination by private employers, landlords, and so on. But if we’re going to have non-discrimination laws at all, they should surely include sexual orientation and gender expression. I therefore urge readers to visit the One Kalamazoo site (http://www.onekalamazoo.com/) and support their efforts.

Washington State:

For some years Washington State has had limited domestic partnership rights which include hospital visitation, inheritance rights, the ability to authorize autopsies and organ donations, and legal standing under probate and trust law. This year legislators expanded the law so that domestic partners would be granted the remaining statewide legal incidents of marriage (though not under the name “marriage”)—including access to unpaid sick leave to care for an ailing partner, various legal process rights, pension benefits, insurance benefits, and adoption and child-support rights and responsibilities, among others.

Opponents then collected signatures to force the new law on the ballot. As in Kalamazoo, a YES vote here is the pro-gay vote: it would support the expanded domestic-partner law. A NO vote would kill the expanded domestic-partner law, leaving Washington staters with the far more limited domestic-partner rights they previously had.

The opposition’s campaign is ugly. Take a moment to visit

http://protectmarriagewa.com/ and click on the video on the right with the smiling white couple in wedding attire. There you will learn that “God established, and defined marriage, between a man and a woman….Senate Bill 5688 violates GOD’s mandate.”

Incidentally, you will also learn that Adam and Eve look like they should be doing Breck commercials—at least as depicted in a certain Lowell Bruce Bennett painting owned by the Mormon Church.

The visuals may be funny, but ignorance and discrimination are not. Visit http://approvereferendum71.org/ and support efforts to preserve robust domestic-partnership legislation in Washington State.

Polls for both of these initiatives show us close enough to win—but if, and only if, we support them.

******

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 20: Illinois State University

November 10: Central Washington University (debate with Glenn Stanton)

November 11: Colorado State University, Pueblo (debate with Glenn Stanton)

November 12: Miami University of Ohio

November 16: Bergen Community College (NJ)

Check school websites for rooms and times.


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  • Thomas Zinaman Said: November 11th, 2009 at 10:22 pm
    • Hopefully this hate with the gay marriage will stop…. we have equal rights just like straights…. we all are human lets get treated like we are… its crape….. and im over it…… lets continue this fight for our rights…..

  • Matthew Simonds Said: October 17th, 2009 at 1:09 pm
    • I have not seen that “protect Marriage Washington” add yet but then again I guess they are not wasting there money on the western half of the state (say for the few conservative pockets) and are fucesing on the estern half of the state. Time for me to look into doing like my union and getting the word out to vote Yes on R71.

  • JonnyBoy Said: October 16th, 2009 at 4:10 pm
    • Apparently the opponents of the new law in WA are entrusted by Jesus, our lord and savior, to fight our homosexuall agenda. Also, gay men are 8 times more likely to divorce and lesbians are 300 times more likely. Amazing stats.

  • Kelson Said: October 16th, 2009 at 3:30 pm
    • Ignorance can be fixed. Stupid can’t. Unfortunagely, most Bible bangers fall into the second category. I just wonder how many “Christians” know that the gospels were written about 300 years AFTER the death of Christ. And the old testament time line is much worse. Of course the immediate response is usually: “no matter, it is all under the guidance of the holy spirit.” Oh really? What was this mythical character doing during the 300 years? And for the old testament this character was really out to lunch – a very long lunch. There are plenty of scholarly sources available for anyone who is interested in studying the construction of the Bible. The Evolution of God by Robert Wright is an excellent source. If anyone can still believe in this mythology after doing the research then there is no hope – they will have fallen off of the ignorance ledge into the dark pit of stupidity. Does this mean that a belief in a supreme being is no long valid? I would think not. It just means that using the Bible as a foundation for that belief is “stupid.” Faith? Boy, that is a stretch. Faith in what? Mythology? And not even good mythology at that. One should do the math before jumping onto the “Praise Jesus” band wagon (or Praise Moses, or Praise The Wicked Witch of the West).

      THINK. I will NOT make one’s hair hurt.

  • Facebook User Said: October 16th, 2009 at 2:57 pm
    • I am afraid that this will not end until the time is right for a supreme court ruling. Until then, the nutty referendum process which allows the majority to deny rights to the minority is a fact of life in some states.

 
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