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Duck and Cover Time

By Molly Ivins, AlterNet. Posted May 24, 2005.


Here in Texas, the Can't-Shake-Your-Booty bill passed the House, saving us all from the scourge of sexy cheerleaders. But nothing else is getting done.

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Here in the National Laboratory for Bad Government, it's Duck and Cover time -- the Legislature is in session. The Can't-Shake-Your-Booty bill passed the House, saving us all from the scourge of sexy cheerleaders. But nothing else is getting done. The state is being run by people who do not know how to govern. Keep in mind that based on past form, whatever lunacy is going on in Texas will eventually sweep the country.

Rarely are the words of one state legislator worth national attention, but when Senfronia Thompson, a black representative from Houston, stalks to the back mike with a certain "get-out-of-my-way" look in her eye, it's Katie, bar the door. Here is Thompson speaking against the Legislature's recent folly of putting a superfluous anti-gay marriage measure into the state constitution:

"I have been a member of this august body for three decades, and today is one of the all-time low points. We are going in the wrong direction, in the direction of hate and fear and discrimination. Members, we all know what this is about; this is the politics of divisiveness at its worst, a wedge issue that is meant to divide.

"Members, this is a distraction from the real things we need to be working on. At the end of this session, this Legislature, this leadership will not be able to deliver the people of Texas fundamental and fair answers to the pressing issues of our day.

"Let's look at what this amendment does not do: It does not give one Texas citizen meaningful tax relief. It does not reform or fully fund our education system. It does not restore one child to CHIP [Children's Health Insurance Program] who was cut from health insurance last session. It does not put one dime into raising Texas' Third World access to health care. It does not do one thing to care for or protect one elderly person or one child in this state. In fact, it does not even do anything to protect one marriage.

"Members, this bill is about hate and fear and discrimination... When I was a small girl, white folks used to talk about 'protecting the institution of marriage' as well. What they meant was if people of my color tried to marry people of Mr. Chisum's color, you'd often find the people of my color hanging from a tree... Fifty years ago, white folks thought interracial marriages were 'a threat to the institution of marriage.'

"Members, I'm a Christian and a proud Christian. I read the good book and do my best to live by it. I have never read the verse where it says, 'Gay people can't marry.' I have never read the verse where it says, 'Thou shalt discriminate against those not like me.' I have never read the verse where it says, 'Let's base our public policy on hate and fear and discrimination.' Christianity to me is love and hope and faith and forgiveness -- not hate and discrimination.

"I have served in this body a lot of years, and I have seen a lot of promises broken... So... now that blacks and women have equal rights, you turn your hatred to homosexuals, and you still use your misguided reading of the Bible to justify your hatred. You want to pass this ridiculous amendment so you can go home and brag -- brag about what? Declare that you saved the people of Texas from what?

"Persons of the same sex cannot get married in this state now. Texas law does not now recognize same-sex marriages, civil unions, religious unions, domestic partnerships, contractual arrangements or Christian blessings entered into in this state -- or anywhere else on this planet Earth.

"If you want to make your hateful political statements then that is one thing -- but the Chisum amendment does real harm. It repeals the contracts that many single people have paid thousands of dollars to purchase to obtain medical powers of attorney, powers of attorney, hospital visitation, joint ownership and support agreements. You have lost your way. This is obscene...

"I thought we would be debating economic development, property tax relief, protecting seniors' pensions and stem cell research to save lives of Texans who are waiting for a more abundant life. Instead we are wasting this body's time with this political stunt that is nothing more than constitutionalizing discrimination. The prejudices exhibited by members of this body disgust me.

"Last week, Republicans used a political wedge issue to pull kids -- sweet little vulnerable kids -- out of the homes of loving parents and put them back in a state orphanage just because those parents are gay. That's disgusting.

"I have listened to the arguments. I have listened to all of the crap... I want you to know that this amendment [is] blowing smoke to fuel the hell-fire flames of bigotry."

Then they passed the amendment.

Digg!

Molly Ivins writes about politics, Texas and other bizarre happenings.

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Thank you Senfronia
Posted by: nate01 on May 24, 2005 2:16 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Now I love two women from Texas - the first being Molly.

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I Love Molly and Senfronia!
Posted by: mstenger on May 24, 2005 2:22 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Senfronia Thompson is a very wise woman. This proves the awful state our nation is in and that it doesn't matter how eloquently, or down to earth, or how clarifying, or intelligent, or however the hell you explain the truth, the bigots have their ears full of nasty crap that will eternally plug up their nasty heads and they will continue to pass laws that demean, degrade, assault, harm, bash, disenfranchise, marginalize, discriminate and hate us good gay people.

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Texas Is Not Alone - It's Becoming A Persecution
Posted by: thirdmg on May 24, 2005 8:38 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Texas is far from being the only state to pass, or planning to pass, laws attacking gays for no reason other than bigotry. For example, besides the 18 states which now ban gay marriage (often extending to bans on other partnership and contractual arrangements), there are also increasing restrictions on adopting and foster parenting.

Moreover, Louisiana is now the third state to consider placing restrictions on children's books with gay themes (echoes of the attacks on SpongeBob and Buster Bunny). And, in Alabama, a state lawmaker wants to ban gay speech from any institution which receives state money. The law would bar any representation of gays in schools, libraries, and state funded universities. And those examples are just for starters.

Anti-gay attacks by state legislatures have increased so much in number and severity since the last election that the legislative frenzy now amounts to organized persecution. The laws serve only a punitive purpose, and they are becoming for gays what Jim Crow laws once were to African-Americans.

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Another non-issue caused by bad government
Posted by: dennyduke@earthlink.net on May 25, 2005 12:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Gay marriage would be a non-issue were it not for the fact that government intrudes into personal relationships far beyond what may be necessary if any such intrusion is in fact necessary.

Why should anyone have to ask government for approval of an entirely personal relationship (possibly religious, not necessarily so) - as in "getting a marriage license"?

The only excuse has to do with financial concerns, like sharing health insurance or filing joint tax returns. There may have been a time when "the state" had an interest in promoting procreation, and therefore a reason to provide certain privileges to the procreators, like tax breaks. But given that the planet Earth has been overpopulated with humans for at least 10,000 years, maybe it's time to join the present.

So, why not "allow" each of us to choose and specify one other individual as their financial partner, for the sake of these financial issues, and leave marriage and other personal relationships to those involved? Note that this arrangement would "permit" one to have different persons as financial partner and marital partner, certainly an option many would choose!

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Madness
Posted by: sapatatanka on May 25, 2005 1:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It threatens to drive me nuts that "Every nation has the government it deserves".

Why is it that people of good will seem unable to drown these nuts in the ocean of shit the latter produce?

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» RE: Madness Posted by: mazur
» RE: Madness Posted by: apodapa
» RE: Madness Posted by: tangent
Till Death Do Us Part
Posted by: Astroboy on May 25, 2005 4:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It seems the only certain hope for all this bigotry and hatred to pass is when this generation of lawmakers finally gasp their last breath and DIE, and allow room for the next generation to take over and correct the damage done by them and their hateful ilk.

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» RE: Till Death Do Us Part Posted by: lamy_chop
She fights the Konservative Khristian Kult
Posted by: apodapa on May 25, 2005 4:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That woman has bingo!

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weaselpopper
Posted by: weaselpopper on May 25, 2005 4:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Can we enlist Senfronia to move to Kansas?

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we need Senfronia
Posted by: Jean on May 25, 2005 4:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The whole country needs women like Senfronia to start taking the FRONT mikes to cut through the sh@# we've been getting - in every state, county and rural town.

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SENFRONIA AND MOLLY
Posted by: edposton on May 25, 2005 5:06 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
THREE CHEERS FOR SENFRONIA AND MOLLY....HRRRAH! HURRAH! HURRAH

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Erin
Posted by: Erin on May 25, 2005 5:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I nominate Senfronia for President! Here is a woman who really know the meaning of freedom and justice for all.

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» RE: rin Posted by: KAT1291
common damm sence
Posted by: cwazycajun on May 25, 2005 6:01 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Intellegence at last Intellegence at last good god almighty we have intellegence at last

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» RE: common damm sence Posted by: Bic Pentameter
Symbolic Issues, Gotta Love 'em -- NOT
Posted by: hagwind on May 25, 2005 6:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Something I learned going to town meeting (I live in Massachusetts, where some people like to think they don't have much in common with Texas): the amount of time and hot air devoted to an issue is inversely proportional to its importance. This clicked for me the night that the debate over snowmobiles in a certain wooded area of town went on for 45 minutes and the school budget of well over a million dollars (this is a pretty small town, and it was even smaller then) was discussed and approved in about 10 minutes. It wasn't hard to figure out why: The finance committee and the school committee and the school administration had put months into hammering out the school budget, listening, discussing, and balancing priorities. If you wanted to propose a change to the school budget, you had to know as much as they did, which meant you had to have put in almost as much work and thought as they did. To rant about snowmobiles, you didn't have to know much of anything.

The same goes for the legislative body of your choice, not to mention talk-show hosts and a whole lot of other people. Including (gasp!) progressives. We've got our symbolic issues, our litmus-test issues, and we can go from 0 to 85 on any of 'em in 5 seconds flat. This discharges the adrenaline and makes us feel politically virtuous, sure, but what are we missing in the process?

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hate and fear and discrimination
Posted by: 42Years on May 25, 2005 6:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is obviously another ploy to take our attention away from budget and trade deficits, energy, environment, education, Social Security, healthcare, war, nation-building, and a host of others that are under assault by the White House in an attempt to consolidate power and control over the world's financial and natural resources.

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Ava in California
Posted by: singsgood on May 25, 2005 6:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I want to know how Molly Ivins (and Senfronia Thompson for that matter) maintain hope for us all. My daughter suffered through the 2004 election, went to two protest marches with me and now I find I have a cynical, pessimistic, angry 16 year old who believes being involved in politics is an exercise in futility. The response by the Texas legislature to Ms. Thompson's reasonable, logical and irrefutable words supports my daughter's reaction. Advice?

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» RE: Ava in California Posted by: Helen
» RE: Ava in California Posted by: cb
Channeling Forrest
Posted by: tintobrash on May 25, 2005 7:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Remember the Ala...Oh, I meant, just remember Texas that Mama always said 'stupid is as stupid does.'

Signed, Mr. Gump

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Duck and Cover Time
Posted by: dakota on May 25, 2005 7:57 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Did not the words of Jesus fall on the deaf ears of the bigots, money changers, and hate mongers? There is a special place in heaven the the Senfronia Thompson's of this world.

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the truth shall set us free
Posted by: Shakti on May 25, 2005 7:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We need to keep speaking the truth, like Sefronia and Molly, in microphones, telephones, blogs, letters to the editor, emails, with friends ... at every opportunity. The more truth-tellers there are the better.

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» Networking Posted by: Gulliver
» Networking - Part 2 Posted by: Gulliver
enoughOThate
Posted by: eyespy on May 25, 2005 8:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The problem with Ms. Thompson's argument is that these people have also read the good book and come up with this little Biblical tidbit--Thou shalt not lie with mankind as womankind: it is abomination (Lev 18:22 KJV).

Which is then qualified by--For whoever shall commit (this) abomination, even the souls that commit (it) shall be cut off from among their people (Lev 18:29 KJV). Ouch.

Leviticus 18:22 is the wellspring of all homosexual discrimination in the Christian world. Even though true Christians know that Jesus replaced the old ways with His New Covenant, these Stone-Agers persist on using Old Testament hellfire to fry those they hate. Somehow hey've gotten past the ones about not eating shellfish and not killing the adultress AND the adulterer, but the gay one remains with resonance. This all-too-common fundamentalist hypocrisy is both saddening and frightening.

People seeking a path, any path, should not look first to hate and righteous indignation, but to spirituality and community. This, more than anything else, defines Jesus' true mission for us all--our hand needed to build a holy and peaceful world.

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» RE: enoughOThate Posted by: nakis
» RE: enoughOThate Posted by: kattmann
Joe Jacobs, Helena, MT
Posted by: MTguy on May 25, 2005 8:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When you lay it out there as Senfronia Thompson did, how could you not feel the truth of her words? How could you be proud of work like the passage of that amendment to their constitution?

I have my misgivings about adoption rights for Gay couples. Maybe I don't know enough about Gay people in order to be more sure that families constructed in that manner develop good, normally healthy children into good, normally healthy adults. I do know that a normal child needs positive role models both male and female in order to develop properly. That being said, I cannot understand removing children from a loving family environment without a case by case analysis being done first.

Ms. Thompson is right on the money when she called it the legislation of hatred, fear and bigotry.

Leadership ...it starts at the top. It's good to remember the Mr. Bush put out the possibility of a constitutional amendment in a State of the Union address, no less, to insure nationalizing this kind of fear mongering.

I guess these people must have a different Bible than I do. Mine talks about loving your neighbor as yourself. Oh, well, It's just more of the same approach as "killing for Peace" in Iraq. Once you've convinced yourself that what we're doing over there is in the name of Jesus Christ, this isn't such a big leap after all.

Congratulations, Texas. You've done America proud.

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» RE: Joe Jacobs, Helena, MT Posted by: mstenger
» RE: Joe Jacobs, Helena, MT Posted by: paulaH
Ahh, the South.
Posted by: kmeyer on May 25, 2005 8:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Can we just give the south back? You know, pretend they won the "War of Northern Aggression" and let them legislate themselves back to the bronze age? They've completely taken over national politics, which makes no sense. And while we're at it, can we force people who use that Leviticus passage to justify hatred to actually read the entire chapter? How about locking up menstruating women? Keeping slaves? Murdering adulterers? Its all there, in that wonderful literary masterpiece that is Leviticus.

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» Dominionists Posted by: Meta4Life
» RE: Dominionists Posted by: aliagins
retired
Posted by: montana freeman on May 25, 2005 9:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
people of texas ' you should really try to wake up before its to late for you to do so

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Pseudo-Christians
Posted by: thweems on May 25, 2005 9:49 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That's what we need to start calling these people. If they can't get any freaking clue as to what Jesus actually taught, and instead preach a philosophy that's completely antithetical to everything he ever talked about, then we shouldn't dignify them with the moniker of "Christians". They're just a bunch of phonies. We need to stress to this point over and over... These people are not Christians.

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They are scared!
Posted by: Iamnotafruittree on May 25, 2005 10:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
First of all though, women and blacks do not enjoy equality! We are still invisible. Second, the republican christians are picking on gay people so that the world won't find out that they are actually homosexual that turned themselves into perverts. That is the secret, silly! They are hidding in plane site. Hasn't any noticed this yet? Use your new found power wisely!

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I am outraged!
Posted by: Lathor on May 25, 2005 10:31 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My political beliefs cannot be completely summarized on a bumper sticker, but I have to agree with this one:

"If You're Not Outraged...
You're Not Paying Attention."

I AM OUTRAGED! Hell is not where you go after you die if you are an "unbeliever". Hell is what people seem to be trying to perpetrate, IN THIS LIFETIME, for those who are different from them.

WE MUST STOP THEM.

NOW is not too soon.

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It is going to get worse!
Posted by: aliagins on May 25, 2005 10:33 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To read about the real agenda of the Christian Right...
Do a web search for: Dominion Theology; Reconstruction Theology; Kingdom Now Theology and throw in: Rushdoony.
Your eyes will be opened to what they really want to do.

They want to take this nation BACK to Puritianism and while they are at it they want to have dominion of the whole world.

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Can we have Sinfonia instead of ___________?
Posted by: lenal on May 25, 2005 11:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Insert the Texan you would most like to disappear from the national scene, Wa DC has become overrun already with Texans bent on destroying the republic, now we are going to get another right winger nominee in a federal position. Can there be a hope that the R7D7 group can loosen this death grip holding our nation hostage?

lenal

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No surprise here, just more sorrow
Posted by: drSooz on May 25, 2005 11:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Texas Legislature is on a par with Ann Coulter's remark (about 9-11, I believe) that we should just 'go over there, kill all their leaders, and convert them to christianity'. What a great example of a free country we are... NOT!

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Thank you GOD!
Posted by: philosopherintraining on May 25, 2005 11:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
She may be the most wonderful woman I have ever heard of. Some one to finally show people of the world that not all christians are bad!

She has a great arguement, and its... just... so well said.
If more politicians were like her, I feel that the legislative process would be more purposeful.

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» RE: Thank you GOD! Posted by: philosopherintraining
Proud Southerner...
Posted by: aebartle on May 25, 2005 12:02 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I don't think that that was a fair characterization of the South. I am proud of my Southern heritage (Georgia AND Texas), my bachelors degree from Tulane University in Louisiana, and the strong Christian background I received in Georgia, Tennessee, and Kentucky. That being said, there are hypocrites in government everywhere, even the North and the West. Consider, for example, Sen. Orrin Hatch, from Utah. Or Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania, a man so offensive to those of us with sense that a gay newspaper columnist in Chicago uses his name to refer to the by-product of anal sex. Just goes to show you...

We love you Molly Ivins!

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Would Mexico Buy Texas From The U.S.? Let's Sell!
Posted by: Tinyelvis on May 25, 2005 1:48 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Racism and bigotry are the main reasons we moved out of Texas. I am not surprised...with the quality of public education the typical Texan receives, it's no wonder the general population is easily manipulated to hate gays. Let's start a poll what group will be next: we have many to choose from. Then Las Vegas can start making book on the odds of which ethnic/religious group will be discriminated against. Texans can place bets on themselves...and probably lose.

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Deformed in Mind
Posted by: pjrsullivan on May 25, 2005 2:57 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Chrisitianity itself is merely an ideology, a blood cult, of the desert dwelling cannibal tribes. Its greatest value is to control the minds of the populace. That it is in large measure absolutely preposterous and absurd to be basing much of anything on, our mind deformed political class keeps hawking the wares of this tribe.

The absurdity of its practices, helps to create more mind deformed people, who can then be used to commit atrocities against other peoples.

When you think of a "Cretin," what do you see in your mind? Maybe a deformed idiot who lives under a bridge? The word Cretin is the French word for Chrisitian.

When the desert dwellers made their appearance in Europe in the 6th Century, the stretch hat that the Pope and the Cardinals wore was called a Raquette, this is the root of the word "Racket," and oh what a racket it is.

The desert dwellers like to think that they can always fool us, yet from early on the peoples of the north called their game. A Cretin Racket, and that describes our current political form of life.

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kattmann
Posted by: kattmann on May 25, 2005 5:01 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is another sign of a repressive totalitarian state controlled by fear/hate mongoring hipocrits. It's just a religious minority control of the majority. I think there should be a law against ignorance and religious bias. There should be a massive $100 billion law suit against the Tx house for failure to address any real issues, fraud, and the waste of tax payers money to satisfy a few zealots. This issue should be a matter of referendum and be put on the ballot for the next state election. I will never move to TX, nor will I ever visit Tx again. We the People are no longer in control of our government. Is it time we take it back, before it's too late? Or are we too late already?????????

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Sometimes I'm Proud
Posted by: Word Lackey on May 25, 2005 5:50 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sometimes there are these "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington" moments. Nothing inspires me more than to hear a politician speak their mind in bold terms. I'm so used to hearing the mushmouthed and careful-not-to-offend utterances that the clarity is sometimes startling in its brightness.

I can only hope this sort of thing is a trend.

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If you want to send Senfronia a thank you ...
Posted by: supreme commander on May 25, 2005 9:26 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here is a link to send Senfronia an email.

I watch the Blacks and Gays discrimination parallel unfold. AntiGayIsm looks like being the future focus for the ultra-right-wing persecution of minorities with religious underpinning is a potent brew for the more gullable. This is the place to stand up and be counted. It can only get worse before it gets better. It is noteworthy that Hitler came to power in part due to an Anti-Gay mandate.

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Speak Truth to Power
Posted by: Sojourner on May 25, 2005 10:25 PM   
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That's what the Quaker George Fox advocated to replace the reliance on power in worldly affairs. I feel quite sure that he made no promise that his pacifist strategy would win on the issues. I'm sure he believed it would win in the long run.

Sometimes we have to learn how to lose well, as in this case. Does anyone doubt the eventual, while long-delayed, outcome? We can be sure minds already have changed to support gay rights after this encounter. Strength endures, even in its provisional loses to power, so long as the truth does get spoken.

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How it is...
Posted by: pdeep on May 26, 2005 1:19 AM   
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I love the comments so far, and Sonfronia certainly should be thanked and congratulated. One might wonder how it all came to this, where bigotry is worn as a medal of honor.

I, too, am shocked at the rhetoric and the laws but have to admit none of it surprises me. (So much so that I have left the country for good!) The hatred and bigotry were always there. At least in my lifetime. And whenever it came time for someone to stand up for gays, not a soul would, John Kerry's half-hearted sidestepping included. No one ever has stood up for us, mostly I think for fear of being identified as one of us. It's learned early on. Who wants to be called 'faggot' in junior high? Is it any wonder why the laws are getting passed? Senfronia aside, who has had the conscience to stand up for us? The Clintons? Kerry? Dean? Ha! Schwarzenegger? Ha-ha!!!!

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Except this ain't Puritanism
Posted by: amike on May 26, 2005 3:12 AM   
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If one looks at Puritanism early in its development, one finds the generation of John Cotton and John Winthrop in the New World and John Milton in the old was assured, self confident, and intellectually and socially adventuresome--lacking entirely the fortress mentality of the current (pseudo)Christian right. John Milton argued for the right to divorce and against censorship, for example. Fear, disappointment, and lost of power turned later puritans (Cotton Mather's generation) into witch burners. Come to think of it, fear, disappointment, and loss of power (to corporations, among other things) may be why the current crop of (pseudo) Christians on the right behave as they do.

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» Nicely put! Posted by: Sojourner
» Agreed Posted by: HeidiLockwood
Glad To Be Canadian
Posted by: pzzp on May 26, 2005 7:40 AM   
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Need I say more?

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Cultivating ignorance and hate
Posted by: Gulliver on May 27, 2005 9:45 AM   
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I happen to have some fundies in my family, so I get a whiff of what's floats so execrably through that world. One of the most absurd concepts, which they expound passionately, is the myth of gay recruitment. They're utterly convinced that gay people are out to turn everybody else gay, though I haven't had the stomach to investigate it enough how they bend their logic to such conclusions (I am, in the interest of full disclosure, hetero, though that shouldn't matter, should it? Does it matter to you? If so, why?) This is the rationale for keeping gay teachers out of the schools. "Won't someone please think of the children?!?!" The fear of gay recruitment is a major tool in keeping this issue alive. After all, if that belief were not widespread, then the other issues of gay marriage and all would take on much less of a threat status.

What really gets me about the whole antigay movement in this country is what is so rarely said openly: What on earth does it matter what orifice someone else prefers to use to obtain sexual pleasure? The hypocrisy of the uptight right is nowhere more outrageously demonstrated than in the recent revelations about that self-aggrandizing paternalistic self-righteous jerk Dr. Hager, who'd bugger his narcoleptic wife when she was out for the count, then claiming he couldn't tell the difference between her anus and her vagina. This from an OB/GYN, mind you, who'd written several books on how his god expects women to be treated, and given such pithy advice to the nation as using Bible readings to treat PMS. Seriously!

So what is the story with this sodomy business? For one thing, isn't it kind of weird to use that one catch-all word to include anal intercourse and oral sex, whether between opposite sex or same sex couples? And to make it illegal? I mean, how many of these "straight" defenders of our morality participate in such heinous practices on a regular basis with their own spouses? Or wish they did! Hager used to pay his wife up to $2000 for a blow job! And even at that rate he rarely got her to go for it. And don't get me started on Horsely and his mules!

(More below if you're not tired of my rant by now...)

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God Used to Smile on the USA
Posted by: eormama on May 27, 2005 4:21 PM   
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I am a disabled woman---blind & a cancer survivor---who will be 57 years old in September of this year; I have read this article & several of the comments from other readers; I am not a perfect person, but I do feel that I am open to change, aware of the needs of others & able to imagine the obstacles others must face in daily life; I too am a Christian--but I follow a God of Love & Compassion--not one of fear, ignorance or hatred of what is unknown; I am also the mother of an adult son; he is 28 years old & black & I am white; I was one of those brave pioneers who challenged the 'race should not mix' concept of love & marriage; my son is in the Gay community; when I first learned of my son's Gay lifestyle, I was against it & told him so often; one day God spoke to my heart & told me to be quiet, love my son & let God deal with it; I did so; instead of alienating my son to the point of not having him in my life--we are now closer than we've ever been; it shames me to know that there are still people on the earth who feel that they have the right to dictate the lifestyles or love arrangements of other people; I grew up in the era of the 'hippies' & the 'love child'; we changed the world in so many ways--most of them for the better; it was the beginning of the 'acceptance' of others for 'who' they were---not for 'what' they owned or for the 'color' of their skins; not only did the African Americans & Hispanics of the USA gain power over their lives---but so did 'women'; there is 'NO' one man, woman or child who is the 'PROPERTY' of any other person; I do NOT blame the government leaders for the negative aspects of laws being presented in today's times; I blame each one of us who did not vote, who did not contact a Senator or Representative with our opionions of bad laws, who did not look into the future to see 'how' a particular law would affect all of us---were the leaders being truthful or misrepresenting the facts?; the God that I serve has given us a two-edged sword of truth & justice; the truth is that we--as people--have accepted what others say we should think, feel, do & our justice will be when we face God & have to account for our lives, our minds & our hearts; promote love; promote peace between all people; and most importantly--stand up for what you know to be right & true; Pamela

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Reasons For Gay Recruitment Myth
Posted by: thirdmg on May 28, 2005 11:53 AM   
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The myth of gay recruitment, raised by Gulliver in a previous message, is part of a larger package of interconnecting ideas tirelessly promoted by the fundamentalists. Among them are the following. God made Adam and Eve, which means, by interpretation, heterosexual male and female. God doesn't make gays; everyone is born heterosexual. Therefore, homosexual orientation or behavior must be an induced perversion, probably by bad parenting or sexual abuse, but also through seduction (recruitment) or tolerance of gays. The story about Lot in Sodom and Gomorrah is "historical" evidence that entire populations can become homosexual if not prevented. (Apparently, however, Lot wasn't so sure of that. Lot, a sad monument to the deficiencies of Old Testament morality, offered his daughters for abuse by the men outside his house.)

A corollary to all of the above is that there are no gay kids and, therefore, no need to protect gay kids from bullying and abuse in the schools. Those kids only need proper counseling in being straight. Moreover, hostility to kids being gay is an inducement for them to become straight.

Another corollary is that gays can become ex-gays through sufficient motivation and proper religious and psychological counseling. Although the phoniness of those claims has been repeatedly exposed and condemned, for a variety of reasons they retain their attractiveness. One reason is that many parents are desperate to avoid having gay children, and many gays are desperate to believe that it is possible to be ex-gay. Another reason is that it is possible for professionals in mental health care to make tens of thousands of dollars through offering to "cure" individuals.

What allows the fundamentalists to keep these myths afloat is not only the closed social structures they have created around themselves. Through polling done years ago, their leaders found that a majority of Americans believe that being gay is both a choice and immoral. And, as long as Americans believe that, they regard gays rights as an issue of morality, not as an issue of civil rights. Fundamentalist leaders take advantage of that finding by constantly playing to it. That's why you hear them repeatedly claiming that being gay is a choice and why you hear them repeating the term "special rights."

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Bumper Sticker
Posted by: krumattic on Jun 6, 2005 4:48 AM   
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Bumpersticker for Texas: Texas, You Can Have It

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