Pedestrian

Entries from May 2009

The 18k Silver Lining in the Prop 8 Decision

May 28, 2009 · 3 Comments

October 5, 2008

October 5, 2008

A lot of tears were shed shortly after 10am PT on May 26, 2009 – here’s one news report which includes my wife, Moya Watson, mentioning that she wept on the NBC evening news, here’s an AP article that quoted me while I was wiping away tears.

Now that we’ve used up a box of tissues, I’m getting a bit tired of the insults thrown at California despite the disappointing cowardly, and, yes, shameful ruling. I see a lot of hope and momentum and cause for optimism partially because California still provides more legal protection for GLBT couples than most states.  Despite the tears this week, here we were in October 2008 talking with Michael Tomasky about worry that our marriage would be invalidated … and it wasn’t.

Think about the 4 states in 6 weeks, and then try on this tasty tidbit from Justice Moreno, “The rule the majority crafts … places at risk the state constitutional rights of all disfavored minorites.”  It’s shameful that more of the justices didn’t concur with him, but at least it wasn’t 7-0.  I highly recommend reading Moreno’s entire opinion (PDF – Moreno’s opinion starts on page 151).  It’ll make you feel good.

Mark Morford writes, “Sorry, enemies of gay marriage. Prop 8 or no, you’ve already lost.”

The Daily Kos points out some of the positive parts on page 36 of the decision:

Today, the court unanimously upheld the substantive fundamental right.  Liberal to conservative, they all now accept it.  They construed Prop 8 as narrowly as possible: as a initiative that addressed what we would label these relationships that we normally call marriage.  The voters said that we can’t call these relationships “marriage” when they involve same-sex couples.  That’s an insult to gays and lesbians and I hope and believe that it will not last.  But note what this does not say.

I disagree with Andrew Sullivan’s assertion that the ruling was “the right call,” and I appreciate his optimism that …

It would have been equally dreadful if those couples lawfully wed were subsequently forced into divorce by the court. And these married couples and their families and children will now become the focus of the debate in California, as they should be. They are the evidence that we are right: that extending the blessings and responsibilities of full family life to gay men and lesbians is a good and conservative and integrating thing. We need now to put these families forward as our core argument. Their lives are our best case. Like mixed-race married couples in another era, they will show that there is nothing to fear here and much to celebrate.

A legal writer for Andrew Sullivan’s Daily Dish (at The Atlantic) argues that the decision further solidifies gay rights:

It appears that this is a blockbuster pro-gay-rights decision, restricting the effect of Prop 8 to the effect of removing the designation of gay civil unions as “marriage,” but upholding all equal rights previously declared by the Court; and, suggesting that if the opponents of gay rights were to try to restrict equal union rights for gays by constitutional change, such change would be an Amendment (not a revision) and thus would be procedurally much more difficult to accomplish.

Being able to lay claim to the word “marriage” is important, but in all other respects this appears to be a spectacular decision in favor of gay rights.

The word “marriage” is very important, and I plan to take up this cause and, like Dan Savage suggests, show how my marriage is doing no harm and is, in fact, doing a lot of good.

The anti-gay bigots said before the decision that they wanted Prop 8 upheld and they weren’t concerned about the 18K gay couples who wed while same-sex marriage was briefly legal in CA. That exposes their fundamental dishonesty. If they believe, as they claimed during the campaign, that married same-sex couples are a threat to the family, a threat to children, an invitation to hurricanes and earthquakes and wildfires, and that the existence of married gay couples somehow requires homosexuality to be taught in schools, how can they be indifferent to 18K married gay couples rattling around the state? Won’t all those bad things still happen?

(Related side note: I’m completely intrigued – and I know many think this is a horrible move – by Bush administration solicitor general Ted Olson taking up the cause in federal court.)

I’m still angrysad about the decision, and I’ve started to feel that my membership in the California Supreme Court certified special class of 18,000 married couples can be a powerful spot instead of an awkward angrysad part of a small minority.  Now I want some membership schwag.  I’m thinking of gold-embossing a copy of our October 2008 marriage certificate and putting it on t-shirts.  Perhaps my membership in the certified special class of 18,000 can help me inspire some Yes on 8 voters to also vote Yes in 2010 on the proposition to legalize marriage equality and undo the harm of Prop 8.

I also believe, as does my wife, Moya, that marriage will and should eventually be downsized to a religious word and what we now consider to be legal civil marriage should instead be a legal civil union for all couples with marriages left to religion.

With ads including gay/lesbian couples, pun intended, coming out now (unlike the advertising during the No on Prop 8 campaign which specifically excluded gay/lesbian couples), and hopefully more people like myself going out and introducing ourselves to Yes on 8 voters, maybe they won’t be so afraid of us and maybe they’ll see we’re not so unlike them.

Ruben and Hector (30 seconds)

Frances and Cynthia (30 seconds)

Kate Kendell: Tell your story and NoDumbQuestions.org will show you how to do it. (2 minutes)

For anyone who voted Yes on 8 and is planning to vote No on the marriage equality proposition next year, I’m still working out my anger before I come to meet you with a more friendly tone, so, for now, as Lily Allen sings, Fuck you very much for voting to hurt my family:

Categories: civil rights · happiness · marriage · obama · president · prop 8
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Obama makes a joke at our expense

May 28, 2009 · Leave a Comment

President Obama played dumb last night when he was in Beverly Hills raising money and made the LGBT community the butt of his joke. As the NY Times blog The Caucus reports:

A gaggle of sign-waving protestors milled around outside The Beverly Hilton, the sprawling hotel on Wilshire Boulevard. They must have caught the president’s eye when he arrived at the hotel from an earlier stop in Las Vegas because he relayed one of their messages to the crowd.

“One of them said, “Obama keep your promise,’ ” the president said. “I thought that’s fair. I don’t know which promise he was talking about.”

The people in the audience – who paid $30,400 per couple to attend – laughed as they ate a dinner of roasted tenderloin, grilled organic chicken and sun choke rosemary mashed potatoes.

That “gaggle” of sign-waving protestors was a couple hundred people asking President Obama to live up to his promise to repeal Don’t Ask Don’t Tell.

Outside, Lt Dan Choi spoke at the protest, saying, “Love is so worth it:”

Categories: civil rights · obama · president
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Shame on you, California Supreme Court

May 26, 2009 · 2 Comments

outside the California Supreme Court after Prop 8 decision was r

outside the California Supreme Court after Prop 8 decision was r

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I now belong to a “special” group of approximately 18,000 who are married in the state of California even though the constitution does not allow us to be married.  As Ana Marie Cox tweeted:

“CA Supreme Court follows People vs. KFC precedent: no more gay marriage except for 18,000 who already used coupon.” (via @pourmecoffee)

I know there are probably many good logical spins to explain how/why a court who declared us a suspect class has now upheld discrimination against us, but I do not get it. Page 7 of the opinion is no comfort that they even meant anything  they wrote a year ago:

Nor does Proposition 8 fundamentally alter the meaning and substance of state constitutional equal protection principles as articulated in that opinion. Instead, the measure carves out a narrow and limited exception to these state constitutional rights, reserving the official designation of the term “marriage” for the union of opposite-sex couples as a matter of state constitutional law, but leaving undisturbed all of the other extremely significant substantive aspects of a same-sex couple’s state constitutional right to establish an officially recognized and protected family relationship and the guarantee of equal protection of the laws.

This sounds like an awfully thin curtain of one word dividing first class citizens from second class citizens. So my family has the right to a recognized and protected relationship, but the word, when clearly words matter, is solely reserved for opposite-sex couples, even though that word has clear advantages and rights that are being denied to same-sex couples.

At least Justice Moreno included a piece of Varnum v. Brien (Iowa 2009) 763 N. W.2d 862,877 as the introduction to his opinion:

[T]he ‘absolute equity of all’ persons before the law [is] ‘the very foundation principle of our government.’

My entry into a special class

My entry into a special class

Categories: civic center · marriage · prop 8 · san francisco
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A New Scientist

May 20, 2009 · 3 Comments

Lucy announced this week, on walk home from school, “I want to be a scientist when I grow up.”  I tried to respond with calm and support and only imagined myself jumping up and down and cheering.

She's been afraid to lift her legs off the ground while the bike is moving, but shortly after this photo was taken she did it and lifted her legs up and floated. Bravery! Courage!

She can be just about anything she wants, but I have a soft spot of extra enthusiasm for girls wanting to be scientists, and also a strict promise to myself to try not to require it of her or overly emphasize it.  Since this announcement she’s started describing some specific things (maybe she’s done this before and I only recently noticed) as scientist toys or scientist books or scientist play.  And, oh,  don’t I want to hold onto this confidence and desire and interest she has and spread it out amongst her whole life like soft butter on a pancake.

Confident conspiring stance

"C'mon, let's go find the puppies!"

Categories: happiness · preschoolers
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