Susan's Place Logo

News:

Visit our Discord server  and Wiki

Main Menu

The Advocate's Person of the Year: Pope Francis

Started by LearnedHand, December 17, 2013, 07:12:04 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

DriftingCrow

http://www.advocate.com/year-review/2013/12/16/advocates-person-year-pope-francis
Author: Lucas Grindley Source: The Advocate

When deciding who was the single most influential person of 2013 on the lives of LGBT people, there are obvious choices. At least, they seem so at first. [. . . ] Edie Windsor is a hero, one well worth recording in history books that retell the story of DOMA's demise. But she is not the Person of the Year. She couldn't possibly be, not for The Advocate, where we celebrate the work of so many who contributed to that landmark Supreme Court victory.

Pope Francis's stark change in rhetoric from his two predecessors — both who were at one time or another among The Advocate's annual Phobie Awards — makes what he's done in 2013 all the more daring. First there's Pope John Paul II, who gay rights activists protested during a highly publicized visit to the United States in 1987 because of what had become known as the "Rat Letter" — an unprecedented damning of homosexuality as "intrinsically evil." It was written by one of his cardinals, Joseph Ratzinger, who went on to become Pope Benedict XVI. [. . . ] Pope Francis is still not pro-gay by today's standard.

One could imagine how acceptance of LGBT people might fit into the pope's case for loving every human being and valuing the contribution made by each to society. With less than a year as pope, Francis still must show whether his aspiration ends at not being our enemy. Will he be an agent for fighting our discrimination worldwide?

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
While I do like Pope Francis and hope he'll make things a bit more inclusive in the Catholic church, I don't really think he's done enough for LGBT people to be person-of-the-year for an LGBT-catered magazine. While there were tons of lawyers, legal-groups, etc. I don't see why Edie Windsor couldn't have gotten their award; she might not have done everything by herself but she was certainly the figurehead of the recent marriage equality movement in the USA.
ਮਨਿ ਜੀਤੈ ਜਗੁ ਜੀਤੁ
  •  

dalebert

Wow, just... wow. The bar is being lowered. Now all you have to do to be considered an LGBT activist is say that we should be not quite as evil toward gay people.

Jamie D

  •  

dalebert

Quote from: Jamie D on December 20, 2013, 06:52:02 PM
Every journey begins with a first step.

I'll be the first to say he's a hell of a lot better than previous popes, but PERSON OF THE YEAR?

Amy The Bookworm

Quote from: dalebert on December 22, 2013, 10:09:27 PM
I'll be the first to say he's a hell of a lot better than previous popes, but PERSON OF THE YEAR?

One of the great things about Francis is ... he probably doesn't care about being person of the year.
  •  

dalebert

Quote from: Amy The Bookworm on December 23, 2013, 08:52:21 AM
One of the great things about Francis is ... he probably doesn't care about being person of the year.

I beg to differ. I think he was selected for his PR and damage control potential and that's what his focus is right now. This is great PR and damage control for the Catholic church.

DriftingCrow

The Advocate's Person of the Year: 'Idiotic' or 'Important?'
http://www.advocate.com/year-review/2013/12/19/advocates-person-year-idiotic-or-important
Source: The Advocate Author: Sunnivie Brydum

We knew that naming Pope Francis The Advocate's Person of the Year would spark conversation both within and outside our readership. And judging by the international discussion we've seen since the pick was announced on Monday, that's exactly what the decision did

A writer at the Daily Kos agreed with our assessment that Pope Francis' rhetorical shift could indicate an important departure from longstanding Church-based homophobia. "Francis is certainly not what I would call a 'progressive' on these matters, but compared to some of his predecessors, he's positively radical in his insistence on treating all people with dignity," writes user commonmass.

Michaelangelo Signorile, an outspoken LGBT activist [. . . ] acknowledges that the best thing about this LGBT publication naming Pope Francis its person of the year is that it's driven right-winger Bill Donahue of the Catholic League "into a vessel-popping rage."

"But mostly, this was idiotic," Signorile continues. "Pope Francis is a lot of things to many people in the world. But he is not our hero of the LGBT community in 2013. [. . . ]
ਮਨਿ ਜੀਤੈ ਜਗੁ ਜੀਤੁ
  •  

dalebert

Quote from: LearnedHand on December 29, 2013, 12:27:59 AM
Michaelangelo Signorile, an outspoken LGBT activist [. . . ] acknowledges that the best thing about this LGBT publication naming Pope Francis its person of the year is that it's driven right-winger Bill Donahue of the Catholic League "into a vessel-popping rage."

Okay. I will acknowledge the silver lining of this cloud.  >:-)