Quote from: Kaweah on November 15, 2008, 10:08:57 PM
Quote from: nickie on November 15, 2008, 06:26:30 PM
I wonder how the Mormon sect would feel if they could no longer marry more than one woman?
While I think the Mormon Church deserves the negative attention it is getting, to be fair we need to remember that the mainstream Mormon Church hasn't approved of polygamy since 1890. Polygamy has been grounds for excommunication since 1921.
They have not approved of it. But they still believe in it. It is still a fundamental aspect of their doctrine.
BUT, this is not about the Mormon church. This is about equal rights. I agree that we should not demand attention from the new presidency of our country. Quite frankly, Obama has a full dump load of doo doo to clean up and will not be able to focus attention on anything but the highest priority items.
We have protested here in California, all over the state today for equal rights in marriage. In the out of the way very conservative town where I live, some 70 people gathered together to protest the recent proprosition that rescinded rights for a minority group. Of the 70 in attendance, there were three gay couples. Everyone else was not. We had many married people, teens, and singles. We were jeered at, people stuck up their middle fingers and yelled obscenities as they drove by. But you know what? In this town, where the measure passed in favor of the religious majority, we had resounding support from most people driving by. I believe that we are at a turning point.
This is not about a national agenda, it is about a majority ammending our state constitution through a ballot measure rescinding existing rights of a minority group. This is much more than a gay issue. This has never been done before in this country. Additionally, we are fighting the very concept of changing our state constitution without convention and through a proposition. There are three lawsuits pending in our courts to challenge the popular decree to diminish existing rights of a minority group.
I remember (even though I was very young at the time) during the civil rights marches of the 60's someone said that blacks would never have equal rights until whites would stand with them in protest. In my community, straight people stood up for gays today.
The major religions have drawn a battle line here in California over gay rights. We will fight here and we will win. We do not need the help of the federal government, nor do we want it. We do realize that we Californians do set the stage for the rest of the country. If we can help gays attain the same rights we all share here, then it is only a matter of time until the rest of the country must follow.
No matter how you stand on these issues, know this: WE will never have equal rights before gays have them. They are in line first. We can not hope to receive the attention on issues we feel important until gay rights are firmly established.
Cindi