Quote from: Sandy on June 19, 2009, 02:46:37 PM
It does not change thoughts, agreed. But neither did the civil rights act of 1964.
But the civil rights act did change behavior through laws.
And over time, behavior changed thought.
Actually, the act itself changed very little behavior beyond the collective behavior of some Fed. government bureaus in some states.
In 1964 I was in elementary school. Lemme see, O yeah, I was in 9th grade when the first black faces arrived -- three males --- from being bused away across the county and past the school we all lived within three miles of.
In 1974 or so the Feds started demanding "busing for the purpose of racially balancing schools." By the 1990s pretty much every district (not those in the Northeast where township schools are common and are perhaps the largest perpetrators of segregation even today) in the country was as integrated as it could be.
So, over time, yes, the overt behaviors have gone underground into peoples hearts and minds where they still harbor racial animosities, but generally do not apply those to workplace, schools and housing. Although the churches are prolly the most segregated aspect of USA-life we still have.
Now, Obama can sign a few executive orders, hell, he may even decide to draft some legislation and submit it through this or that Rep for passing by the House and Senate. But just like he makes a budget and submits that, but then has no major control over how Congress passes that budget, he has no control over Federal laws.
tekla's absolutely spot-on. Just like LBJ for civils rights, Obama might be able to push this or that and certainly he can use the "bully pulpit," but actually changing laws he's not going to be able to do. Congress does that and the SC rules, if suits are filed, whether or not those laws pass muster with the constitution.
So the Obama press-secretary or spin-doctors can speak to what tekla said, but if they do they'd be actually "spinning" you the truth of American constitutional practice.
And as was also mentioned -- I'm sorry, it does strike me that there are more than a few current events that trouble me a whole lot more than do DOMA and ENDA and whether or not "gay" marriage is recognized by the Feds.
I mean, it would be nice, for instance, to see a Federal Water Authority to help states learn to parcel out water rights, and a Federal Clean Air and Water Act that was enforced, strictly. It would be nice if, perhaps, the Feds would shut the DEA out of insisting that hemp = marijuana for the simple fact is that hemp could help replace and reduce toxic items like petrochemical fertilizers and ethanol costs, building materials for construction in everything from office buildings to houses and garages, fiber for clothing rather than the current polyester (both cheaper, stronger and longer-lasting -- Levi's used to "wear like iron" because they were originally made from hemp, not cotton.
Yes, LTBG issues are important to me, but I'd rather see some action on a few of those things I listed prior to me getting too concerned about repeal of DOMA and whether or not LTBG-folk can openly serve in the military. Those things are window-dressing and the real issues of our lives are much more mundane and foundational and get consistently ignored.
Radicals need to get educated instead of getting angry about the non-essentials. If my TN BC never gets changed to F then fine with me as long as the planet I live on isn't being made dead-space in the name of the choice of couches I can make for my living-room, or whether or not my friends Les and Russell can get married while one is serving his final hitch in the Navy.
Get real here, folks. Please.
Nichole