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Rick336
11-13-2008, 12:06 PM
In an email to the members of the Human Rights Campaign, President Joe Solmonese talks about last week's defeat in the fight for LGBT equality:



Normally, I would wait until Friday to write to you, but with all that's going on right now, I felt it was important to speak to you today.

Our community is facing great challenges in the wake of the outcomes of ballot initiative fights in California, Arizona and Florida. Now, we must decide how to approach the obstacles ahead.

As Martin Luther King wrote in his Letter from a Birmingham Jail:

Will we be extremists for hate or will we be extremists for love? Will we be extremists for the preservation of injustice--or will we be extremists for the cause of justice?

On November 4, less than six months after the California Supreme Court ruled that lesbian and gay people are fully equal under the law, a slim majority of voters declared that we are not.

In Arizona and Florida voters also took away rights we had not yet even been granted.

We are angry - and that anger has moved to the streets.

Our rights were stripped. Our love was branded unworthy of the name marriage, though our commitments and responsibilities to each other are worthy of nothing less.

We are determined the world will see we are not an issue; we are families. Many of us are people of faith; many are people of color; our children play with yours; all of us are neighbors.

The Mormon Church played a huge role in the travesty called Proposition 8. In response, there have been protests at churches. The Mormon community faced persecution in its early years. In the wake of Prop 8, I question whether members of that community have forgotten the lessons of their struggle.

Likewise, the Roman Catholic Church disregarded the history of sectarian oppression and pursued a campaign of deceit and misinformation in support of Prop 8 reminiscent of the anti-Catholic movement of the early 1800s.

It is chilling to realize the Catholic and Mormon Churches knew they were telling lies - that marriage equality would require children to learn about homosexuality in school - priests would be required to solemnize marriages of same sex couples - and they lied anyway.

As our community and allies exercise our uniquely American right to protest, I hope we will remember the lessons of the HIV/AIDS protests in the 1980s. We were angry, but strategic; impassioned, but smart. Our actions in the streets will set the tone for the ongoing debate about marriage equality. Let us be motivated by our pain, while we model love and justice.

The fact that 70% of African Americans voted for Prop 8 has been particularly jarring. Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people have depended on the real leadership exerted on our behalf by African American leaders. As the Obamas move to the White House, the African American family is receiving long overdue respect. We, too, strive to have all families supported and valued by society.

We ask ourselves why the community that has endured the most violent and persistent discrimination in our country's history failed to understand our struggle for human rights. The results of the campaign have fueled rage. Yet this is misdirected anger. We obviously failed to communicate to African Americans the interdependence of our struggles.

The question before us now is, will we stray from our own path toward justice, and reduce a human rights movement to tactics of recrimination? How we respond to Prop 8 and defeats in Arizona and Florida will define our success, and say much about who we are.

To my community and allies, I say this: our anger is just; our goal is alive. We must remain worthy of the cause we fight for. Our cause is love; and only through love can we win the freedom to marry. In the streets and over coffee, our message must be consistent. We love our soul mates and our families; we love and respect our neighbors; we expect love and respect in return.

To reverse the outcomes of November 4, we must embrace our passion and anger, and redirect them to tasks that have as yet gone undone.

We must take this election as an occasion to look inward. In our California, Arizona and Florida campaigns, we asked diverse communities to hear our stories and respect our rights. But have we heard the concerns of the people we asked to listen to us? We assert that equal marriage rights are basic human rights. We must also show that our concern for human rights does not end with marriage. We must make clear alliance with those we seek as coalition partners.

As we ask communities of color and religious communities to engage and partner with us, we must demonstrate our commitment to the people and issues they care about. We must show that we will not abandon forty-seven million uninsured once we have domestic partner benefits, and that non-discrimination laws are not enough when legions of children are denied equal opportunity by failing schools, violence, and racism. We must stand with immigrants as they, too, seek to fully realize the American dream.

Our campaigns to beat back discriminatory ballot measures in California, Arizona, Florida and Arkansas failed to help others who have experienced discrimination understand that putting the rights of one minority up for a vote puts everyone's rights at risk. That is a conversation with our neighbors that starts today. I hope I will be better able to communicate with them, not because my argument is sound, but because they will be better able to hear me as we labor together for justice for all.

Now is the time to be constructive with our hurt and disappointment. This weekend, thousands in all 50 states will take to the streets with one common goal in mind—full equality for all—let us not forget that our cause is one of civil respect rooted in justice and fairness. Marchers will call not only for justice for LGBT families, but for an end to all the oppressions that hold our nation back and give the false impression that our differences are more profound than what we have in common. To locate a Join the Impact rally near you, please click here.

During and after the Join the Impact protests, we must all recommit ourselves to confront our neighbors with our love.

I will engage my Mormon, Catholic, and African American neighbors—and will ask them to engage me in their lives. I am ready to listen and act on their behalf while I make my case for their support.

November 4 showed us how much work is left to do, but it also brought out the passion we will need for that work. We must hold on to it, and use it wisely. We seek to live as loving families in peace and equality with our neighbors. We trust in the power of love.

Warmly,

Joe Solmonese
President, Human Rights Campaign


Rick

Matt Algren
11-13-2008, 01:46 PM
It was nice of him to chime in after he got back from his spa vacation (http://www.boxturtlebulletin.com/2008/11/11/6117).

Rick336
11-13-2008, 02:21 PM
It was nice of him to chime in after he got back from his spa vacation (http://www.boxturtlebulletin.com/2008/11/11/6117).

Jim Burroway of the boxturtle website you included in your post says, “It’s like they’re [Human Rights Campaign] not even trying anymore.”

HRC donated 2 million dollars to the "No on 8" Campaign. Is there anything on how much Boxturtle donated?

Rick

Zerbie
11-13-2008, 03:26 PM
Jim Burroway of the boxturtle website you included in your post says, “It’s like they’re [Human Rights Campaign] not even trying anymore.”

HRC donated 2 million dollars to the "No on 8" Campaign. Is there anything on how much Boxturtle donated?

Rick


Jim is based in Tucson, AZ.
Jim was a MAJOR force in fighting against Prop 102 here in Arizona this year, donating countless, countless hours of time and organizing in the absence of any available budget for fighting the proposition.

Arizona was ignored. IGNORED! Most of the major LGBT rights groups didn't even MENTION AZ in their email updates right up to the day of the election.

If Box Turtle Bulletin is disappointed about that, they have every right to be.

Rick336
11-13-2008, 03:35 PM
Arizona was ignored. IGNORED! Most of the major LGBT rights groups didn't even MENTION AZ in their email updates right up to the day of the election.


Wow. I can see why Jim and others in Arizona would be upset. I hope Jim confronted HRC and the other LGBT groups about this unfairness besides posting criticisms on a website.

Rick

Matt Algren
11-13-2008, 04:00 PM
Jim Burroway of the boxturtle website you included in your post says, “It’s like they’re [Human Rights Campaign] not even trying anymore.”

HRC donated 2 million dollars to the "No on 8" Campaign. Is there anything on how much Boxturtle donated?

Rick
Like Zerbie said, Jim Burroway was part of the leadership in the Arizona campaign. IIRC, Tim Kincaid was active elsewhere, though I can't find the reference now. And that's on top of the tremendous resource that the BTB has become.

HRC is pretty high profile, though. It would have been great to see them pitch in with more than money either before the vote or in facilitation of the protests after.

Alecto
11-13-2008, 04:54 PM
HRC is indeed high profile, but they're failures are catching up with them. They're kind of the "fighting the system from within the system" folks, and I guess we probably need that, but...
They're part of the problem when they push marriage as the totality of gay equality (Ok, Arkansas did get a mention in this letter, but only one, and it didn't even talk about what the proposition in Arkansas did. Hint: it wasn't about marriage)
They're part of the problem when they promote rights based on two white lesbians living in the suburbs with 2.5 kids and a couple goldfish. These two white lesbians do exist, and do deserve rights, but the truth is the leather daddies in the city deserve the same access to rights as everyone else.
They're part of the problem when repeatedly, and for LONG before the (G)ENDA mess, they did little to include transgender issues in their work.

They exist, and they're probably still useful for something, but they've got a LOT of issues to iron out, and throwing money at this most recent election doesn't give them a pass on those.

BenL
11-13-2008, 07:59 PM
Joe Solomnese's letter is eloquent and makes some good points, but he and his organization have a lot to make up for. I am a gay man married to a transman, and we never felt so abandoned as we did when HRC negotiated away transgender rights to get a vote in the House that they knew was either going to be scuttled by the Senate and/or vetoed by President Bush. He squandered a lot of good will in the LGBT community, and it will be years, if ever, before I will support HRC again.

Physician, heal thyself.

tdogg
11-13-2008, 08:41 PM
Amen Alecto!

With all the daily numerous emails from HRC and No on Prop 8 asking for money, I expected great things. When I heard about the donations increasing and nearly matching the "Yes" donations, I was excited, and expected even great things. Sadly, I didn't see anything great other than the heart and soul poured into the efforts of everyday people like us. I kept waiting for the clincher, the biggie, the TV ad refuting all the lies (yeah, I kept expecting something like Keith Oberman gave us the other night), but nothing. Not a thing worth what was donated.

Phone banking with 90% of the calls going to answering machines. Holding signs on street corners, in gay friendly neighborhoods (some of us took it upon ourselves to show up in the not so gay friendly areas), talking to voters for hours on end election day, in pre-determined gay friendly neighborhoods.

In the end I didn't feel like anything I did made much of a difference. Some of it made me feel pretty good, some made me feel pretty bad but I question the effectiveness. It would have been nice to have seen more from these organizations. That is my opinion of how things went down in CA anyway. Like Zerbie says, there wasn't much on any other state.

Rick336
11-13-2008, 09:56 PM
I donated money to fight Prop 8, but not being directly involved in fighting against state amendments banning gay equality in California, Arizona, Florida, and Arkansas, it's difficult for me to feel the anger towards the Human Rights Campaign that some of you are feeling.

I've been a supporter of HRC off and on since it was founded by Steve Endean in 1980. I knew Steve personally from his work with the Minnesota Committee for Gay Rights in the 70s and I know that he believed in working within the system for change. I think that HRC still believes that.

I have always held high respect for HRC much as I do Soulforce and PFLAG. HRC has worked hard lobbying congress for LGBT rights and I think their work will finally pay off within the next year or so with the new congress and administration.

I understand the resentment towards the organization for negotiating away transgender rights with the Employment Non-Discrimination Act. But transgender rights are a goal of the organization and will probably be included in this lobbying effort. I think we should acknowledge that the organization has worked hard for the passage of the Matthew Shepard Act, and the repeal of "Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell".

I see nothing wrong with productive criticism of HRC or to suggest changes for the organization that can best benefit the national community. But I don't think it's fair to suggest that HRC is totally ineffective or that they waste time lying around a health spa while the rest of the country is reeling from the latest rounds of defeats.

HRC provides a contact page and asks for feedback. If you’re dissatisfied, tell them how you feel:

http://www.hrc.org/contactus.asp


Rick