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| View Poll Results: I am interested in discussing MLK's speeches | |||
| Strongly Disagree |
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1 | 9.09% |
| Disagree |
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2 | 18.18% |
| Neither Agree Nor Disagree |
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2 | 18.18% |
| Agree |
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3 | 27.27% |
| Strongly Agree |
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3 | 27.27% |
| Voters: 11. You may not vote on this poll | |||
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#1
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There does not seem to be a lot of interest in discussing Dr. King's speeches and how they apply to LGBT civil rights. I am going to discontinue this discussion for now. Maybe the time is not right.
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#2
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Don't be discouraged, I think the timing is bad. I know that I've been extremely busy completing the Dining Room, planning a party (1 hour from now) and busy at school with my classes. I've wanted to get into those threads, but have avoided them because I know I can't put the time into them that I want to.
january or february?
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Tolerate one another, just as I have tolerated you.- Jesus Christ? |
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#3
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Anthony,
I have thought the speeches were quite interesting and valuable. I have noticed on the threads where we have had ongoing discussions that the participation drops off steadily over time. I like the continuity, but it doesn't seem to work well with most people here. Maybe a new speech every month? Pablo
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For I am convinced that neither life nor death...neither the present nor the future nor anything in all creation will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord. Romans 8:38-39 |
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#4
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#5
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King has wonderful ideas about civil rights. BUT if he were alive today, what would he be doing? That is the discussion you should be having. We can learn from the past, but we cannot live there. Think more about what we can do with the lessons of king not his speeches.....
Just my 2 cents..... |
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#6
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Yeah, I think the timing is an issue. I read one of the speeches and loved reading it, but that was all I wound up taking time for: with regular life, planning travel (we're going all over the place these next few weeks), the usual end of semester chaos, and the round of holiday parties which we have to go to or we won't see our friends or colleagues for like, 2 months
, I took a pass on clicking on these meaty (tofu-y?) threads for now.It could be the holiday hustle and bustle coming up. btw: I also like Joe's suggestion of speculating about how to proceed from where we are NOW, versus slipping into making MLK's peculiar niche a sort of textbook. Or, make it textbook if ya want, but understand that every time is unique, and be free to deviate from textbook. Don't drop the discussion. But another time might work better, at least for me.
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*** Never linger too long with the ignorant, throw stones at their talk. Walk only with the lovers, the mirror of the soul gets rusty when dipped in muddy water. -Rumi |
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#7
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#8
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There are timeless principles here that have been embraced in various liberation movements. I agree that deviation may be necessary, but we cannot proceed forward without deliberate attention to the Civil Rights leaders of the past. I just wonder if our LGBT movement has spent enough time in sustained thinking about civil rights activism from the past, whether Ghandi, King or Mandela. These men lead successful civil right movements that transformed nations. I was talking to someone today about this. Harvey Milk was assassinated in 1978 about 30 years ago and we still don't have a federal hate crimes law that includes sexual orientation or gender identity. Martin Luther King was assassinated in 1968 and one year later there was a federal hate crimes law including race. It really gives me pause. |
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#10
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Maybe it is easier to just subscribe to the HRC cell phone alerts and visit their email web form and send our representatives an email from the comfort of our homes. Last edited by antonyh; 12-13-2007 at 07:27 AM. Reason: reword |
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#11
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Antony, I feel your frustration. I have to say, however, my desire to get off of my butt and get busy has come relatively late in my life, later than some of the young ones around here. I really believe that it is in part, because I am finally, fully, in all aspects, embracing my lesbianism as part of the whole of who I am, and loving it. I am ready and willing and able now, and so that means everyone should be ready to rally with me (us), right???
I am trying to be patient with all of the others that are struggling to "get there" in terms of activism. That is hard sometimes. BUt this is what I have to say about the lessons that Dr. King and the civil rights movement has to give us. I really wanted to participate in the weekly reading of the speeches, but agree with Keltic, I did not want to do it halfway, and never seemed to have a good chunk of time to read fully and process the words. Sure, maybe Dr. King's words and deeds are from a time long ago, and maybe we do need to move on and create our own realities to address our issues in the present. But, his speeches are less about learning how we should respond today. It is about being moved and inspired by someone who is filled with the energy for drastic change, and filled with the love of God and such human compassion that is so hard to find today, it seems. Simply, his speeches, his words, his VOICE, inspires me to want to fight the good fight TODAY. Not necessarily using every means he used forty years ago, but the spirit in his voice is much the same as the spirit and energy I possess in my heart. ![]() ![]()
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[B]THE TRUTH IS ALL THERE IS.[/B |
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#12
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Maybe there are not enough of us who really accept our full dignity as human beings and before the law. Maybe there is just not enough full acceptance of our dignity in the collective psychic consciousness of LGBT people. Yet. Quote:
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Last edited by antonyh; 12-13-2007 at 10:57 AM. Reason: Correct text |
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#13
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When I finished undergrad, I was very interested in possibly switching career gears to LGBT rights activism. I wrote over a dozen letters to organizations and made about a dozen phone calls asking how to become involved. I received one response: a letter telling me to become involved by reading the newspaper and voting for candidates who are friendlier to gay rights issues. Not a single opportunity did I find in a decade of trying - in fact, the message I kept getting was that there was no desire for activists or volunteers. I was just supposed to mail my yearly membership to the HRC and then sit around and do nothing. In my experience, the single biggest obstacle I have faced as an activist, is a lack of opportunity to be active. That's why once I finally got an opportunity this past year or two, the floodwaters spilled over. Now, I would be delighted to march for equality. Come to think of it, I have, with a few score other dedicated activists in the Phoenix area. But a more important issue is why, with a rights movement that is 30 years old, are so many of our marches and demonstrations still so small? Vanessa raised issues of self-worth and by extension, internalized homophobia. Very definitely a part of the problem. So what can we do, aside from marching or demonstrating in tiny little groups of a dozen or there? (tired, cranky, and frustrated at the moment, sorry everyone.)
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*** Never linger too long with the ignorant, throw stones at their talk. Walk only with the lovers, the mirror of the soul gets rusty when dipped in muddy water. -Rumi |
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#14
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I'm glad MLK did not say, "Ghandi worked in South Africa and India, his activism is of no use to us today." I'm glad that Mandela did not say, "King is useful in the American context, but has nothing to say to our civil rights movement in South Africa". We need to build on the shoulders of the greats and also allow the search light of their activism to shine on ours. Some African American people find the use of MLK by the LGBT community to be offensive. During the Hate Crimes Bill debate, it was fundamentalist African American ministers that objected. This is a minority of the African American community. The great African American civil rights activist Representative John Lewis stood with us during the Hate Crimes Bill debate. Here is a link to his speech in the House on May 3, 2007: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pIZyAxjjE8E Coretta Scott King, the wife of MLK, also supported gay rights. You can read what she said here: http://www.hatecrime.org/subpages/coretta.html During the Hate Crimes debate, the NAACP chastised the African American ministers for their opposition of the Hate Crimes Bill. These ministers were very vocal about disliking the use of MLK for the LGBT civil rights struggle. http://www.hatecrimesbill.org/2007/0...calls-for.html MLK's legacy is for the human race because justice is for all human beings. His legacy was historically lived out in the African American community, but his ideas are the property of the human race. Last edited by antonyh; 12-14-2007 at 01:28 PM. |
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#15
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I think there is the idea that this kind of direct action is for the past. That is one reason that I appreciate Soulforce so much. I hope that as Soulforce continues it's work that it will stimulate thinking in the larger LGBT community about the use of direct action. It is so tempting for us to think that the power of the Internet is all we need. Put up a site or a blog. Pound Washington with emails. There is just no substitute for putting our bodies on the streets in large numbers. We do have a leadership vacuum in this area...but we do have Soulforce
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#16
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I've always believed the gay rights movement needs it's Gandhi or MLK, and have been waiting for such a persona to appear. But unless one does, we have to work with whatever means we currently have. I agree that direct action probably does still need to be part of the picture. After 30-plus years, why is it that so many demonstrations are still so tiny? Our populace has been discouraged from expressing itself in that sort of way. Is that the entire answer? I have no idea.
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*** Never linger too long with the ignorant, throw stones at their talk. Walk only with the lovers, the mirror of the soul gets rusty when dipped in muddy water. -Rumi |
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#17
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Don't be too hard on your good old self today. I feel discouraged frequently when I think of how daunting a task, or tasks, we seem to have ahead of us, yet so few of us to pursue it in active, 3D ways. I do agree and firmly state again that the external and especially, internalized homophobia that we have experienced in our lives, including our heterosexual allies, has created a direct impact on the lack of numbers that we see in direct action. I envision the possibility of a million of us on the Mall in DC, but first, we have to WANT to be visible, to be seen, to be recognized.
That is, as we all know, a very unique process for each one of us. However, I have had a vision of something for the last few months, although not really sure how to have it come to fruition. I know that we have all joyfully written about the possibilities of having a SF picnic, meeting each other face to face. Along those lines, I think one way to unite the movement, at least to a degree, or to begin to discuss our differences, we should have a mid-country conference on just those topics, how to unite forces and create change LIVE. I think it is very easy for all of us, including myself, to be so inspired, determined, and ready to act when I am typing the words on a page. I had said last year that when Mia and I had first been trying to get a local activist group going, the overwhelming majority of those attending were/are straight allies, whom we need for sure, but my gay and lesbian friends were no where to be found. That remains to be so, lack of generalized enthusiasm to get involved. I believe that many issues are ingrained in that, but homophobia, like with so many things we talk about here, is at the root by far. That saddens me so much. But, I am not moved to quit. ![]() ![]()
__________________
[B]THE TRUTH IS ALL THERE IS.[/B |
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#18
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The big deal is that we need a leader at the HRC that really understand the importance of direct action and has the intellectual and oratorical abilities of MLK, someone who can build the coalition and inspire our community to get off the couch onto the streets. I nominate Mel White. |
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#19
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#20
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Well I don't think one should preclude the other either. But one doesn't get all groups aboard a unified agenda. Someone will take offense for us pushing too hard and someone else will take offense for us being too compromising.
__________________
*** Never linger too long with the ignorant, throw stones at their talk. Walk only with the lovers, the mirror of the soul gets rusty when dipped in muddy water. -Rumi |
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