"What you can expect, is that little by little, they'll get there. Little by little, they'll learn. Little by little, they stop being afraid."
And in the meantime, these unsophisticated bigoted idiots get to vote to deprive other citizens of equal protection under the law, mostly in the name of a book of fairy tales. Revolting.
"If they can get you asking the wrong questions, they don't have to worry about the answers." Thomas Pynchon, GRAVITY'S RAINBOW
"Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away." Philip K. Dick
My blog: http://www.roscoewrites.blogspot.com/
"And in the meantime, these unsophisticated bigoted idiots get to vote to deprive other citizens of equal protection under the law, mostly in the name of a book of fairy tales. Revolting."
Yes, Roscoe. Many of my kith and kin down there took to the polls in the defense of "God's Law".
"The greatest divide in this country is not between liberal and conservative, but between those who feel that they should have a say in the love lives of strangers, and those who do not."--Miss Manners.
I can't think of a better way to frame the gay marriage argument--or a simpler, and, dare I say, "traditional" one. How can anyone be so arrogant as to claim they have a right to interfere in the marriages of total strangers who have done them no harm?
Take heart, everyone. Even if the worst happens, the human impulse to love and mate is a lot older than any government or any religion. You still get to decide whom you marry, whether a narrow and shortsighted government chooses to recognize it or not. There are a number of happy and successful same-sex marriages that thrived on this principle--Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas, for example, had one of the most famous, celebrated, and publically approved marriages of the last century. I know we want to move on and have our marriages legitimized alongside our straight friends, and I hope this will happen soon--but some of the comments on this thread have depressed me beyond belief. Please don't give in to anger and despair over North Carolina.
I ask in all honesty/What would life be?/Without a song and a dance, what are we?/So I say "Thank you for the music/For giving it to me."
As awful as I think the passing of Amendment 1 was, I never understood the apparent notion that the passing of similar laws was something that "happened" in other states, whereas this was something NC "did."
I think for some people, it's easier to just wash their hands and say, "Well, that's the South. What do you expect?"
Even when Prop 8 happened, I couldn't help but (kind of selfishly) think, "You do realize, New Yorkers and other folks who are losing your sh*t over California, that this has happened and is happening all of the country"?
I do know some people thought that NC had taken it the furthest, barring not only marriage but any other recognized union between same-sex couples, but no, that's been happening in other states, too. That's why I don't believe these laws are about anything other than sticking it to gay people - remember how the anti side would crow that it was just about the word "marriage"? Yeah, no.
'There are three sides to every story. My side, your side, and the truth. And no one is lying. Memories shared serve each one differently'
-Robert Evans-
In better news, RI's Gov Chaffee signed an executive order yesterday declaring that RI must honor same sex marriages of those married in other places. The good thing about this is that it will force the issue to a head. Being that someone can live and get married in MA and be treated as a valid married couple when they visit RI. Yet I, who live in RI cannot get married myself. This is begging for a lawsuit that will force a court decision of the issue.
This is Chafee's facebook page in case you want to let him know how you feel about his actions. https://www.facebook.com/lchafee
Art has a double face, of expression and illusion.