If you aren’t already sold on Kathy Griffin based solely on her amazing comedic talents, perhaps you should give her a shot as a person. It’s really worth watching this all the way through. She may not be the best at delivering speeches, but the woman sure as hell knows what she believes in and it’s nice to see a celebrity (D-list or otherwise) take a stand against an issue that may not necessarily win them popularity. Although, I guess to be completely fair, I don’t think that has ever really been a concern of our girl.
Go on Norma Gay!
[Via Joe. My. God.]
Saturday, February 14, 2009 is a day that many couples will remember as Valentine’s Day of this year, but for a group of Chicagoans, it was Freedom to Marry Day. A group of peaceful protesters gathered outside the Cook County Building to demand their equal rights here in Chicago while a smaller group staged a sit-in inside the Cook County office of Vital Records, insisting that they would not leave until they office agreed to issue marriage licenses to homosexual couples.
The seven who remained inside the office were allowed to stay past the closing time of the office but were eventually arrested for criminal trespass. Later, County Clerk David Orr’s office issued a statement saying, “Gay couples deserve to enjoy the same rights and legal protections as straight couples, whether it be getting married or making emergency health decisions, filing a joint tax return or receiving retirement benefits to which they are entitled.” (ABC7 Chicago) That view, however, has yet to be reflected in practice.
Further coverage:
http://www.towleroad.com/2009/02/hundreds-protes.html
http://www.chicagopride.com/news/article.cfm/articleid/6876025
http://www.pamshouseblend.com/showDiary.do?diaryId=9489
http://www.examiner.com/x-443-Chicago-Gay-Examiner~y2009m2d15-7-queer-activists-arrested-at-Marriage-Bureau-sitin
http://blog.radioleft.com/blog/_archives/2009/2/15/4093964.html
http://joemygod.blogspot.com/2009/02/seven-arrests-at-chicago-marriage.html
http://www.windycitizen.com/chicago/politicscity-news/2009/02/freedom-to-marry-in-chicago-hundreds-rally-seven-arrested/
In just a few short weeks on March 5, the California Supreme Court will begin to review the legality of Proposition 8, a ballot initiative that amended the California State Constitution to revoke marriage rights from gay and lesbian couples. The court then has 90 days to come to a decision. It is now SO important that people come out of the woodwork in overwhelming vocal support of gay marriage rights and denounce Proposition 8.
This week is Freedom to Marry Week and in various cities around the nation protests will be held throughout the week to support the rights of ourselves, our friends, our family, and our neighbors. On February 14 in Chicago teams will march while gay couples head to the Cook County Marriage License Bureau and demand to be married. We need as many people as we can get at these events!
Please, please, please: join the Facebook event (details below), tell your friends, blog about it, put the information out there in as many spots as you can find. This is a crucial time for an important cause!
Facebook event (for Chicago): http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=123437705110
Facebook group (where I can nag my friends, please feel free to join!): http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=53940967030
How you can help:
- Go to one of the protests, no matter where it may be!
- Invite ALL your friends to the event for your area, and to the group!
- Put up posters and flyers: http://gayliberation.net/pdf/2009/0214free2marryday/Flyer,%20color.pdf
- Call, text, email your friends.
- Organize a party to make picket signs.
- Organize a brunch party for immediately before the protest so people can meet in one place and travel together.
- Write a blog post, tweet about it, put it on your FriendFeed, share it on your other social networks.
As a teenager, I, like many homosexuals, struggled to accept and love myself for who I was. The world makes it incredibly difficult to believe that being gay is okay. The idea that “gayness” is something to be ashamed of has become so ingrained in American culture that it is almost impossible to avoid encountering some form of bigotry each and every day.
Only when I finally came to believe in, accept, and be proud of myself did I begin to see that changes were happening in the world around me. Being gay was becoming more and more socially acceptable. I even stopped fearing that I would be killed for being gay (yes, this was a fear that I lived with for years.) I still never imagined that I would one day be allowed to marry.
Then in December 2003, in a twist that I really never thought I would see, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruled that gays could not be denied the right to marry. The emotions that were stirred in me were strong. My heart swelled with hope and my eyes teared. Thinking back on it still causes those same feelings to resurface today.
Five years later and relatively little progress has been made though. On the contrary, a lot of steps backward have been witnessed. DOMA still prevents any union between same-sex couples from being recognized federally, a handful of states have constitutional amendments outlawing gay marriage, and what is arguably the most progressive state in the nation has claimed a first: stripping rights from a minority that were previously afforded to them.
At the same time celebrities are coming out, television shows and movies are regularly featuring gay characters, major corporations are enacting by-laws protecting gay employees and offering domestic partner benefits (links go to companies that scored 100 on the HRC Corporate Equality Index for 2009), and gay-straight alliances are becoming commonplace in schools.
So why is it, then, that the gay rights movement has moved at a snail’s pace? Why is it that five years later only two states offer homosexuals the right to marry while so many states have been able to quickly outlaw that capability? It’s because we are too lazy.
A few months ago, after Proposition 8 passed and gays in lesbians in California stripped of their rights, half a million people around the country came out in protest. Chicago alone saw 10,000 take to the streets. Finally people were upset and demanding action. What happened that day was amazing. People of every orientation, race, religion and background imaginable were out in full force fighting for what is right. Not only was it empowering but it was emotional. I struggled at times to hold back tears. I was full of happiness, pride, comfort… outrage, anger, and motivation.
I looked around at my friends who came with me as we poured out onto Michigan Avenue. Everywhere there were chants. “Gay, straight, black, white same struggle, same fight.” “What do we want? Equal Rights. When do we want it? Now.” “Hey Hey, Ho Ho, Homophobia’s got to go.” Shoppers in stores along the Magnificent Mile came to the windows and drivers stuck in traffic cheered instead of getting angry. It seemed that maybe things would start turning around.
Two months later, on January 10th, Chicago’s DOMA protest drew barely one hundred and garnered no news coverage.
Some chose to sleep in because it was snowing. Others stayed home with hangovers. Quite a few people didn’t bother to take the day off from work. Out of over three hundred people that I invited personally only three showed up, and quite ironically, all three were straight.
I was there with my three friends and a small handful of others. We all had picket signs. We also were covered in snow, cold and drenched, feet soaked from road slush and ourselves very hungover. But for the few who made it that day we realized that equality mattered more than a few extra winks of sleep.
What I want people to understand is that for progress to happen we have to fight for it. Politely but steadily and without wavering. The single reason why bigots have been able to make so much progress is because they, not we, have been organized and committed to their mission.
On the eve of a “change we can believe in” it is important to remember that the changes we want don’t happen while idly waiting for them.
- Educate people through casual conversation.
- Stop people when they call things “gay” or use the word “faggot.”
- Attend events like the protests that have happened. Attendance get media coverage and media coverage reaches far and wide.
- Absolutely under no circumstances support anything or anyone that supports bigoted views.
- Fight not just for your own rights but for those of others.
- Leave your comfort zone, push the limits.
- Come out – to everyone.
Don’t be evil. It’s a simple mantra that spells out one of the basic Google philosophies. But not being evil can be simple inaction. It is possible to not be evil without being good. That isn’t the case though.
Today, Google announced it has signed an amicus brief supporting several cases that are challenging California’s Proposition 8, the first US law to strip a right from a minority that they were previously afforded.
Just as we need more gays, more lesbians, more transgenders, more straight allies, we also need more corporate support to push forward the gay right’s movement. People need to be outspoken about the issues and so do the companies we work for. If you work for a company that is quiet on these topics I encourage you to reach out and find support wherever it is possible. Start an LGBT diversity group, talk to human resources about diversity hiring, seek out your public relations department and ask them to issue a press release in support of your LGBT employees and in opposition to hate laws such as Prop 8. Heck, you can even go to your VPs and tell them how important it is that your company support this movement.
In other Google-related diversity news, the company is now a sponsor of Chicago’s AIDSCare Fat Saturday Ball. Kudos!




