Friday, July 9, 2010

ONE homosexual American thinks about the movement to found America and the movement to gain civil rights for glbt citizens

There is talk about getting mentor/elder programs going in the glbt community/movement because in a sense this is the first time there have been lgbt people who have been in a movement to gain civil/equal rights for homosexual/glbt citizens and have lived/experienced life as "out" citizens. (Don Kilhefner and others in L. A. is an example.)

What do young people need to hear from elders/mentors to help them understand how America came to be as it is for lgbt citizens?

I think there is a parallel between how our nation started and is today and how the glbt movement started and how it is today. It is not necessary to give a list of dates, names and events to say that in 1776 some people got together, in secret in a sense, to form a nation and to get rid of the domination of England, or any other country. It was not a great time to do this and there seemed little hope of defeating the military of England. And each generation since has had to work, fight and (many had to) die, to keep what those founders started and left for us.

In 1950 a group of homosexual citizens met in secret in Los Angeles and started an effort to educate themselves and then the rest of society on understanding homosexuality and trying to change society and the views of medicine, religion and legal professionals. It also was not a great time for such an undertaking- this was the McCarthy era. And just as there was a question of loyalty of some early Americans and if they supported England or the new efforts to become a separate nation among the people in 1776, there was a question of the loyalty of homosexual public officials in the 1950s. And yet the founders of this movement were successful, from the start, winning a historic, some say a "Rosa Parks" moment in this civil rights movement (Dale Jenning's victory in court, the first time someone had challenged the entrapment arrests of police) and then the U. S. Supreme Court victory in the ONE Magazine case. And each generation since has found more and more citizens, glbt and allies, who stepped forward to join the work.

The black civil rights movement has such legal victories as Brown v Board, and the homosexual civil rights movement has Lawrence v Texas.

The question is how much young people want to know about the ideals in the Declaration of Independence and those of early those Mattachine and later ONE meetings and found in
ONE Magazine, and later the Mattchine Review, The Ladder, etc.

There are three issues that cause our troubles and even though they are connected, they can be easily be confronted. The start is the belief that our Constitution and the Bible are perfect. Neither are perfect. Both accepted slavery. That alone makes them imperfect. The founders recognized the moral problem, but compromised to get a nation started. It is less easy to explain how preachers, especially in the American South for generations quoted the Bible to affirm that black Americans were not equal to white Americans, or why at one time there were separate branches of major Christian churches, only because those branches supported slavery-the Methodist Church South and Southern Baptist Convention are two examples.

They have apologized now and admit their error-which means they misused the Bible and made laws based solely on a religious teaching that was wrong.

The day will come when the current religious “leaders” and politicians will apologize for their views on glbt citizens.

Connected to the religious issue is the part about child molestation. Recently on NBCs
Meet the Press, a guest was discussing why America has difficulty in dealing with Afghan citizens and said that even though most of them didn't like the Taliban, and its extreme religious—and thus government rules, they can't like the current “government” people who come to their area and rape their boys. There had already been a documentary on this issue, dealing with warlords, which contradicts this theory. There is boylove in that and other Islamic nations. And there is worldwide confrontation with the Roman Catholic Church over priests who have molested children and those who protected them. Yet it is our community that is the one constantly falsely accused on being child molesters. As usual, those who attack others for a “sin” are merely fighting the sin that is theirs-projecting on others their problem.

The last issue, “it is icky,” was also discussed on TV when Fox News, no surprise, allowed Governor Huckabee to “explain” his words talking about why homosexuality is icky. He defended himself by saying he was merely quoting something in
Edge Magazine, apparently words by a University of Chicago Law School professor-perhaps Martha Nussbaum. She immediately said he was misquoting her. But the fact is that that is an issue. But again, one hard to understand, since the acts those bigots say they find “icky” are performed by heterosexuals. They also have anal and oral sex—so it is time to confront them with their hypocrisy.

While we need to get rid of DADT, DOMA, etc, it is the personal things that seem our major problem, and one that has all along been said the easiest to solve, since once we come “out” and our relatives, neighbors, friends, fellow workers know who we are, the lies go away and the vast majority of Americans will be comfortable dealing with us. That is what is happening with racial issues too.

It is hard for young people to know that at one time there were laws preventing interracial marriage, etc. And one of the main “arguments” against such marriages was “what it will do to the children.” That is the current argument in glbt discussions of marriage, adoption, etc. This argument has lost power in the racial arena since all you have to do is look not only at the White house, but around you. Soon most of us will be interracial. Problem solved-the fact is that now if there is a “problem” with being interracial, it is a problem everyone has.

So it seems to me that there is a good reason to celebrate, as an American and as a homosexual/lgbt American. And to hope that young people will join in the effort to make our nation even more perfect.




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