Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: California Supreme Court, gay marriage, Prop. 8
says the LA TIMES.
As expected…
Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: culture war, economics, Frank Rich, Prop. 8
Frank Rich gives an economic perspective on the retreat of the culture war:
Once again, both the president and the country are following New Deal-era precedent. In the 1920s boom, the reigning moral crusade was Prohibition, and it packed so much political muscle that F.D.R. didn’t oppose it. The Anti-Saloon League was the Moral Majority of its day, the vanguard of a powerful fundamentalist movement that pushed anti-evolution legislation as vehemently as it did its war on booze. (The Scopes “monkey trial” was in 1925.) But the political standing of this crowd crashed along with the stock market. Roosevelt shrewdly came down on the side of “the wets” in his presidential campaign, leaving Hoover to drown with “the dries.”
Much as Obama repealed the Bush restrictions on abortion and stem-cell research shortly after pushing through his stimulus package, so F.D.R. jump-started the repeal of Prohibition by asking Congress to legalize beer and wine just days after his March 1933 inauguration and declaration of a bank holiday. As Michael A. Lerner writes in his fascinating 2007 book “Dry Manhattan,” Roosevelt’s stance reassured many Americans that they would have a president “who not only cared about their economic well-being” but who also understood their desire to be liberated from “the intrusion of the state into their private lives.” Having lost plenty in the Depression, the public did not want to surrender any more freedoms to the noisy minority that had shut down the nation’s saloons.
In our own hard times, the former moral “majority” has been downsized to more of a minority than ever. Polling shows that nearly 60 percent of Americans agree with ending Bush restrictions on stem-cell research (a Washington Post/ABC News survey in January); that 55 percent endorse either gay civil unions or same-sex marriage (Newsweek, December 2008); and that 75 percent believe openly gay Americans should serve in the military (Post/ABC, July 2008). Even the old indecency wars have subsided. When a federal court last year struck down the F.C.C. fine against CBS for Janet Jackson’s “wardrobe malfunction” at the 2004 Super Bowl, few Americans either noticed or cared about the latest twist in what had once been a national cause célèbre.
I found this opinion piece compelling. Rich convincingly articulates the argument that the culture war is ending, in large part because of the economy. However, how do we reconcile that view with a high profile, insanely expensive, and divisive campaign against gay marriage in CA that resorted to the same lies and smear tactics that the religious right has successfully used over the last forty years? Frankly (pun intended), I’m not sure you can.
Robin Rauzi writing for the LA Times looks at the upside of what appears to be (another) inevitable victory for Prop. 8 supporters:
Yet, rather than dread my potential future of semi-suspended matrimony, I’ve decided to embrace it. On this roller-coaster trip toward full civil rights for gays, this could be the fun part of the ride.
It’s the moment when the anti-marriage-equality forces might want to coast downhill, to revel in their courtroom comeback, to finally savor their 52.47% victory at the polls last November. To the most smug among them, I will be able to say this:
I’m still married.
A $50-million election battle, two high-court showdowns, and what do the pro-Proposition 8 folks have to show for it? California still has what is likely the largest population of married same-sex couples — an estimated 18,000 — anywhere in the world. That’s 18,000 raspberry seeds stuck in their teeth for years to come. California won’t be a gay-marriage-free zone again unless we all die or move.
Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: California Supreme Court, Constitutional Law, Prop. 8
“…we will go back to the ballot box, and we will eventually prevail.”
The real question is, if and when Proposition 8 is upheld, how long will gay Californians have to wait?
See all the action streaming on the web.
ADDED: CNN has a feed as well, which probably isn’t overloaded with viewers.