motherFUCKER!
Feb. 9th, 2004 10:03 pmhttp://www.npr.org/rundowns/rundown.php?prgId=2&prgDate=current
Looks like Kerry will support an anti-gay constitutional amendment if the language is right.
Mother. FUCKER.
Here's the relevant bit.
NPR: I'd like to turn to the subject of gay marriage. The highest court in your home state of Massachusetts has said that same-sex couples do have the right to marry; I know that you've said you oppose gay marriage; but would you support a Constitutional amendment that would define marriage as a heterosexual union?
Kerry: Well, it depends entirely upon the language, as to whether it permits civil unions and partnerships or not.
Here, I stole this from a mailing list I'm on; it's text forwarded from a Dean blog:
Looks like Kerry will support an anti-gay constitutional amendment if the language is right.
Mother. FUCKER.
Here's the relevant bit.
NPR: I'd like to turn to the subject of gay marriage. The highest court in your home state of Massachusetts has said that same-sex couples do have the right to marry; I know that you've said you oppose gay marriage; but would you support a Constitutional amendment that would define marriage as a heterosexual union?
Kerry: Well, it depends entirely upon the language, as to whether it permits civil unions and partnerships or not.
Here, I stole this from a mailing list I'm on; it's text forwarded from a Dean blog:
The man today said clear as day that he'd be ok with a constitutional
amendment if the "language" was right.
He didn't say no.
He didn't say that we shouldn't be making constitutional amendments that strip rights away from one group of US citizens.
He said that his decision depended upon the language.
That is terrible. My Jaw dropped when I heard it.
What if was talking about black people or hispanic people? Would he be OK with a similar amendment if the "language" was right?
The reason it is a huge deal is the same reason it would be unconstitutional and immoral to call white people "citizens" and black people "residents" even if they had the same basic rights.
If we crafted an amendment saying that from hence forth, all states shall never refer to black people as "citizens" but they shall enjoy the same rights as white people; it would rightly be denounced.
"Separate but equal" has a very ugly history in our country. To allow for a constitutional amendment that enshrines that failed and divisive concept is reprehensible and dangerous.
Kerry knows better but he is covering his political butt. You know that, I know that. It is a shame and people who care about basic human rights should speak up.
no subject
Date: 2004-02-10 01:07 am (UTC)There is a point that needs to be made (and which Kerry is apparently trying to make, even if he fucks up specifically on the notion of an amendment), namely that marriage the legal concept and marriage the religious-sacrament are separate, and any real government-off-our-backs/out-of-our-churches/etc conservative ought to agree that government has no business messing with the second --- instead, of course, we get neoconservatives going out of their way to conflate the two for maximum political benefit.
Bleah.
no subject
Date: 2004-02-10 01:22 am (UTC)The social conservatives drafting these pieces of shit are explicitly trying to knock out civil unions ("the legal incidents thereof" and all that). I.e., it's not the word "marriage" they care about --- even as they play on this to try to win over the more moderate/tolerant-albeit-religious types who are bothered by the notion of government messing with churches and redefining religious notions of marriage --- but the legal facts on the ground, and the notion of state recognition/approval of a same-sex relationship in any way is what's anathema to them.
Given what Kerry has said, I can't even picture an amendment that both he and Delay-et-al would agree to that wouldn't also be completely vacuous or already subsumed by the 1st Amendment's free-exercise clause.
no subject
Date: 2004-02-10 05:15 am (UTC)He is not stating 'I will get into office and immediately set about working to remove anything resembling marriage from those dirty queers'. He is honestly stating that, within his own beliefs, if the wording of an ammendment was exactly what he believes in, he'd probably support it.
Such laws have been proven unconstitutional in the past. Ammendments taking away rights have failed miserably and been repealed. I think it is inevitable that, eventually, homosexual couples will have the same rights as heterosexual couples all over the US. It will be a long battle, but it will come.
But Kerry isn't the antichrist for being honest enough to tell the truth when being asked the tough questions.
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Date: 2004-02-10 08:10 am (UTC)Re:
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Date: 2004-02-10 10:41 am (UTC)On the other hand, I don't believe that Clinton (and many other Democrats), who signed the "Defense of Marriage Act", is really opposed to gay marriage. I think he simply lacks the courage to be honest about his true views on the issue. And I suspect Kerry isn't much different.
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Date: 2004-02-10 10:47 am (UTC)Re:
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Date: 2004-02-10 12:30 pm (UTC)Kucinich and Al Sharpton are both pro (as was Carol Mosley-Braun FWIW).
no subject
Date: 2004-02-10 12:36 pm (UTC)I wish Kerry would have said he absolutely, flatly, would NOT support such an amendment under any circumstances and that he was outraged and offended by the mere question. But you know what? He'd lose the election with that 1 single breath of air. Just like Kerry would lose if he stood up there and said he was an atheist, or he celebrates interracial marriage, or if he or his son were married to an Asian woman.
Middle America doesn't want to HEAR about gay marriage. He's being honest - I'm sure he would support it if it had a palatable-to-him language.
I think the issue of gay marriage is literally the fundamental civil rights issue of our current time. But you know what? Conservatives have spent a good part of the last 10 years dismantling civil rights for people of color. I really don't see any huge leaps happening for anyone right now.
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Date: 2004-02-10 02:11 pm (UTC)Alone the conservatives don't have the votes to pass laws like this. But with the support of Democrats who go along to get along, these laws will and do pass.
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Date: 2004-02-10 04:00 pm (UTC)Re:
Date: 2004-02-10 05:26 pm (UTC)That will sway some people who otherwise might rightfully denounce this as open bigotry. And that makes me very sad, and angry.
I think Kerry could have gotten away with what Dean has said, without hurting his chances--basically, he doesn't favor gay marriage "personally" but amending the Consitution to make a group of people second class citizens is unacceptable.
I just hope that as events in MA go forward, Kerry doesn't jump in and follow up with support for an amendment as some kind of proving ground of how "moderate" he is--as Clinton did with DOMA. Being neutral is acceptable from a political point of view, as much as it bothers me. But I would have to think long and hard about voting for him if he actively supported an amendment, even knowing that the alternative is Bush.
no subject
Date: 2004-02-10 05:31 pm (UTC)Seems like a decent place, they don't SEEM to be promoting any particular agenda. They have nice little sections on all the candidates pointing out the candidates views (with references to back them up it looks like)
http://www.livejournal.com/users/solarbird/175537.html?mode=reply
They even have a little quiz thingy which gives you a percentage match on each candidate to YOUR views in certain areas.
Sadly it looks like my best match won't make it to the election and Kerry was WAY down my list. (so was Bush)
Why can't these guys get it through their heads that there is no logical, legal, financial, or plausible reason to not allow same gender marriage? Every time it boils down to a religious reason.
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Date: 2004-02-10 05:33 pm (UTC)