Friday, November 7, 2008

Prop 8 Protests From L.A. to San Francisco


The No Crowd continues their marches. Maybe they should have put this much effort into their campaign.

Thousands of demonstrators marched down Market Street in San Francisco on Friday night to protest the passage earlier this week of Proposition 8, which effectively bans same-sex marriage in California.

The march began around 5:30 p.m., as the group worked its way west toward its final destination of Dolores Park. A large group remained around Ninth and Market streets, holding signs, chanting and jamming traffic. About a dozen Muni buses were stuck in the traffic mess.

More here.

Thursday, November 6, 2008

I'm Surprised They Haven't Stormed the Temple and Set It Ablaze




More Tolerance from the No Crowd

No on 8 Concedes Defeat

Opponents of Proposition 8, after taking a close look at the ballot totals from Tuesday's election, today conceded defeat in their effort to keep same-sex marriage legal in California.

More here.

No on Proposition 8's Protest at LDS Los Angeles Temple

As we speak the tolerant No Crowd is in front of the LDS Los Angeles Temple. Funny that they direct their ire to a group that makes up no more than 2% of California's population. Didn't nearly 53% vote in favor of Prop 8?

Hundreds of protesters marched near the landmark Los Angeles California Temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Westwood today to protest the church's strong support for Proposition 8.

Opponents of Proposition 8, which outlawed gay marriage in California, were waving banners and chanting. A similar protests occurred on Wednesday night in Hollywood and West Hollywood.

Los Angeles Police Department officials say they won't be caught off-guard as they were last night, when they were required to call a tactical alert after a few members of the mostly peaceful crowd got out of hand. The protest is scheduled to begin at 2 p.m. off Santa Monica Boulevard.

More here.

The Beauty of the No Crowd's Tolerance

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

It Never Ends - Legal Challenges to Prop 8

The San Diego Union Tribune reports: “The San Francisco City Attorney’s office says he plans to challenge the validity of a ballot measure that would change the state constitution to ban gay marriage.”

Mercury News: “The first lesbian couple to be married in Los Angeles County after the Supreme Court threw out the gay marriage ban also plans to announce a lawsuit against Proposition 8.”

The LA Times reports: “After losing at the polls, gay-rights advocates filed a legal challenge today in California Supreme Court to Proposition 8, a long-shot effort that the measure’s supporters called an attempt to subvert the will of voters.”

Lambda Legal issued this press release that begins: “The California Attorney General, Equality California, and the nation’s leading LGBT legal groups agree that the marriages of the estimated 18,000 same-sex couples who married between June 16, 2008 and the possible passage of Proposition 8 are still valid in the state of California and must continue to be honored by the state.”

Lambda Legal has also issued these press releases:

Lambda Legal: LGBT Ballot Losses Do Not Predict the Future

Legal Groups File Lawsuit Challenging Proposition 8, Should It Pass

The American Civil Liberties Union, Lambda Legal and the National Center for Lesbian Rights filed a writ petition before the California Supreme Court today urging the court to invalidate Proposition 8 if it passes. The petition charges that Proposition 8 is invalid because the initiative process was improperly used in an attempt to undo the constitution’s core commitment to equality for everyone by eliminating a fundamental right from just one group — lesbian and gay Californians. Proposition 8 also improperly attempts to prevent the courts from exercising their essential constitutional role of protecting the equal protection rights of minorities. According to the California Constitution, such radical changes to the organizing principles of state government cannot be made by simple majority vote through the initiative process, but instead must, at a minimum, go through the state legislature first.

Results Update #2

As of 4:05 p.m. on 11/05/2008 the count is 5,387,939 or 52.5% of the votes in favor of Prop 8 and 4,883,460 or 47.5% of the votes against Prop 8 with 100% of precincts reporting.

This appears to be a victory, but there are also potentially 2 million provisional and vote by mail ballots that have not been counted. Counties have 28 days to certify the election.

Results Update

As of 9:49 a.m. on 11/05/2008 the count is 5,220,694 or 52.2% of the votes in favor of Prop 8 and 4,792,873 or 47.8% of the votes against Prop 8 with 96.4% of precincts reporting. There are also potentially 2 million provisional and vote by mail ballots that have not been counted. Counties have 28 days to certify the election.

It's A Close One

As of 7:59 a.m. on 11/05/2008 the count is 5,195,136 or 52.1% of the votes in favor of Prop 8 and 4,779,297or 47.9% of the votes against Prop 8 with 95.8% of precincts reporting. There are also potentially 2 million provisional and vote by mail ballots that have not been counted. Counties have 28 days to certify the election.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

LDS Church's Response to Ad

"The Church has joined a broad-based coalition in defense of traditional marriage. While we feel this is important to all of society, we have always emphasized that respect be given to those who feel differently on this issue. It is unfortunate that some who oppose this proposition have not given the Church this same courtesy."

The Bigotry of the No Crowd

The following commercial is supposed to air on CNN and MSNBC today. Please write a message to CNN (http://www.cnn.com/feedback/forms/form6a.html?2) asking them not to air it and also write an email to MSNBC at letters@msnbc.com. This is bigotry at its worst. Such a commercial would never air against Jews, Muslims, or any other religion.

Monday, November 3, 2008

School Clams Up on 'Gay' Pledge Cards Given to Kindergartners

A California school system refuses to say what action, if any, it will take after it received complaints about a kindergarten teacher who encouraged her students to sign "pledge cards" in support of gays.

During a celebration of National Ally Week, Tara Miller, a teacher at the Faith Ringgold School of Arts and Science in Hayward, Calif., passed out cards produced by the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network to her class of kindergartners.

The cards asked signers to be "an ally" and to pledge to "not use anti-LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender) language or slurs; intervene, when I feel I can, in situations where others are using anti-LGBT language or harassing other students and actively support safer schools efforts."

More here.

Marriage Amendments and Intellectual Quicksand

On Tuesday, voters in California, Arizona, and Florida will establish what “marriage” means in their state by voting on amendments to their constitutions. These amendments are hotly contested, imbued with impassioned rhetoric and even angry name-calling. The name-calling is bad enough: using words like “hatemonger,” “bigot,” and “homophobe” is not reasoned debate. What is really wrong, however, is when people opposing marriage amendments claim that amendment supporters mindlessly cling to a “stupid,” intellectually unsupported position. But is that true? Which side actually rests its argument on intellectual quicksand?

The baseline issue is simple: For what purpose does a state recognize marriage and grant benefits to its participants? The supporters and opponents of marriage amendments diverge at this point, which, as we shall see, leads each camp to vastly different conclusions regarding the definition and scope of marital unions.


More here.

What Did the Dissenting California Supreme Court Justices Say Regarding SSM?

Next Tuesday, when deciding how to vote on Proposition 8, please consider the statements of the three Supreme Court Justices who wrote dissenting opinions in opposition to the decision to legalize same-sex marriage—which decision overturned the law previously enacted by 61% of California voters.

Justice Baxter & Justice Chin

“So far, Congress, and virtually every court to consider the issue,
has rejected it. Nothing in our Constitution, express or implicit,
compels the majority’s startling conclusion that the age-old
understanding of marriage — an understanding recently
confirmed by an initiative law — is no longer valid.”

“California statutes already recognize same-sex unions and
grant them all the substantive legal rights this state can bestow.”

“The question presented by this case is simple and stark. It
comes down to this: Even though California’s progressive laws,
recently adopted through the democratic process, have
pioneered the rights of same-sex partners to enter legal unions
with all the substantive benefits of opposite-sex legal unions, do
those laws nonetheless violate the California Constitution
because at present, in deference to long and universal tradition,
by a convincing popular vote, and in accord with express
national policy (see fns. 1, 2, ante), they reserve the label
“marriage” for opposite-sex legal unions? I must conclude that
the answer is no.”

“…a bare majority of this court, not satisfied with the pace of
democratic change, now abruptly forestalls that process and
substitutes, by judicial fiat, its own social policy views for those
expressed by the People themselves. Undeterred by the strong
weight of state and federal law and authority, the majority
invents a new constitutional right, immune from the ordinary
process of legislative consideration. The majority finds that our
Constitution suddenly demands no less than a permanent
redefinition of marriage, regardless of the popular will.”

“The majority has violated these principles. It simply does not
have the right to erase, then recast, the age-old definition of
marriage, as virtually all societies have understood it, in order to
satisfy its own contemporary notions of equality and justice.”

Justice Corrigan

“But I, and this court, must acknowledge that a majority of
Californians hold a different view, and have explicitly said so by
their vote. This court can overrule a vote of the people only if the
Constitution compels us to do so. Here, the Constitution does
not. Therefore, I must dissent.”

“It is important to be clear. Under California law, domestic
partners have “virtually all of the same substantive legal
benefits and privileges” available to traditional spouses. (Maj.
opn., ante, at p. 45.) I believe the Constitution requires this as a
matter of equal protection. However, the single question in this
case is whether domestic partners have a constitutional right to
the name of “marriage.” Proposition 22 was enacted only eight
years ago. By a substantial majority the people voted to
recognize, as “marriage,” only those unions between a man and
a woman. (Fam. Code, § 308.5.) The majority concludes that
the voters’ decision to retain the traditional definition of
marriage is unconstitutional. I disagree.”

“Domestic partnerships and marriages have the same legal
standing, granting to both heterosexual and homosexual couples
a societal recognition of their lifelong commitment.”

“The legitimate purpose of the statutes defining marriage is to
preserve the traditional understanding of the institution. For that
purpose, plaintiffs are not similarly situated with spouses. While
their unions are of equal legal dignity, they are different because
they join partners of the same gender. Plaintiffs are in the
process of founding a new tradition, unfettered by the boundar-
ies of the old one.“

“The majority ignores the fact that plaintiffs already have those
rights and privileges under the DPA. The majority aptly
articulates how domestic partnerships and marriages are the
same. But it fails to recognize that this case involves only the
names of those unions. The fact that plaintiffs enjoy equal
substantive rights does not situate them similarly with married
couples in terms of the traditional designation of marriage.”

[Originally an advertisement in the Contra Costa Times]

Sunday, November 2, 2008

Response to Latest No Ad

Have you seen the ridiculous commercial comparing supporting traditional marriage to racism? What a joke. The video below, posted by the Yes Campaign, responds.

Saturday, November 1, 2008

Why Feinstein (and Everyone Else on the No Side) Is Wrong

This guy really nails it on the head. The No Crowd completely ignores the prejudice that SSM imposes on children.

It's Funny Because People Actually Believe It

The Simpsons has got to be the most clever sitcom of all time. One of the classic lines from Reverend Lovejoy is directly applicable to the mindset of many in the No Crowd.

"Once something has been approved by the Government, It's no longer immoral."

Whatever makes you feel better. . .

Wow - Someone Is Supportive!

Great Job!

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (BP)--One week after issuing a plea for donations, supporters of a constitutional marriage amendment have surpassed their goal -- raising more than $5 million -- although it remains to be seen whether it will be enough.

More here.