Apollo as god

In mythology, Apollo is one of the most important and many-sided of the Olympian deities. Apollo has been variously recognized as a god of light and the sun; truth and prophecy; archery; medicine and healing; music, poetry, and the arts. (from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apollo )



Blog Archive

Sunday, February 19, 2012

When Jesus Plays the Bagpipes


What's the Future of
Same-Gender Marriage in the USA?



(OKLAHOMA CITY)  Gazing into a crystal ball my prediction for same-gender marriage is that the United States Supreme Court (SCOTUS) will not accept any appeal from the lower courts. This will have the consequence of leaving same-gender marriage to the individual states to do what they will, using the state legislatures to pass bills, pass the question on to public votes, or let lower court rulings decide the hot-button issue state-by-state.

We gays and lesbians are hated even more than people of "color" were in the 1950s and 60s. Some people of "color" deny there is any connection at all with their "immutable" equality movement and ours where we "decide" on a daily basis whether to be gay or straight.

On the other track, DOMA might be overturned should Obama get re-elected, but SCOTUS can legitimately deny any appeal by using the tactic that since marriage laws have always been the prerogative of the states there is no place for a Federal court ruling requiring states to conform to a national marriage law. The patchwork system of some states recognizing the existing yet un-recognized civil right to marriage for any two qualified adults will continue for another generation.

This is our Plessy v. Ferguson interregnum where SCOTUS ruled in 1896 that separate WAS equal. This attitude was legal until overturned by the Brown v. Board of Education decision of 1956 and instituted integration in public facilities. Perhaps in the 2050s we'll get the legal recognition that is morally ours already, but I won't be here to see it.

The entire history of America, in a nutshell, has been denial of legal recognition to minorities--it's evident in the original Constitution:  women were not mentioned at all, slaves and native Americans were counted as 3/5ths of a person, the states were allowed to pass laws requiring minimal ownership of property to allow only some men the right to vote, poll taxes and literacy tests were allowed to keep minorities from voting. The latest trend to oppress minority demographics is to require state-issued ID cards for all voters, ostensibly to reduce non-existent "voter fraud", disregarding the time and expense that will result in dis-enfranchisement of the voter--this burden falls mainly on minorities who pay for responsibility through their taxes, yet receive little of the accompanying privileges. There is little reason to expect our own gay/lesbian equality fight to be met with any less resistance from the status quo that calls the shots behind the scenes.

Chest-beating America is far from being a leading Democracy of the world--it's an equal-opportunity denier.
The real history of America is one of some people not willing to share the public pie, wanting it all for themselves. Are civil rights diminished when shared?  Is there a limited supply?  Some activists and politicians who try to defuse issues or salve the wound  appeal to our collective "better nature".  I think the true nature of America is one of contentiousness and self-promotion.

No European or Latin American country that recognizes same-gender marriage has put the question to a vote of the people. What more need I say?  America is a country of bully-boasting braggadocio supported by diluted education, exaggerated by the delusion of religious superiority.

We'll get true equality in America when Jesus comes back to play the bagpipes.

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Rich people do not speak for me.

Rich people, even gay rich people, do not speak for me.  Rich people can afford to buy their civil rights, live in blue colonies of  respect, isolate themselves from the dirty slurs and calumnies of middle- and lower-class workplaces.


Obama has NOT done enough to rest on any laurels.

DOMA, the Federal anti-marriage law aimed at same-gender people, is still in place..  ENDA, though it's been kicking around for decades and would offer employment protection, shows no sign of being ENDA-ed.  States continue to raffle off our civil right of marriage to the majority of homo-hating voters.  And when the flat-earthers can, as in Iowa, they remove judges who understand and vote to ensure civil liberties are NOT available to the highest bidder.

http://gay.americablog.com/2012/02/report-from-lgbt-fundraiser-low.html

http://www.metroweekly.com/poliglot/2012/02/high-dollar-dem-donors-talk-wi.html

clip---  The President has spent the last few months telling us "We can't wait' while using his executive authority to make needed changes. Sounds like Bean and Birch are telling the White House, don't worry, we'll wait. I hope the President's team don't think those two speak for the community. Many people, the kind of people who can't drop $35,800 for a fundraiser, can't wait. They could use the protection.

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

OMFG!!! It's 2004 all over again re: s-s marriage


grpahic from  http://www.koze950.com/

2012

http://www.edgeonthenet.com/index.php?ch=news&sc=national&sc2=news&sc3=&id=129687


clip  The Court's decision comes a day before the Washington House of Representatives is slated to vote on a bill that would allow same-sex couples to marry in the Evergreen State. The New Jersey State Senate is
scheduled to vote on a measure on Feb. 13 that would allow nuptials for gays and lesbians in the Garden State, while Maryland legislators continue to debate a marriage equality bill in their state.

New Hampshire lawmakers are poised to debate a bill later this month that would repeal their stateĆ¢€™s marriage equality law. North Carolina voters in May will vote on a proposed constitutional amendment that would define marriage as between a man and a woman. Minnesotans are slated to consider a similar ballot measure in November, while Maine voters will vote on a referendum that would allow same-sex couples to marry in the Pine Tree State.

2004
http://www.usatoday.com/news/politicselections/vote2004/initiative.htm

clip  Voters around the country Tuesday weighed in on a range of state measures from legalizing marijuana to banning gay marriage and scrapping the tradition of winner takes all electoral votes in a presidential election. Gay-marriage bans bulldozed to victory in all 11 states that voted on the measure: Arkansas,
Georgia, Kentucky, Michigan, Mississippi, Montana, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon and Utah.