Posts tagged religion

The GOP’s War on Marriage

Thank you, Mark Sanford, for protecting the institution of marriage for us, the American people, against those evil homogays who want to destroy it. You, like many other Republicans, have been working hard over the past decade to prevent the full enforcement of the Fourteenth Amendment — especially those parts about “liberty” and “equal protection under the law”.

I think my favorite part about the Republican Party platform is that it has nothing to do with, say, the evils of cheating on one’s wife or divorce. No, apparently the only — or at least the biggest — threat to marriage is same-sex marriage. But here’s the funny thing. The divorce rate in the United States is estimated to be 40-50%. Estimates vary, but the most conservative put the infidelity rate at about 20%. So, basically: not only is who I marry none of the Republican Party’s business, not only does it have no effect on anyone else’s marriage, but even if neither of those things were true, divorce and adultery would still be the biggest threats to the institution of marriage.

But I guess none of that matters to the Crazy Crusaders for Marriage. Let’s take a look at the hypocritical douchebags who go on at length about the “protection” of marriage against “them evil homosexuals”. In only the past five years, we’ve had Mark Foley — the crusader against internet predators who was actually a predator himself; Ted Haggard — fundy-wingnut-in-chief who apparently was down with hiring male prostitutes and doing crystal meth; Robert Allen — member of the Florida Statehouse and state chairman of the McCain campaign; Larry Craig — the Republican senator from Idaho with the “wide stance”; Bill Clinton — the “Democrat” who signed the “Defense” of “Marriage” Act while doing naughty things with a cigar with his intern; Glenn Murphy — the national chairman of the Young Republicans who got another Young Republican drunk to take advantage of him; John Ensign — senator of Nevada and fellow adulterer; the list really does go on and on.

You’d think that the massive hypocrisy of the Republican Party might reflect somehow on the legitimacy of their rantings about “protecting marriage”. You know, considering that they themselves are responsible for more damage to the institution of marriage than anything else. Well, I suppose that’s a bit of an exaggeration. It’s a totally legitimate argument to say that the 24-hour Britney Spears marriage and the other shenanigans which go on in Las Vegas are far more harmful to the moral fabric of this country than anything that gay marriage could wreak.

In conclusion: if the Republican Party leadership wants to prevent the “decay” of the institution of marriage, they should do a number of things: (1) pass tougher divorce laws; (2) stop cheating on their wives; (3) come out of the closet already.

Leave a comment »

My Vote for Nader, Vindicated

According to AMERICAblog, Barack Obama’s legal team — likely on instructions from the White House — filed a motion to dismiss a legal challenge to the “Defense” of “Marriage” Act (DOMA). The full-length, fifty-four page rape of the Constitution and queer constituents can be found here. Among some of the claims the team makes are:

* Homosexuality is comparable to incest and pedophilia. Maybe if the Obama administration lawyers had a basic understanding of reality, they might comprehend that since children aren’t able to consent (unlike adults, the persons in question in same-sex marriage) the comparison to homosexuality is not a very good one. They might also understand the fact that incest has been scientifically linked to genetic problems in offspring, whereas homosexuality…not so much.

* DOMA is fine because it saves the federal government money. (Funny, I don’t recall that being a concern of the Obama administration.) Besides, aren’t our rights priceless? Or something? Maybe?

This shit goes on and on; I encourage every person who voted for Obama to read this in full and then seriously reconsider voting for him again. You can’t write this off as simply him doing “his best” for gay people in today’s political climate: this was a relatively minor proceeding (i.e. whether the case would be able to go to court or not) and Obama would have been perfectly capable of distancing himself from the actions of his legal team. Instead, he chose to aggressively seek out and destroy the rights of same-sex couples.

I was happy to see that a number of gay-rights groups, including the ACLU, GLAD, Lambda Legal, and HRC, among others, wrote a letter to the Obama administration complaining about his desertion of gay Americans. This shouldn’t be shocking to anyone who even vaguely recalls the Clinton administration. In fact, the Democratic Party has a strong tradition of trying to screw gay people, even though we’re way out of their league.

To me, the recent actions of the Obama administration, combined with his announced refusal to repeal Don’t Ask Don’t Tell for a long time, are merely a vindication of my belief that an Obama White House wouldn’t mean anything for gay rights.

Barack Obama should be absolutely ashamed of himself.

Leave a comment »

Smith v. Allwright…alright?

In his last post, Tim makes a number of legitimate points, but seems to have missed the last couple of paragraphs of my original post:

Admittedly, their right to freedom of association does cover their right to be total dicks. Undoubtedly, the fact that they are on private property shields them from the righteous fury of First Amendment scholars everywhere. However, that doesn’t preclude me from: 1. exposing them as total dicks; 2. urgings others to do so; and, most importantly, 3. calling for their tax-exempt status to be rescinded.

I’d take issue with anyone who said otherwise (imagine what would happen if we had to let the Klan into shabbos services!). I suppose this would be a more serious matter if “Liberty” “University” faced any other destiny than to embarrass itself into irrelevancy and oblivion.

However, since I think it’s fun to play with ideas (even those with which I disagree), let’s explore some forum analysis.

Read the rest of this entry »

Leave a comment »

Gay, Jewish, and Pissed-Off: A Manifesto (Part I)

1. Just because something has emerged from western culture doesn’t mean that it’s “bad” or “evil” or even must necessarily be questioned, when something from non-western cultures would not be.

Recently, the people in Sudan who were indicted on charges of genocide charged that the ICC was a “racist” organization because it was formed by Western nations. Besides the fact that such allegations are bullshit (23 or so African countries participated in its formation), it shouldn’t matter whether that organization was formed by “western” countries or not. If you have problems with its principles then level an attack against those principles. Just because you happen not to like the fact that white people formed it doesn’t mean that it’s an illegitimate organization — it just means you’re racist.

Which brings me to my next point.

2. Not all white people are racist; not all black people are free from bigotry. This may come as newsflash to some people on the left, but not all non-white people shit ice-cream — and not all white people are evil oppressors. In case you didn’t notice, there were numerous white people who participated in the Civil Rights movement. In fact, if it hadn’t been for white people, African Americans likely still wouldn’t have any rights today. The next time someone calls me a racist because I’m white or don’t happen to support race-based affirmative action, remember that.

And as for black people somehow magically being free from racism — has anyone heard of the Nation of Islam. They believe that white people are all incarnations of the devil or some shit. Now if a bunch of white people ran around claiming that black people were the devil or something, they’d be shut down in like a week as fucking asshats. But no, instead, people like the Nation of Islam attract all kinds of white apologists who attempt to justify their racism, as if “oh, well, it doesn’t count because they were oppressed.”

Or, moving away from racism, doesn’t anyone else want to talk about Prop 8? I mean, sure a lot of it has to do with education, but it doesn’t matter how you analyze it — black people were bigots against queer people. The fact that they were uneducated doesn’t excuse it, it just demonstrates the need to reform the educational system. I don’t recall anyone excusing actions by the KKK by just saying that they’re “uneducated” — how are the actions by Black Churches Any different?

Also, just because I think your music sucks doesn’t mean I’m racist. It just means your music sucks.

3. Not all black people suffer from horrible, horrible oppression. Newsflash, people: not all black people have been called names, beaten, or lynched or even been around or near those things. In fact, there are quite a few of them who are doing quite well for themselves. This is why Affirmative Action is bullshit — or at least race-based affirmative action: there are rich-off-their-asses African-Americans who are getting into universities or who are getting jobs over equally-qualified white poor people. Do I think that white people should get jobs just by virtue of being white? No. But I do think that the fact that someone is poor means that they had to try harder in order to succeed on an equal level. If you’re rich and black, the fact of the matter is that you probably had just as many — if not more — opportunities as someone who is rich and white. But if you’re poor and white, you’ve probably had far fewer opportunities than someone who’s rich and white.

The way the educational system is set up is biased against the poor. Since it’s locally funded, and people frequently live segregated by class, poor school districts frequently face the choice of having less funding or taxing those who can least afford it even more. So while in Trenton, for example, schools are falling apart and the school can barely afford to pay its teachers, the next district over is buying new computers every year or two.

My point here is this: race and class are strongly correlated. But the oppression that is frequently faced by poor African-Americans is also faced by poor whites and poor latinos. Why should wealthy blacks get a foot up over poor whites?

4. Jewish people aren’t white. What’s fun is that for the past two-thousand years, white people — and brown people, and yellow people, and, just, well, everyone (but mostly white people) — have been trying to wipe us (i.e. Jews) off the face of the Earth.

Then, suddenly, after a last big push (i.e. the Holocaust), suddenly Jews are white. Thanks guys. I like how we became white just in time for affirmative action to be put into place. That’s awesome.

You know what college interviews were implemented right? To weed out the Jews and the gays. Then as soon as they were done with that and started to try to encourage non-whites to apply, all of a sudden OH WOW YEAH YOU JEWS HAVEN’T BEEN OPPRESSED AT ALL WELCOME TO THE CLUB. LET’S JUST IGNORE THE PAST 2000 YEARS OF US TRYING TO KILL YOU, AWESOME.

5. There are certain things that are always bad. Just because non-white, non-male, non-straight, or non-”oppressive class” people perpetrate them doesn’t make those things okay. Things such as the Haitian genocide of former slaveowners and their families is abhorrent. There is a line to be drawn between punishment for crimes and unnecessary retribution; and, further, between justified retribution and wholesale slaughter of innocents.

6. All-women’s colleges are sexist; all-black colleges are racist. No. Really. I’m really scratching my head about this one. How much did the left bitch about the fact that “oh, wah, wah, wah, all these schools are men-only, and wah wah wah we have to go to these separate schools.” Okay, so, instead, the deal is that not only can men not go to your special schools, but you also get to go to what used to be male-only schools?

And as for all-black colleges…well, wasn’t there something called the Civil Rights movement that was all about segregation? And then wasn’t there another case called Brown v. Board of Education which said that separate was necessarily unequal. So what’s the deal?

You want to have your cake and eat it too? Why can’t I go to Barnard if I want to? The fact of the matter is that it is better. But I can’t go there? Why? Because I have a penis. OMG I GUESS IM THREATENIN UR RITES OMGOMGOMG.

Assholes.

7. I can still be on the ‘left’ and believe this. Sorry, people, but just because I don’t subscribe to your bullshit identity politics doesn’t mean that you can call up the Leftist Pope and excommunicate me from the Green Party or SDS or whatever. I’m not sure where along the line the Green Party/Socialist Party/the left in general decided to sign a suicide pact by advocating entirely untenable things that are totally unrelated to economics or economic justice (I’m sorry, but what’s the deal with spelling “women” incorrectly? It’s not “womyn”. It’s women.), but I’m pretty damn sure my name wasn’t on that document.

Continued in Part II

Leave a comment »

Yes We Can; But So Could They

This about summarizes how I feel about the whole gay thing.

This about summarizes how I, as a religious person, feel about the whole gay thing. Click the image for a larger version.

This piece ran in the Commentariat, the Spectator opinion blog.

Last night, when I found out Barack Obama had won, I was ecstatic. I ran out of my dorm with my friends and we, and probably 200 other Columbia students, marched up to Harlem to watch the last few minutes of Obama’s speech.

But when I got back to my computer and television, I was horribly disappointed. The ban on gay marriage in Florida had passed, the ban on gay marriage in Arizona had passed, the ban on gay marriage in California had passed, and the ban on gay adoption in Arkansas had passed. Al Franken looked like he was going to lose to Norm Coleman, and convicted felon Ted Stevens was ahead by three points in Alaska (my friend has vowed to start donating to the Alaskan Independence Party so that incubator of corrupt and incompetant politicians will leave us alone and take their two corrupt Republican senators with them).

I know I should be happy. My friends keep telling me that Barack Obama will be good for gay people. And “at least it’s not McCain”. And yet, for the past eight years — for nearly half of my lifetime — my countrymen have been voting to stop me from having equal rights.

Read the rest of this entry »

Comments (1) »

Education by Jubilation

This piece ran in the Commentariat, the Spectator opinion blog.

In its recent editorial, the editorial board of Spec demonstrated incredible ignorance in their analysis of the events promoted by “the QuAM” (this reference to QuAM demonstrates, in and of itself, a lack of familiarity with the group and events). In addition, the e-board’s implication that sexuality is a “preference” is dually offensive and further exemplary of their ignorance.

It is unfortunate that the board fell into the same trap that so many other media sources have and simply furthered the perception of “the queer” as a sex-crazed maniac with little concern for other matters. This is not only untrue, it is patently offensive.

In fact, as many of my fellow students pointed out in the comments, there are many, many other parties at Columbia which are equally or even more sexualized than the parties sponsored by QuAM or even queer groups in general. Perhaps a prime example of this would be those taking place on frat row, where homophobic and misogynistic prejudices remain their strongest and where value of consent remains the lowest. Indeed, where are the editorial board’s condemnations of the revelry in America’s bastions of heteronormativity?

The editorial’s condemnation of celebrations of queer sexuality is entirely unacceptable and furthermore harmful. In a society where, in many places, to be queer is to face harassment — be it in the workplace, the home, or school — physical violence, and shame, the exact opposite of condemnation is called for — and this is exactly what some of these events were designed to do.

Even in purportedly liberal places, LGBT people — and youths in particular — face a considerable amount of pressure to conform in a variety of ways. Some parents send their children to be brainwashed and “fixed” at camps run by fundamentalist Christian groups, sometimes gay youth face public humiliation when their church congregation prays for God to make them straight. More common, however, is for a demand of outward conformity. While the straight people around us are permitted or even expected to talk about their private lives, queer people are pressured to be silent about sex, romance, and who they find attractive — this expectation permeates not only friendships, but educational environments, a wide variety of professions, and, of course, the military.

There is a reason that the queer suicide rate has been reported to be between three to five times that of our heterosexual counterparts, and, undeniably, part of the reason behind that is the expectation of heterosexuality and the suppression of queer sexuality.

We live in a nation in which the question of queer rights is something up for debate, where my right to marry a person I love comes down to a razor thin vote, even in places like California. In this culture, to be anything other than heterosexual is inherently political, to express that sexuality is inherently political, and, by extension, the revelry which the e-board so strongly condemns is inherently political. This “revelry” is designed to help queer students become more comfortable with themselves and their sexuality, after eighteen, or nineteen, or twenty years of repressing it.

Lastly, while straight allies are highly valued in the LGBT community, the focus of QuAM is not to make them feel at home. It is to make queer students feel at home in a society where heterosexuality is assumed. While the vast majority of straight students rarely feel threatened because of their sexual identity, the same, unfortunately, cannot be said for queer students. Therefore, both a large and important part of QuAM is to create spaces friendly to and comfortable for non-heterosexual students. If those spaces make straight students feel uncomfortable, they have the other 11 months of the year and every other building and room not only on this campus, but in much of the rest of the world.

The only truly acceptable response to this travesty — indeed, that is exactly what the editorial piece represents — is a retraction and apology to the queer community at large.

EDIT: Tom Faure, the editor-in-chief of the Spectator,  recently wrote a conciliatory post on the editor’s blog. However, while certainly well-intentioned, it failed to address a wide variety of the complaints which were levelled against the editorial, amongst which was the fact that the editorial board referred to sexuality as a “preference”, implying that there is a choice involved in being a member of a marginalized and oppressed community.

Comments (1) »

The Real America

Ever since Sarah Palin’s comments about the “real America” and the “pro-America” parts of America, I started paying more attention to these sorts of utterings from the GOP. I had been hoping that it would be limited to Sarah Palin, or perhaps even a few on the fringes of the party, but, of course, I was disappointed.

On Monday I went to see the Daily Show live. That show was glorious, both because it was hilarious and because it was filled with with righteous fury about Palin’s recent comments. What really surprised me, however, was a comment from one of McCain’s staff members which referred to the “real Virginia”, as opposed to the fake, Democratic, part of Virginia.

Then one of my friends pointed me towards an apology that had to be made by a North Carolina Republican congressman. At a McCain rally he said to the crowd:

…liberals hate real Americans that work and accomplish and achieve and believe in God.

Of course, this is even more offensive than the remarks made by Sarah Palin. I suppose he was at least more upfront about what he meant, however. In his apology remarks he said this:

there is no doubt that it came out completely the wrong way.

Quite honestly, it doesn’t matter how it “came out”. What matters is the sentiment behind the words, and his sentiments were this:

1. Liberals are not “real Americans”

2. Liberals do not believe in God

3. Liberals do not work or accomplish things

4. Liberals hate people who believe in God

I don’t really consider myself a liberal, but I have no doubt that I fit into his ignorant definition of one, and, quite frankly, none of these implied or explicit statements apply to me. I believe in God and attend religious services weekly, I work hard and have accomplished any number of things of meaning to myself and those around men, I have a great apprecation for people who believe in God (as well as for those who don’t believe in God), and I am a real American.

The fact that this theme has crept up in the past few days is, quite frankly, terrifying.

I have a lot more to say about this, but I have a midterm tomorrow/later today for which I haven’t finished studying quite yet.

Comments (1) »

Death by Religion

PrayerThis is somewhat relevant to the research paper I wrote on the effects of religion as a stressor with regards to sexual minorities — a girl recently died because her parents refused to seek medical treatment and opted instead to pray for healing.

Apparently they weren’t aware of the numerous studies that showed that praying actually does nothing (see picture to the right).

This whole incident reminds me of a parable I heard in an episode of West Wing. While it pertained to the President commuting the sentence of a prisoner about to receive the death penalty, it’s nonetheless relevant. It goes as follows:

The man that lived by the river. He heard a radio report that the river was going to rush up and flood the town. And that all the residents should evacuate their homes. But the man said, ‘I’m religious. I pray. God loves me. God will save me.’ The waters rose up. A guy in a row boat came along and he shouted, ‘Hey, hey you! You in there. The town is flooding. Let me take you to safety. ‘But the man shouted back, ‘I’m religious. I pray. God loves me. God will save me. ‘A helicopter was hovering overhead. And a guy with a megaphone shouted, ‘Hey you, you down there.The town is flooding. Let me drop this ladder and I’ll take you to safety. ‘But the man shouted back that he was religious, that he prayed, that God loved him and that God will take him to safety. Well… the man drowned. And standing at the gates of St. Peter, he demanded an audience with God. ‘Lord,’ he said, ‘I’m a religious man, I pray. I thought you loved me. Why did this happen?’ God said, ‘I sent you a radio report, a helicopter, and a guy in a rowboat. What the hell are you doing here?’

For those of you who are dense, and don’t quite grasp the concept here (read: people like this poor child’s parents), the moral of the story is this: God works in mysterious ways. He won’t reach down with all his might and save you from the floodwaters — but he will send you a radio report, a helicopter, and a guy in a rowboat. He won’t miraculously cure your child — but he did provide mankind with hospitals and medical experts.

Sad as it is, this incident can be marked down as just one more reason why the Christian fundamentalists are wrong — on almost everything.

Leave a comment »