ProbeX
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Feb 13, 2007
- Messages
- 1,446
I am very pleased with Barack Obama's win.... but I have to say my exuberance is tempered with a good bit of sadness for the passage of Prop 8 in California.
The sadly ironic part. The gay community was almost completely behind Barack but in the end, from the poll numbers I have heard, it was mostly the African American vote that got Prop 8 passed adding a Constitution amendment to ban gay marriage in California.
More ironic perhaps, Barack ran on a message of unity and inclusion. Of all the electorate Black American's should understand how it feels to be excluded. "Inclusion" was the underlying message that attracted them to Obama in the first place.
Even in my joy and relief at Obama's win, as a white straight male, today I am truly sad for my gay friends.
We do have much work to do still in our nation.
My apology if any of my comments are repeats. Didn't yet read the whole thread as I'm fairly busy right now, but would like to add a response:
Like you I have mixed feelings. Wish Prop 8 weren't even an issue. To me it seems like just as much a civil rights violation that gay ppl can't get married, than it was when Black ppl couldn't legally get married.
It's not just the Blacks who are to blame for Prop 8 passing. It is any culture - including many Latinos/Whites/Asians - who are homophobic and hide behind their religion to justify such sentiments.
But if your argument is that more Blacks voted for Prop 8 than others, then that may be a result of Blacks being stripped of everything years ago, and pressured into converting - by Whites - to a homophobic model of Christianity that obviously still exists today.
Also, gay people have harbored prejudice against, and wrongfully treated, Black people throughout history, too. I've heard gay people use interesting words to describe Black people, even in liberal, present day San Francisco. So this is not such a Black-or-White issue.