Whoever thought that there would be actual voiced concerns about
men in America wanting to marry their goats? Is there something going
on in our great Heartland that I’ve missed? Instead of “The L Word”
does Showtime have a special series just for the Midwest called “The
G Word”?
Of course not.
But the debate over the idea of gay marriage has brought out concerns
by one extremist end that it will lead to people marrying their livestock
to Gay Gestapo charges of homophobic bigotry against those opposed
to same-sex nuptials.
Neither accusation is valid, so as an independent gay woman, I think
it’s time to make a few things clear. First of all, despite what you
hear from the Gay Elite, there is not a consensus in the gay community
about this issue. We do not all operate in the cultural or political
equivalent of a Vulcan mind-meld.
I, one among many, respect and understand the growing concern about
the disintegration of our traditions and values. I am so concerned,
it is the heart and soul of my second book, The Death of Right and
Wrong.
Consequently, I respect the majority of Americans and their opinion
that marriage should be defined as between one man and one woman.
At the same time, as an American, I also believe that every American
deserves the same rights and protections as every other. Most of you
do, too. The very same polls that show how united Americans are against
“gay marriage” indicate a majority approving of civil unions.
That doesn’t surprise me. It is consistent with the American belief
that we can have fair play and equality while recognizing the need
to honor traditional institutions.
Frankly, I believe the cultural trouble and moral vapidity in our
society today—the moral relativism I write about in DRW—has sprung
from the ‘liberation’ movements of the 60s and 70s. It was then that
the Left began to attack the traditional in the name of liberation
and equality.
Anything that would strike a pose against authority and social norms,
ranging from promiscuous sex to drug abuse to adultery to riotous
violence, was embraced and encouraged by leftist leadership. The “Counter
Culture” was born.
Courtesy of cultural Incrementalism (which I explain in my previous
column) what it became has rivaled Rosemary’s Baby.
Today’s struggle with single-parent families, drug addiction, the
epidemic of sexually transmitted diseases among the young, suicide
rates, the devaluing of the family, and even the extraordinarily high
divorce rate, I contend, can be traced back to the time which lionized
the destruction of the traditional and the elevation of moral relativism.
Despite this, American society remains committed to equality, but
it’s apparent that we don’t like the aftermath of taking our traditions
for granted. So, yes, we’ve decided to maintain the idea of “marriage”
as it has stood, while finding another way to guarantee the rights
of gay people.
While this should actually be a relatively easy situation to resolve
(heck, Bush, Kerry and Edwards all hold the same position—against
gay marriage, for civil unions), all hell seems to have broken loose—not
only in San Francisco, but in Washington, DC as well.
On one hand you have the reckless law-breaking behavior of San Francisco
mayor Gavin Newsom bestowing marriage licenses on gay couples. A few
of my gay friends have voiced their support for this. I reminded these
friends, who are also pro-choice, that Fresno, California has a pro-life
mayor. How would they feel if that mayor decided to ignore the law
and keep women from accessing their legal abortion rights?
They heard me, but it was disturbing that I had to put this into
perspective.
Now, in Washington, DC the president has declared the need to amend
the U.S. Constitution! Really now—that appears to be as much of a
stunt as the rogue gay marriages in San Francisco. And this from a
man (who along with Cheney) in the last election who said it should
be a matter left to the states. It seems, though, only if the states
do what you like.
Clearly, the Constitution should be amended as a last resort. Regardless
of how you feel about gay marriage, or abortion, or saving the spotted
owl (or not), the Constitution is not made of silly putty—to be twisted
and shaped and torn apart depending on our national mood. It is written
in a way that makes us have to struggle with issues we face.
After all, if we are truly committed to wanting to save and not tamper
with our traditional institutions which represent the core of the
American value system, doesn’t the Constitution fall into that category
as well?
I am heartened by a few true conservatives, including Representative
David Dreier whom I got to know on the Schwarzenegger Transition Team,
who have voiced concerns about the rush to amend.
We’ve been through worse, we’ve survived and found solutions. We’ll
survive this too, but the gay community must come to terms with a
few issues first.
Gays ultimately need to stop looking to government for unconditional
love and approval of who we are. Andrew Sullivan, a political commentator
and writer many of you know and respect, wrote a piece for Time
magazine where he actually equated governmental recognition of
gay marriage as a necessary element to all gay people feeling accepted
and wanted. He claimed that anything other than marriage will “build
a wall between gay people and their own families.” http://www.andrewsullivan.com/main_article.php?artnum=20040210
While his story was personal and moving, the argument was, frankly,
nonsense, and representative of the general mentality among the gay
elite. It also gives the government and other people’s opinions far
too much power over the quality of our lives and effectively eliminates
our own responsibility for our happiness.
Part of the fight for gay marriage is based in Sullivan’s lament—that
it is only governmental recognition of who are that will make us whole.
Let’s get real—the only thing that will make gay people whole is
personal acceptance of ourselves by ourselves. Instead,
we are still looking to Mommy or Daddy, now in the form of Society,
to tell us we’re Okay. To sanctify, if you will, our lives and relationships.
Society has been the benevolent parent for a very long time. And
it has been amazing, and a testament to the American character, that
despite being a people of faith who have legitimate concerns about
the gay lifestyle, Americans have made this the best place on Earth
for gays and lesbians, where we are free to live incomparably rich
lives.
Now, when Americans have said through polls and voting, that they
do not want to give up the meaning of marriage but support a comparable
alternative, how do the gay elite respond? When you ask for one cultural
thing to be left untouched, the Gay Elite become the Gay Gestapo.
It’s a very fast change from the polo shirt to the brown shirt these
days.
In classic Thought Police fashion and like children throwing a tantrum,
the name-calling flies—those who oppose gay marriage are “homophobes,”
“haters” and the label du jour “bigots.” Once again, the left, unable
to answer critics with respect, resort to name-calling only to further
the divide they need to validate their inevitable victimhood.
Marriage is worth protecting, in more ways than one. It’s also worth
noting the cavalier way in which heterosexuals have handled marriage
has lent fuel to the fire of this issue.
How seriously can any of us take the president’s vow to “protect
the sanctity of marriage” when Britney Spears indulges in it for 5
minutes in Vegas? Marriage has become a television reality game show.
And protecting children? Before amending the Constitution, perhaps
the Feds should make divorce a little harder to get. It’s divorce
that is ruining children’s lives at the moment, not a couple of lesbians
who want to get married (no matter how scary some of those pictures
were out of San Francisco).
If George W. Bush is serious about “saving the institution” he has
his hands full and he’s running late.
Tammy Bruce