Gay Marriage: The NY Times to Mayor Bloomberg:
Break the Law -- or Else
April 1, 2004
by
Nicholas Stix
The New York Times is not pleased with New York City Mayor
Michael ("Mayor Mike") Bloomberg. In a March
11 house editorial, "Mayor Bloomberg's Commitment Issue," the
newspaper in so many words demanded that Bloomberg embrace same-sex
marriage, and begin personally officiating at same-sex weddings in
the mayoral residence of Grace Mansion, forthwith. Or else.
"He doesn't officiate at weddings at Gracie Mansion, a previously time-honored
tradition for mayors of New York. And it seems that he has a problem
committing on the issue of gay marriage.
"In the month or so since performing same-sex marriages became a point
of civil disobedience for a handful of other American mayors, Mr. Bloomberg
has tried to deflect interest in his personal opinion of the debate.
He said the city simply enforced the law made in Albany, which does
not allow such unions. Go there to get the law changed, he told critics.
Gay supporters were disappointed, especially in view of the mayor's
long history as a backer of civil rights for gays and his early comments
rejecting President Bush's idea of amending the Constitution to bar
marriage for people of the same sex….
"To be re-elected, Mr. Bloomberg will need to convince Democratic voters
in this overwhelmingly Democratic city that he still thinks like them,
while keeping the city's Republicans contented enough to forestall any
serious competition for the party nomination."
There are at least three things wrong with the
Times' implied
position: 1. Same-sex marriage is against the law in the State of New
York; 2. Mike Bloomberg is a Republican; and 3. The Times is saying
that Bloomberg should break the law, simply because certain 'other people
are doing it.'
Apparently, the
Times' editors, who have published dozens of
pro-same sex marriage articles since last November, think that if the
mayor of America's most populous city were to join the ranks of criminal
public officials, most notoriously San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom
and New Paltz Mayor Jason West, it would create a tidal wave effect
that would wash away the law. Mayors of municipalities large and small
across the country, starting with Chicago Mayor Rich Daley, would set
course by the wave of anarchy, and all state attorneys general and judges
would be swept away by the undertow. And so, the newspaper is practically
daring Bloomberg to break the law, suggesting that if he doesn't, he's
a wimp.
This is the mentality of a 12-year-old. And gays and socialists alike
typically inveigh against such macho swagger. For the media and the
rest of the Left, politicians are no longer permitted to be "tough guys"
in support of law and order, but are obliged to be tough guys, in supporting
lawlessness.
Now, Mike Bloomberg is no Ronald Reagan. A "RINO" (a "Republican in
name only"), until he ran for mayor in 2001, "Bloomy" was a liberal
Democrat. In New York, the Republican mayoral primary has come to function
as an alternative Democrat primary, for fresh-faced Democrats from outside
the clubhouse. The founder and still owner of
Bloomberg Business
News wasn't a politician, he was a self-made media magnate.
The terms "Republican" and "New York" co-exist uneasily in the same
sentence. (That applies to both the city and the state; consider the
case of Gov. George Pataki, who was a conservative Republican, until
he got elected governor in 1994.) In "flyover country," New York Mayor
Rudy Giuliani (1994-2001) would appear to be a Democrat. After all,
he's pro-illegal immigration (alright, forget that issue), pro-abortion,
anti-Second Amendment, and pro-"gay rights." In fact, as I once noted,
Giuliani had been
accused
of being a closet Democrat. And yet, there was a huge difference,
in New York, between Giuliani and the Democrat Party -- the difference
between the rule of law and the rule of crime, between leadership and
Clintonian followership. And in 1993, when despite a 5-1 edge in Democrat
to Republican registered voters, Giuliani beat Democrat Mayor David
Dinkins, a black socialist, in their second head-to-head race, it was
the political equivalent of a miracle. Indeed, led by
Al
Sharpton,outraged black New Yorkers sought to undo the "miracle,"
and make it impossible for the man who had beaten the city's first black
mayor to govern. (The campaign, led by black racists and the socialist
media, to undo Giuliani's 1993 and 1997 election victories, may have
inspired the attempt, also to a remarkable degree led by black racists
and the socialist media, to undo George W. Bush's victory in the 2000
presidential election.)
And yet, even in the case of Michael Bloomberg, the adjective "Republican"
still signifies something, even if that something cannot be expressed
in terms of a clear political principle. Had Bloomberg's socialist Democrat
opponent, Mark Green, prevailed in the 2001 election, Green might well
have broken the law this year, and married men to men, and women to
women. Were Bloomberg to do so, however, he would surely lose the 2005
election, and might not even win the Republican primary. In any event,
if New Yorkers wish to elect a socialist mayor, they will pull the Democrat
lever.
Hence, the
Times' claim that it is dispensing sound re-election
advice to Bloomberg, is as disingenuous as … well, most everything published
on its editorial page.
But then, the
Times is not interested in helping Bloomberg get
re-elected; it is interested in forcing same-sex marriage on the nation.
Indeed, it is hard to believe that the hard-left newspaper would ever
endorse a Republican mayor, even a RINO, as opposed to a Democrat party
hack. The paper's veiled call for Bloomberg to break the law, was more
in the matter of an ultimatum: Officiate at same-sex weddings, or we'll
destroy you.
There is more than a hint of desperation in the
Times' language.
This is a newspaper whose top people on the editorial side are, as
Reed
Irvine, the longtime scourge of the socialist media and founder
of
Accuracy in Media revealed in 2000, overwhelmingly homosexuals
who daily seek to force the gay agenda on America. And yet, they have
not prevailed. Yet.
(Speaking of the
Times' language, in a March 30 story,
"What
Marriage Means to Gays: All That Law Allows Others," "reporter"
Thomas Crampton used the euphemism "legally contentious" as a substitute
for "illegal," as in "Homosexual couples eager to formalize their relationship
do have options short of a lawsuit or a legally contentious marriage
ceremony." For Crampton, who speaks of gay "families," New York is only
"a relatively gay-friendly city." I suppose that at most, only San Francisco
would count for him as an unconditionally "gay-friendly city.")
It all started when one man, Ulster County (NY) DA Donald Williams,
stood up to New Paltz Mayor Jason West, and said, 'Stop!' Socialist
New York State Attorney General Eliot Spitzer has since forbidden the
issuance of marriage licenses to same-sex couples, but prior to DA Williams'
display of public courage, AG Spitzer had refused to do his job.
And on the same day as the
Times editorial, even the California
Supreme Court had a moment of lucidity, in enjoining against same-sex
marriages, until it can render an opinion on the matter.
Four days later, the New York
Daily News delivered yet another
blow to the
Times. The
Times' assumption that most New
Yorkers support same-sex marriage notwithstanding, a poll carried out
by the
News - whose reporters had
lionized
Rosie O'Donnell for illegally "marrying" her girlfriend in San Francisco
- found that
47%
of New Yorkers OPPOSED gay marriage, as opposed to only 40% who
supported it. (The rest of the respondents had no response.)
Were I a charitable man, I would say that in assuming that New Yorkers
supported same-sex marriage, the
Times' editorial board was merely
incompetent. But the
Times simply has the same contempt for the
facts that it does for the law and for the will of the people.
The
New York Times is hoping that it can bluff and threaten Mayor
Bloomberg into committing crimes, and thus create new "facts on the
ground." Don't let them snow you, Mayor Mike. For the important thing
isn't whether you're a "Republican," but whether you're a republican.
Nicholas Stix
New York-based freelancer Nicholas Stix has written
for Toogood Reports, Middle American News, the New York Post, Daily
News, American Enterprise, Insight, Chronicles, Newsday and many other
publications. His recent work is collected at
www.geocities.com/nstix and http://www.thecriticalcritic.blogspot.com.