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By Maurine Jensen Proctor
Hearing the Senate debate that ended
in knocking the Marriage Protection Amendment down this round has
been a little like watching a magician who tries to keep your eyes
focused on his right hand, while he hides the card in his left.
The opponents had a script repeated with few variations, whose lines
were designed to skirt the substance of the issue, and chill debate.
Yet, redefining marriage is a serious business, whose implications
nobody can entirely predict. Surely this warrants thoughtful debate.
Americans deserve better than the scripted
rebuffs they received from those who opposed the Marriage Protection
amendment.
Here is what opponents mustered as
arguments against protecting marriage — the three handy, dandy,
all-purpose scripts thrown at anyone who takes seriously the place
of marriage in our nation. It’s worth paying attention to them,
because you’ll hear them again as this debate is now transferred
to the House.
Script 1 — Tar Your Opponents
Senator Ted Kennedy summed this argument
up in a sentence, “A vote for this amendment is a vote for bigotry,
pure and simple.” Translated, this means no other reason could
possibly exist for supporting marriage than sheer hatefulness. Of
course, into this group is lumped the 55 religious leaders representing
a wide variety of churches who signed a letter supporting the amendment.
As Richard Lessner wrote in the Free Republic:
One cannot help but wonder what His
Eminence Sean Patrick Cardinal O’Malley of Boston thinks of Sen.
Kennedy’s thunderous pontificating. Cardinal O’Malley, along with
all seven other U.S. Catholic cardinals, signed a statement on
behalf of the Religious Coalition for Marriage supporting the
amendment and urging the Senate to pass the measure along to the
states for ratification…
Among other notable bigots signing
the Religious Coalition for Marriage’s pro-amendment statement
are included Cardinals Egan of New York, Keeler of Baltimore,
and George of Chicago; His Eminence Archbishop Demetrios, Primate
of the Greek Orthodox Church in America; Bishop Charles E. Blake,
First Assistant Presiding Bishop of the Church of God in Christ,
a predominantly African-American denomination; the Most Reverend
Jose H. Gomez, the Catholic bishop of San Antonio; Elder Russell
M. Nelson, Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints; and Dr. Richard Land of the Southern
Baptist Convention, with its associated 43,000 churches comprising
the largest Protestant denomination — bigots all, according to
the Sage of Hyannis.
This would be laughable if it weren’t
taken so seriously. When Governor Mitt Romney said that children
deserve a mother and a father, he was nailed by the press as “hateful.”
In the Goodrich case that made same-sex
marriage legal in Massachusetts, the justices said that the traditional
definition of marriage is “rooted in persistent prejudices” and
amounts to “invidious discrimination.”
Private citizens know that stomach-churning,
sweat-inducing discomfort of having to say out loud why they believe
in marriage. It is not only not cool; it is downright dangerous.
Senator Rick Santorum’s office reports
that there are some campuses where he can no longer speak because
of his bold support for marriage. The vituperation and catcalls
are so violent and vile, he is unable to speak.
Yet, ironically, it is those who protect
marriage who are labeled intolerant and bigoted. In the face of
this accusation, marriage supporters have become muzzled and silenced.
Dennis Prager said, “Virtually every
news report about President George W. Bush's support for a constitutional
amendment defining marriage as the union of a man and a woman describes
it as "pandering" to the "far Right," the "radical
Right" or, less pejoratively, "social conservatives"
of the Republican Party.” When do you ever hear the press describe
anyone as the “far Left” or the “radical Left”? This epithet is
reserved for those concerned about social values.
Those who support the Marriage Protection
Amendment would like to discuss its merits without their character
or their intentions smeared. It shouldn’t be dangerous to protect
and defend what always had been through thousands of years of human
history — marriage.
And if one is harangued now for belief
in traditional marriage, what punishments could society erect for
those who hung onto that belief if same-sex marriage became the
law of the land?
Script #2 — It’s all about Politics.
Let’s Move on to Important Stuff
The angle the press has taken on the
marriage debate has been that it’s all about the Republicans shoring
up their sagging base by bringing up a hot issue that social conservatives
care about. Senator Richard Durbin said that discussing the amendment
was not about the preservation of marriage, but the preservation
of the dominant party.
Senator Reid’s entire speech was based
on what issues were not being discussed during this day in
the Senate. “In Nevada gas prices are over $3.00 per gallon. Fill-ups
at the tank cause emptiness at the bank… Raging in Iraq is an intractable
war… A world changing as we speak as a result of global warming,
etc., etc., etc. In spite of the many serious problems we have just
discussed — what is the United States Senate going to debate this
week — a constitutional amendment on marriage that will fail by
a large margin.”
Trivial stuff, we are told. Americans
aren’t interested in marriage. Let’s get on to the really important
business. This line of reasoning, of course, is meant to deflate
those passionate about preserving family.
It is disingenuous, because the average
vote for the state marriage amendments that have been passed is
71%. This week a constitutional amendment on marriage passed in
Alabama with 81% of the voters.
It’s hard to believe that nobody cares
about this issue.
You wonder too, how an issue can be
raised for political gain if nobody cares about it? Marriage Protection
opponents speak without consistency.
Script #3 — Leave it to the States
Those who want to leave marriage definition
to the state may be well-meaning, but can they be well-informed?
They usually start out their argument with, “I have been married
(fill in the blank) years and have (fill in the blank) children.
I believe that marriage should be between a man and a woman, but
this is a matter best left to the states.”
This is, of course, to establish legitimacy
before they break the bad news that they don’t support a marriage
amendment to the United States constitution.
Some who take this position may also
want to appear to be different than they are. The editors of the
National Review wrote, “These are politicians, typically
Democrats, who know that the public opposes same-sex marriage but
that most liberals favor it. They may, secretly, agree with these
liberals themselves. Their strategy has three components: Let the
courts impose same-sex marriage on the populace. Claim to be opposed
to it. But also oppose any action that would stop the courts from
imposing it.”
With this argument, they can have it
both ways.
It would be great to be able to leave
marriage protection to the states; the problem is that it just won’t
work. Though 20 states have passed constitutional amendments protecting
marriage, activist judges can turn over the will of the people with
a stroke of the pen. That recently happened in Georgia, where 76%
of the people had supported a constitutional amendment and one judge
overturned it on a technicality.
In the past two years, state courts
in Washington, California, Maryland and New York have ruled against
marriage laws. We are awaiting the verdict from Washington, which
has much more impact than Massachusetts since the state has no residency
requirements for marriage. Same-sex partners could come from any
state to be married and return to their own state and begin legal
action to be recognized there. At this moment nine states are poised
to strike down marriage by the end of the year.
Marriage is not confined by a border,
but is carried state to state. Without a national solution, all
the protections the states’ enact may be as flimsy as tissue.
Outcome
The debate for the present is over
in the Senate, and now moves on to the House. If we are to win
this battle in the long run, however, we must continue to talk about
it. Attorneys who bring court cases to activist judges seeking
to overturn marriage cannot win this battle. The people must win.
Senators who voted against the amendment
don’t believe they will feel it on election day. They need to feel
it.
Through Meridian, Family Leader Network
delivered 23,000 signatures on petitions to the Senate. Readers
have asked if it makes a difference. It does. In the days since
then we’ve heard more than one Senator say that it is the calls
and letters that helped to shore them up.
So what lies ahead? A time for people
who support marriage to talk about it with courage and fluency.
If not, what lies ahead?
Governor Mitt Romney wrote a letter
to senators asking them to support the amendment. He said:
Although the
full impact of same-sex marriage may not be measured for decades
or generations, we are beginning to see the effects of the new
legal logic in Massachusetts just two years into our state’s social
experiment. For instance, our birth certificates is being challenged:
same sex couples want the terms “Mother” and “Father” replaced
with “Parent A” and “Parent B.”
In our schools, children are being
instructed that there is no difference between same-sex marriage
and traditional marriage. Recently, parents of a second grader
in one public school complained when they were not notified that
their son’s teacher would read a fairy tale about same-sex marriage
to the class. In the story, a prince chooses to marry another
prince, instead of a princess. The parents asked for the opportunity
to opt their child out of hearing such stories. In response,
the school superintendent insisted on “teaching children about
the world they live in, and in Massachusetts same sex marriage
is legal.”
Once a society establishes that it
is legally indifferent between traditional marriage and same-sex
marriage, how can one preserve any practice which favors the union
of a man and a woman?
Call and Thank
Below is a list of senators who supported
the Marriage Protection amendment. They need to hear from you.
A thanks makes so much difference. It helps give them the fortitude
to stick this out for another day. Click here http://capwiz.com/familyleadernetwork/dbq/officials/
to find the phone number or email of your senator. Those who supported
the amendment are listed below.
| Alexander
(R-TN)
Allard (R-CO)
Allen (R-VA)
Bennett (R-UT)
Bond (R-MO)
Brownback (R-KS)
Bunning (R-KY)
Burns (R-MT)
Burr (R-NC)
Byrd (D-WV)
Chambliss (R-GA)
Coburn (R-OK)
Cochran (R-MS)
Coleman (R-MN)
Cornyn (R-TX)
Craig (R-ID)
Crapo (R-ID) |
DeMint
(R-SC)
DeWine (R-OH)
Dole (R-NC)
Domenici (R-NM)
Ensign (R-NV)
Enzi (R-WY)
Frist (R-TN)
Graham (R-SC)
Grassley (R-IA)
Hatch (R-UT)
Hutchison (R-TX)
Inhofe (R-OK)
Isakson (R-GA)
Kyl (R-AZ)
Lott (R-MS)
Lugar (R-IN)
Martinez (R-FL) |
McConnell
(R-KY)
Murkowski (R-AK)
Nelson (D-NE)
Roberts (R-KS)
Santorum (R-PA)
Sessions (R-AL)
Shelby (R-AL)
Smith (R-OR)
Stevens (R-AK)
Talent (R-MO)
Thomas (R-WY)
Thune (R-SD)
Vitter (R-LA)
Voinovich (R-OH)
Warner (R-VA) |
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Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
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