Friday, November 14, 2008

Today is the Day!

The Event: Protest H8
Date: Saturday November 15th, 2008
Time: 1:30pm - 3:00 pm est
Location: Monument Square
Town: Portland, Maine
Contact: ASHellacious@hotmail.com (please note this is NOT the author of this blog)

Need to download flyers? Go here for some great ones! http://www.against8.blogspot.com/



First off, if you're reading this right after I got done typing it, GO TO BED! It's 1:30 am, REST UP for today!

Today in every single state in the country, at the same exact time, people will be gathering together in solidarity to let California, America, The World know that we will NOT tolerate hate anymore! We will say YES to EQUALITY, we will say YES to FREEDOM, we will say YES to LOVE! Together today we will be one solid unwavering voice saying NO to HATE and NO to Prop 8!

Though there are not many posts to this blog they are all clear, simple, and to the point, stating the facts that were not allowed to come out during California's election.

Let's make this a day to be proud of, a day too look back upon in the future with disbelief that we even had to stand up for such a basic right. A day to remember that you personally and we as a country finally started to get it right, and spoke up for each other so that none of us have to be second class citizens anymore!

It's supposed to rain all day so bring your umbrellas, wear your wellies, laminate those signs and I'll see you in approximately 12 hours!

More words from California

I am a life long resident of California and I have always loved my state. Loved my state. As in I went to bed on November 3rd believing that the great state of California wouldn't vote Yes on Proposition 8. How could they? I mean, we're a really progressive and amazing place to live, how could people knowingly go out and vote to remove a basic civil right from one of their fellow Californians? How could any one living here walk into a voting booth and check "Yes on 8! Because my fellow tax paying Californian neighbors aren't equal to me!" It didn't seem like it could happen.
But then I woke up on November 5th and while the rest of the world was patting America on the back for electing our first African American President, half of the state of California was in mourning. Half of the state of California had gone to the polls and spit in their neighbors faces. And if that can happen here in the big blue state of California, it can happen anywhere. Yes, even in Maine.
This isn't about gay rights. This is about how easily any one's civil rights can be taken away. It wasn't that long ago that interracial marriage was illegal. Think about that, in our parents lifetimes it was legal to keep a man and a woman from different racial backgrounds from getting married. Not only does that seem absurd now, it's embarrassing. And thankfully some people fought very hard and very long to get those bans lifted, to restore human dignity to fellow human beings. To give them their basic civil rights.
Years from now, I hope my friend's children will be looking back on this time the same way. A time of embarrassing absurdity when a bunch of loud, well funded people were able to wrap their hatred in a shiny little package of "protecting the children" and ram it through into law. And they will remember California, and Arizona, and Florida and all the other places that had these absurd bans on love. Don't let them remember that Maine was there too. Say no to hate. Don't let what happened here in California happen where you are. Because if you ignore what's going on out here now, it could. It will.
This author's writing's can be followed at www.discotrash.wordpress.com

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Some words from California...

I was born and raised in Bakersfield, California, a city of 350,000 located about a 100 miles north of Los Angeles. But it's the sort of city that feels about a 1,000 miles away from anywhere progressive. Bakersfield is a bastion of conservatism. It always has been. It always will be. This colored my view of the world growing up. I was deeply confused by what I'd see on TV, or read in books. I'd read "Maurice" and have this understanding that out there in the world, there was a place where it was okay for boys to like boys and girls to like girls, even if it wasn't here. I'd watch "Starsky & Hutch" and just sort of assume that it was a tale of two cops in love. I'd listen to Morrissey records and not care if he liked boys or girls.

And living in Bakersfield, I just assumed there was something wrong with me. I was living in an environment of hate. In school, the worst thing anyone could be called was "faggot." I didn't realize that there were pockets of tolerance all around me. I was completely blind to it because I was a scared little child. Not a child frightened of being taught that homosexuality is okay. I was frightened that I really was alone in believing in equal rights for all people, regardless of their sexual orientation.

In high school, one of my closest friends came out of the closet to me. And he was terrified of telling me, because he was afraid I would abandon him and shun him. In a lot of ways, he was just like me. He was scared, and he felt alone. Over the years, I met a lot of people like that. People who didn't think it was okay to speak out because they just didn't know that other people felt the same way they did. Some of them were gay, some of them were straight. But it didn't matter. The same theme applied to all of them. They were fantastic people with huge hearts who simply didn't think anyone cared.

Years passed and tolerance grew in California. It eventually got to the point where being out about your sexuality wasn't that big of a deal. And then a funny thing happened. The Supreme Court took a good, hard look at the constitution and couldn't find anything that said it was okay to discriminate against anyone who wanted to get married based on their sexual orientation. Suddenly, equal rights had arrived. And some of us began to really stick our necks out and cheer. But the state politicians were frightened, too. They didn't want it to look like they'd somehow aligned themselves with "homosexuals," so rather than send anything to a vote, they put together a proposition.

When Prop 8 was put on the ballot, a lot of those same frightened people screamed out with shock. Simply put, all Prop 8 was designed to do was add an amendment to the California state constitution declaring that marriage is only recognized between a man and a woman. Essentially, it was a bill designed to take fundamental right to happiness away from a segment of society. It was no different than denying women the right to vote. It was no different than telling blacks to sit at the back of the bus. It essentially said, "You're different, and we're going to treat you different."

But this was California. There was no possible way that a Proposition that takes rights away would pass in a state so progressive, right? Well, a funny thing happened on the way to election day. A lot of money got involved. A whole bunch of extremists gathered a whole bunch of money and fought a campaign full of lies. They blurred the issue. Suddenly, Prop 8 was about "protecting children," or "saving the tax exempt status of churches." These adverts completely ignored the fact that Prop 8 only does one thing: it keeps gays and lesbians from getting married. So, election day came and California had its say.

And that's where my hometown of Bakersfield comes into play. For every Santa Barbara or Santa Cruz, there are a dozen Bakersfields. Prop 8 passed. For all of the people thinking, "There's no way something like this could happen in California," here was proof that it can happen. And it can happen in Maine. Maine is a progressive state full of wonderful people. But there are going to be people like the "Yes On 8" folks who mistake their own personal distaste for a section of society for common law. They're going to tell lies and they're going to get away with it. That is, unless the people of Maine stand up for equal rights. Unless the people of Maine stand up and acknowledge that people are people, regardless of their sexual orientation. Please don't become another California.


This author can be followed at http://thelossadjuster.blogspot.com/

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Keith Olberman's Words of Wisdom

WThe Event: Protest H8
Date: Saturday November 15th, 2008
Time: 1:30pm - 3:00 pm est
Location: Monument Square
Town: Portland, Maine
Contact: ASHellacious@hotmail.com (please note this is NOT the author of this blog)
Why Maine should care (click here)



Monday, November 10, 2008

Why should you care?

The Event: Protest H8
Date: Saturday November 15th, 2008
Time: 1:30pm - 3:00 pm est
Location: Monument Square
Town: Portland, Maine
Contact: ASHellacious@hotmail.com (please note this is NOT the author of this blog)

Need to download flyers? Go here for some great ones! http://www.against8.blogspot.com/

If you're visiting this blog chances are you live in Maine. This blog was set up to inform people of a protest that will be taking place on November 15th, 2008 in regards to a Proposition that was passed in California. Yes, that's right, all the way on the other side of the country. Obviously apathy is going to be high but all of my friends and family are in California so I have a deep personal interest invested into this. I'm rather shocked to find a lack of people to rally with though. The reasons as to why people are failing to commit to this event are a little disturbing to me. (Reasons such as "Who cares? It's not Maine." and "I believe in free rights, but I also believe in the way our system is run, the people have spoken.") Everyone knows that Prop 8 is a civil rights issue but it goes so far beyond that. Hopefully I can inform and inspire some of you to come out and exercise your freedom of speech. Even if you don't live in Maine PLEASE continue reading. There will be protests taking place across the country simultaneously on November 15th. You can find a local contact here: http://www.jointheimpact.com/

So why should you care? The battles were fought and the people went to the polls and chose what they felt was best for their state. Correct? Absolutely not! What is Prop 8?

"Proposition 8… would eliminate the fundamental right to same-sex marriage. The very act of denying gay and lesbian couples the right to marry – traditionally the highest legal and societal recognition of a loving commitment – by definition relegates them and their relationship to second class status.”

—Los Angeles Times Editorial, August 8, 2008



It's California, it's not an issue for my state, right? Why should I be meddling in another states affairs?

  • It's estimated that 40-70 percent of Prop 8's financial support came from out-of-state donors. Therefore if the rest of the country is working on spreading hate, then the rest of the country better be ready to combat it! It's only a matter of time before it hits your own backyard if it hasn't already.

The people went to the polls and voted, it's their fundamental right as an American. The people spoken, why fight?

  • Yes, it is our fundamental right, but what if the people were ill informed and actually lied to in order to sway their vote? Please go HERE and read the list of facts vs. fiction. All of the lies listed were advertised as truths throughout the entire campaign. It was a campaign driven by fear and if you read what they were preaching it's no wonder people were unsure - there are some scary accusations in there! Despite the complaints though - be it from false information or children appearing in commercials spreading hate without parental consent - all of these ads were still allowed to air as is.


This is just a brief summary but all of the facts can be found over on http://www.noonprop8.com/. The point is that everyone in California had the civil right to marriage. A rite of passage for all loving and committed couples. If you were to walk down the streets of any town in America and take a poll randomly asking people "does the government have the right to take away some one's marriage?" you'd find next to no one answering with a "Yes". But now THOUSANDS of married couples are sitting there wondering whether or not they're really married and trying to figure out WHO exactly has the right to determine whether or not their love for each other is worthy of marriage. Apparently the State, out-of-state donors, and the millions of dollars thrown at scare tactics and fiction-filled campaigns are able to decide the rights of your average tax paying American Citizen. Look at it this way, the United States used to ban interracial marriages as well. This is exactly what we're dealing with...HATE.

From now through November 15th I will have guest bloggers from California posting their own first hand experiences of what is going on out there, how it is affecting their lives, and why we should care all the way over here on the other side of the country. Please join us in the fight against Prop H8.