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Archive for November, 2008

Nov 29 2008

Say NO to institutionalized inequality

Published by zamnaavila under Uncategorized Edit This

Take a stand against inequality from 7 to 9 p.m. today, Nov. 29, at the Long Beach Performing Arts Center, 300 E. Ocean Blvd.
A peaceful protest and candlelight vigil is scheduled against Proposition 8.
Equality is one of the founding principles of our Constitution.
“No State shall make or enforce any law which shall deny to any person within its jurisdiction equal protection of the law.” — www.eqca.org
Prop. 8 undermines this principle by singling out a segment of our citizenry.
Bring a candle to symbolize the wait for justice and the mourning of the death of civil rights as the justices of the California State Supreme Court to hear the case in March 2009.

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Nov 21 2008

The fight goes virtual

Published by zamnaavila under Uncategorized Edit This

Southern Californians are invited, from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Nov. 25, to Facts and the Future, a virtual town hall meeting hosted by political reporter and news editor Karen Ocamb.
The 90-minute online forum discuss the details and plans that active members of the community will take to continue the fight against Proposition 8, the ballot measure which narrowly passed in California that takes away the right for same-sex couples to wed.
Panel members include:
• Amy Balliett, founder of Join the Impact
• Lorri L. Jean, chief executive officer of the L.A. Gay & Lesbian Center
• Geoff Kors, executive director of Equality California
• Rev. Eric Lee, president/chief executive officer of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference Los Angeles
• Shannon Minter, legal director at the National Center for Lesbian Rights
• John Perez, assembly member-elect of California’s 46th District
• Steve Smith, No on 8 senior campaign consultant of Dewey Square.

To participate: visit www.lagaycenter.org/Prop8TownHall for details.
Details: e-mail TownHallModerator@gmail.com

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Nov 21 2008

Marriage therapy

Published by zamnaavila under Uncategorized Edit This

As the supporters of Proposition 8 celebrate the narrow victory of the ban on same sex marriage, I’m wishing I could ask them some questions. Foremost, I’d like to understand why they would want to discriminate against me. I don’t mean gays and lesbians, I mean against myself, personally. Most people who know me like me well enough, and some of those friends, neighbors, coworkers, and friendly acquaintances launched a campaign of messages that said my kind of family isn’t as good as theirs, or even valid. And they chose to enjoy rights associated with marriage, which they would not grant me. And, beyond harboring rancor regarding our difference in their hearts, they pressed to codify discrimination into the law of our beautiful state of California.

Maybe I shouldn’t be so surprised, because it wasn’t so long ago that our country was segregated by race, and women and people of color were denied the right to vote. Change, understanding, and tolerance take time to overcome fear and ignorance. But I would like to ask: When your battle cry is “Protect Marriage,” what exactly are you protecting it from? From meAnd how could allowing more people to marry diminish the institution of marriage? Did you think it all the way through, or did you just rally behind a sound bite that sounded righteous without thinking critically about it?

Many of the supporters of Proposition 8 call themselves Christians. You, I’d like to ask, aren’t tolerance and kindness to those different from you part of Christian values? Did you think that through for yourselves, or did you just follow a definition of a Christian agenda set out by someone else? If your answer to these questions is a quotation from The Bible, I have a follow-up question for you: If God wants you to interpret The Bible literally, do you also have to support slavery? Is it an abomination before God to eat shellfish? Or is it okay to pick and choose, cafeteria style which passages of The Bible you are free to judge others by?

The fight over same gender marriage in California cost its supporters in excess of $75 million dollars. Would that money not have been better spent on education or charity as espoused by Christian churches?

One of the pillars of the argument in favor of Proposition 8 is the concept of, and fondness for tradition. Do we want to cling to traditions that no longer make sense? For example, would we like to eliminate marriage which does not see a woman as the property of a man? I’ll spare you the obvious question about the LDS (Mormon) Church’s traditional marriage arrangement, even though the LDS Church provided significant funding to support Prop-8. But it is relevant to ask about the political motivation behind what your church is telling you is right or wrong, holy or unholy, natural or unnatural, a threat or not a threat.

In the past, religions preached variations on being fruitful and multiplying as a way of increasing numbers of followers. Now that we are having babies later in life, and not so many, and birth control is relatively well-accepted, churches can’t any longer grow by birthrate, so how do they grow? One way—and I’m not saying this is the strategy of every church—is by rallying their members around fear of those different from themselves, and a notion that their members are somehow better or more loved by God than others. Where would this continuing trend ultimately lead? Certainly not to peace, understanding, and prosperity.

In those religious arguments is embedded that sexual orientation is a choice. Are you prepared to accept those arguments in the face of solid science which shows that there are genetic and biological differences that correspond to sexual orientation?

Finally, have you ever had the experience of standing in line, cheek by jowl with your neighbors, coworkers, customers, bosses, people from the dog park, people from church, and wondered which of them, in the privacy of the voting booth is choosing to invalidate your relationship, take away your rights, and think him- or herself righteous in so doing? I have. I ask one thing more: Please don’t judge me until you have too.

Alex Mackenzie

Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist

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Nov 21 2008

Towhall for equality

Published by zamnaavila under Uncategorized Edit This

Join the fight for equality at 7 p.m. today (Nov. 21) at Hot Java Coffee House 2101 E. Broadway in Long Beach.
Long Beach residents will gather in a town hall meeting to discuss strategies to help repeal Proposition 8, which denies equal rights to same-sex couples to wed.
Details: call (562)-433-0688

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Nov 20 2008

List of Prop.8 Supporters

Published by zamnaavila under Uncategorized Edit This

Your boycotting is much appreciated…

AES Corp.
Affiliated Computer Services
AgReserves
American Express
Avista Corp.
American Express Company
Azul
Beneficial Financial Group
Bonneville International Corporation
Black & Decker
Brigham Young University
Cadence Design
Cornerstone Realty Income Trust Inc
Corvis
Central Pacific Bank
1-800-… Read MoreContacts
Cygnus Inc.
Diebold
Dell Computer
Deseret Management Corporation
Dionex
Downey Savings and Loan
EarthShell
Fisher-Price, Inc
Five Star Quality Care, Inc.
Franklin Covey
Hillenbrand Industries
Headwaters, Inc.
Heinz Asia/Pacific
Hollywood Entertainment (Hollywood Video)
Host Marriott (Marriot Hotels and Resorts
Iomega
JetBlue
JP Realty
KeyCorp
Knight Transportation
Kroger foods (Ralph’s and Albertsons)
K-Swiss Inc.
La Quinta Properties, Inc (La quinta Hotels)
Micrel Semiconductor
Micro General
Merit Medical Systems
Monaco Coach
Microsemi Corp.
Myriad Genetics
Novell
NPS Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
NuSkin

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Nov 20 2008

InvalidateProp8.org distributes $60,000 to Protect Marriage Equality

Published by zamnaavila under Uncategorized Edit This

The Los Angeles Gay and Lesbian Center recently announced today that its InvalidateProp8.org Web initiative raised more than $60,000 to support the effort to overturn Proposition 8.
The California Supreme Court agreed Wednesday to review challenges to Proposition 8, the voter-approved constitutional amendment that denies gays and lesbians the right to wed.
More than 2,300 postcards, one for each donation, are being sent to Mormon church President Thomas Monson, acknowledging that a donation has been made in his name to invalidate Prop. 8 and restore the right to marry to all Californians.
The initiative was announced at a press conference in front of the Los Angeles Mormon
Temple, three days after the election, as a message to the leaders of the Mormon church that no one’s religious beliefs should be used to deny fundamental rights to others.
At the urging of church leadership, Mormons contributed more than $15 million to fund the deceitful advertising campaign that resulted in the initiative’s passage by a small margin.
“It is a travesty that the Mormon church bought this election and used a campaign of lies and deception to manipulate voters in the great state of California,” said the Center’s chief executive officer Lorri L. Jean. “They’re entitled to their beliefs, but not to impose them upon the constitution or laws of California.”
About $40,000 of the money raised so far will be given to the ACLU, Lambda Legal and the National Center for Lesbian Rights, the three non-profit organizations that have jointly filed a lawsuit in the California Supreme Court challenging Proposition 8. Another $20,000 remains in a fund that will be used to support grass-roots activities for full marriage equality.
Donations have come from nearly all 50 states and from countries around the world including, Canada, Mexico, Australia, Denmark, England, Germany, Japan, Singapore and South Africa.
InvalidateProp8.org remains active and will continue to raise and distribute funds to support the effort to overturn Prop. 8 and send postcards to the president of the Mormon church.
Details: visit www.lagaycenter.org.

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Nov 20 2008

A day without a homo

Published by zamnaavila under Uncategorized Edit This

It’s bewildering how in a nation where gays, lesbians, bisexuals and transgender people contribute more than $700 billion to the economy, its members are treated as second class citizens.
As part of a nationwide protest Dec. 10, LGBT workers, business owners, consumers and taxpayers, as well as their straight allies, will participate in an all-day strike and economic boycott across the United States.
The date of the planned boycott also commemorates International Human Rights Day.
Strikes and economic boycotts are a powerful weapon in the history of non-violent protests. For most LGBT protesters, marriage rights are human and civil rights. And, equal rights are often come at cost.
Every couple in America has to get a marriage certificate from their state, whereas religious ceremonies are optional. No church or religious institution has or ever will be forced to marry anyone.
Civil Unions are only legal in the state that offers them. Civil Unions don’t include the 1100 marriage rights and benefits provided by the Federal Government. Separate but not equal is discrimination. Until ALL are equal, NONE are equal.
Marriage should be a Right for all Americans, regardless of gender, race OR religion.
Here’s how to participate:
* Call in gay, shut down your business, take the day off.
* Don’t buy anything or spend money.
* Volunteer or protest.
Details: visit: www.daywithoutagay.org, jointheimpact.com, daywithoutagay.org, daywithoutagay.net or www.noonprop8.com/about/fact-vs-fiction.

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Nov 20 2008

Holiday Open House

Published by zamnaavila under Uncategorized Edit This

Out and About Long Beach invites the LGBT community to the Seventh Annual Progressive Holiday Open House, from 3 to 9 p.m. Dec. 13, at three area homes.
The event is the largest fundraiser of the year for the group.
The evening includes champagne, hors d’oeuvres, wine, dinner, desert and performances by the Poly High School Choral Group and the South Coast Chorale.
Tickets are $30 pre-sale; $40 at the door.
Details: call (562) 397-2511 or visit www.outandaboutlb.org

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Nov 19 2008

Act up

Published by zamnaavila under Uncategorized Edit This

Observe World AIDS Day, from 4 to 9 p.m. Dec.1, with two event programs designed to educate and venerate the lives of people who have died as result of AIDS at the Museum of Latin American Art.
Long Beach Unified School District, Cal State Long Beach and other youth programs, will host the first program, Act up! Mix it Up! from 3:30 to 8 p.m. at MoLAA’s Sculpture Garden.
The educational event, for ages 14 and older, includes live music and entertainment, murals, interactive art, games and activities and giveaways.
World AIDS Day: Keeping the Promise, from 6:30 to 9 p.m., is the second part of the programming for the event.
The multimedia program, intended for audiences 12 years old and older, includes 3-D presentations, liver performances and games all centered on learning how HIV is affecting communities. Seating is limited.
Both activities are free.
Details: visit www.lbaidsfoundation.org

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Nov 10 2008

We’re going national

Published by zamnaavila under Uncategorized Edit This

Protests are scheduled from 10:30 to 1:30 Nov. 15 at city halls across the state. Remember: Our taxes, our contributions to society, our civil rights!
More info on how to participate: www.stop8.org

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