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The Upside of 8

by T. Shawn Long — last modified Nov 23, 2008 10:25 PM
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Prop 8 (and the other antigay initiatives that passed in the election) were horrible, of course, but there are some good things that have come out of all the hullabaloo.

Wedding RingsThe first thing is that we actually had hullabaloo. We've had protests, locally and nationally. This surge of antigay legislation seems to have catalyzed some previously torpid activism.

We had several protests here in North Carolina, including ones in Asheville, Charlotte, Raleigh, and Wilmington. The current LGBT movement hasn't been nearly as energized as it was earlier in the heyday of gay days (think Stonewall and ACT UP), and maybe, hopefully, we seeing a new generation of activism begin.

Now that the protesting has passed, though, it's important that we keep the momentum going. A rally shouldn't be the end. Instead, it should be the beginning. You don't take to the streets and then settle back down in your living room – you take that indignation and anger and energy and transform them into action. You activate. You bring it forward into ongoing action and lobbying and education.

The public response and outcry has brought a lot of attention to the inequities the LGBT community faces, as well as the discrimination. It easier to ignore unfairness when it's not being talked about by every major media outlook. The more marriage is talked about, the more obvious the disparities in rights become.

In addition to creating some positive conversations for the gay community, the publicity has also brought some negative attention to some of our opposition groups. When a church uses its money to fight gay marriage instead of feeding the hungry and clothing the poor, people begin to question how charitable and non-political it is. Casting a ballot takes on the appearance of casting a stone.

And finally, there were some great (tongue-in-cheek) protest slogans by gay protesters:

  • “Do you really want me to marry your daughter?”
  • “More gay marriage means less gay sex. Isn't that what you want?”
  • “My gay friends deserve to be unhappy too!”
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Ian Palmquist

Ian Palmquist
Ian Palmquist is Executive Director of Equality North Carolina. He has served on Equality NC's staff in various roles since 1999, and manages the organization's staff and conducts the group's advocacy, electoral, and communications work.

Kay Flaminio

Kay Flaminio
Kay Flaminio is Equality North Carolina's director of development. She's responsible for direct mail, online solicitations, major gifts, foundation grants, corporate contributions, special events, and workplace giving. Please feel free to email her with any questions you may have about Equality North Carolina's development program.

T. Shawn Long

T. Shawn Long
T. Shawn Long is administrative coordinator at Equality NC. Please feel free to contact him with any general questions, to update your contact information or e-mail preferences, to register for events, to make a donation or pledge, to suggest newsletter or blog topics, or to share information of general interest to the state's LGBT community.