Huckabee, Gay People, Finger Food and Logic

Huckabee, Gay People, Finger Food and Logic

Logic and clear thinking are kryptonite to political balderdashdemagoguery.  That’s perhaps the main reason why the world of law sometimes seems so far apart from the world of politics.

Law and the courts — a realm where marriage equality has largely prevailed — at least attempt to take the logical reasoning process seriously, and to demand fact-based, coherent justifications for someone’s position, rather than just made-up fluff.

Contrast this with the Sunday network talk shows or CNN, where prominent people are so often allowed to babble nonsense without being challenged, as long as it fits some version of conventional wisdom or just sounds folksy. 

Take Mike Huckabee’s weekend “some-of-my-best-friends-are-gay” appearance on CNN discussing gay people and marriage equality.  Specifically, consider his comment that expecting conservative Christians like him to accept marriage equality “is like asking someone who’s Jewish to start serving bacon-wrapped shrimp in their deli.”

Notwithstanding Huckabee’s authority on the subject of unhealthy finger food … no, it’s actually not like that.  Here’s where logic comes in.

From the context of the interview, it’s not clear 1) whether Huckabee was referring to forcing someone like him as a person to accept gay marriage, or 2) whether he was objecting to laws in some cities and states that prohibit business owners from refusing to serve customers based on their sexual orientation.

Let’s start with number one.  Obviously no one is forcing Huckabee to “evolve” (his word) against his will.  There is civil marriage and religious marriage, and this is all about civil marriage.  No one can or will force his church to celebrate gay weddings.  (Wouldn’t it be nice if Huckabee returned the favor and stopped trying to get our law to impose his sectarian creeds on everyone else?)  As a citizen, preacher, talk show host, or vanity candidate for president, he has a First Amendment right to believe or say whatever he wants about gay marriage, no matter how silly or illogical.

Number two requires a bit more unpacking.  Now that they have all but lost on marriage equality, the issue of the moment for Republican lawmakers and conservative religious groups is the demand for “religious exemptions” for florists, cake bakers, innkeepers, and anyone else who claims it would burden their religious beliefs to have to sell their services on equal terms to same-sex couples celebrating their weddings.  Laws forbidding discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation exist in fewer than half the states, and the list hasn’t been added to since 2009.  But as absurd as Huckabee’s comparison is between gay marriage and appetizers, let’s think it through logically.

Twenty-one states have chosen to democratically enact laws forbidding discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, but no state has enacted laws forcing Jewish delis to serve bacon-wrapped shrimp.  Is there is a reason?

Yes.  These 21 states recognized that bigotry, hate, and discrimination against gay people were deeply rooted social problems that ought to be addressed.  On the other hand, a lack of Jewish delis serving bacon-wrapped shrimp pales in comparison as a social or historical pathology.

Let’s dig a little deeper.  Why did these states decide that anti-gay prejudice should be addressed through law?

Because discrimination based on characteristics that have nothing to do with a person’s character or abilities (other traits widely protected in law are race, ethnicity, gender, and religion) are corrosive to civic equality and democratic citizenship.  Again, this is a different problem from Huckabee’s non-sequitur example.  No clear-thinking person believes that the menus of Jewish delis have any significant implications for the health of our social fabric.  

When we tolerate business owners who set themselves up in the public marketplace and then selectively refuse service to certain people (blacks, Jews, gay people, etc.) for no reason other than political, cultural or religious dislike, it makes all of us complicit in a form of social devaluation toward such persons, as law professor Andrew Koppelman has persuasively argued.

By the way, maybe one reason gay people have been historically singled out for discrimination in this way is that certain unevolved people went around comparing them to drinkers and people who use profanity.

Prejudice that is unjustified by a person’s character or abilities is antithetical to the values of human rights, equality and liberty that suffuse American legal traditions.  And so, just as government can legislate against crime or water pollution, it can legislate against acts of injustice and the social pollution of one faction of citizens attempting to denigrate another. Anti-discrimination laws target acts of discrimination in the public marketplace, not the underlying private religious or political beliefs.

To be sure, there are respectable libertarian arguments that government should not regulate such market-sector prejudices at all, for any group, as long as government itself does not denigrate its citizens through discrimination (like refusing to give them marriage licenses).  But that is not the argument Huckabee seems to be making.  I doubt he is willing to renounce laws that forbid discrimination in the marketplace against Christians or Jews.  Most likely, Huckabee simply believes that religious people deserve such laws, but gay people don’t.  

www.huffingtonpost.com/steve-sanders/huckabee-gays-finger-food_b_6591142.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

LGBT Group Delivers Perfect Response To Texas Lawmaker's Hateful, Islamophobic Rant

LGBT Group Delivers Perfect Response To Texas Lawmaker's Hateful, Islamophobic Rant

EqTx

An LGBT group delivered a pitch-perfect response to a Texas lawmaker’s hateful, Islamophobic rant on Facebook last week. 

State Rep. Molly White, a Republican from Belton, Texas, posted the following to mark Muslim lobbying day at the Capitol on Thursday: 

White“Today is Texas Muslim Capital day in Austin. The House is in recess until Monday. Most Members including myself are back in District. I did leave an Israeli flag on the reception desk in my office with instructions to staff to ask representatives from the Muslim community to renounce Islamic terrorist groups and publicly announce allegiance to America and our laws. We will see how long they stay in my office.”

White’s post drew widespread condemnation, but Equality Texas had perhaps the most original retort. Employees from the statewide LGBT group dropped off a gay Pride flag at White’s office: 

There are many flags that celebrate the diversity and unity of TX. We decided to help build Rep White’s collection. pic.twitter.com/RtqHLjQ4jg

— Equality Texas (@EqualityTexas) January 29, 2015

White would later say her Facebook post had been “blown completely out of proportion.”

In addition to White’s diatribe, protesters greeted Muslim lobby day participants, many of them children, outside the Capitol. The protesters carried signs saying things like, “Radical Islam is the New Nazi” and “Go Home & Take Obama With You.” They shouted as Muslim lobby day participants sang the national anthem, and at one point protesters hijacked the microphone. 

No word on what Rep. White plans to do with the Pride flag. But we somehow doubt she’ll be flying it when Equality Texas holds its first lobby day later this month. 

Watch video of the mic-snatching incident as well as an interview with White, AFTER THE JUMP … 


John Wright

www.towleroad.com/2015/02/lgbt-group-delivers-perfect-response-to-texas-lawmakers-hateful-islamophobic-rant.html

Johnny Weir's Outfit Already Won The Super Bowl

Johnny Weir's Outfit Already Won The Super Bowl
These days, there are few better reasons to tune in to a major event (like the Olympics or the Oscars, for example) than to catch a glimpse of Johnny Weir in one of his many colorful outfits. During Sunday’s Super Bowl pregame show, the figure-skater-turned-commentator did not disappoint.

Decked out in black and blue padded ensemble (not to mention tons of sparkle, Giuseppe Zanotti sneakers and a football-shaped fascinator, of course,) Weir managed to fit right in with the NFL players while also, in true form, standing way out.

Naturally, social media has been abuzz with commentary since Weir first appeared on screen, but this tweet by YouTube star Jenna Marbles basically sums it up:

His outfit+life+everything is on fleeeeeheeeeeheeeeheeeeeeeeeeekkkk

@JohnnyGWeir

— Jenna Mourey/Marbles (@Jenna_Marbles) February 1, 2015

Thank you, Johnny Weir, for making yet another sporting event more exciting.

www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/02/01/johnny-weir-super-bowl-outfit_n_6590880.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Hedwig And The Angry Inch Sequel Might Become TV Miniseries

Hedwig And The Angry Inch Sequel Might Become TV Miniseries

HedwigBook-Still3I sort of see it like Olive Kitteridge, like a long miniseries, four to six hours. It’s still a musical; it’s very much about her. It’s kind of on indefinite hold now because of other projects, but it’s been developed a good deal. It’s darker. It’s about the second half of her life, which is the antithesis of ‘It Gets Better’ videos — for her, it gets worse. My favorite playwright is probably Samuel Beckett and; he was always laughing at the abyss. When Hedwig returns, it will definitely be about the limitation of life and how absurd that is.”

–John Cameron Mitchell, creator of Hedwig and the Angry Inch and star of the current Broadway revival, discussing the future of the character in an interview with TimeOutNewYork

Jeremy Kinser

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/gPp5izXDoaI/hedwig-and-the-angry-inch-sequel-might-become-tv-miniseries-20150201