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Libbing it up

By MICHAEL BRONSKI  |  June 13, 2006

A clear example of this tunnel vision lies in the movement’s long-time insistence on fighting for the right to sexual and personal privacy. While the aim of the fight for privacy was to keep the government out of people’s bedrooms (a good thing), it also perpetrated the idiotic and incorrect idea that homosexuality was a completely separate aspect of a person’s identity. The “privacy” argument was attractive to mainstream culture because it kept gay people invisible. But the downside was that it also perpetuated the social isolation of gay people, removing them from the public sphere. A “right to privacy” is of no help to the openly queer high-school student who is forbidden by school administrators from forming a gay-straight alliance, or wearing “gay T-shirts” in the hallways. The “right to privacy” is of no use to the gay man who is visibly living with HIV/AIDS, or to the lesbian couple with kids facing discrimination in school or housing.

Perhaps the best, and most recent, example of the fallout from this single-issue, gay-rights mindset can be seen in the fight for same-sex marriage. True, the marriage-equality movement has scored a big win in Massachusetts. But this single win has generated an enormous, national backlash resulting in 17 states passing constitutional amendments prohibiting same-sex marriage. In eight of those states the amendment language also prohibits civil unions and, in some cases, other legal protections, such as private-sector domestic-partnership programs. These state constitutional amendments will take at least half a century to repeal. And the Bay State win piqued substantial interest in a constitutional amendment that would ban gay marriage on the federal level.

This didn’t — and doesn’t — have to happen. Queer activists and academics Lisa Duggan and Richard Kim (she is chair of the American Studies Department at New York University, where he is a graduate student) suggest in a July 18, 2005, Nation article, “Beyond Gay Marriage” that “in order to counter conservative Republican strategy . . . gay activists and progressives will have to come together to reframe the marriage debate.” To do so, they must build coalitions with labor activists and economic-justice advocates to promote marriage as one of the many ways individuals and households might access badly needed benefits. Duggan and Kim argue that the gay-rights movement is presently fighting for acceptance and economic security only for those couples who choose to enter into the pre-existing institution of marriage. The movement might have been far more successful, they say, if it worked in coalition with other groups, and argued for a comprehensive system of social and economic protections for all families and household groupings.

This is political organizing 101 — find people with shared interests and bring them together to enact social change. But in many ways, the gay-rights movement never passed the course. As a result, this sort of coalition building would have to involve a total revamping and re-visioning of how “gay politics” have traditionally been pursued — and that is precisely the point. With its myopic view of what “justice” might mean, the gay rights platform — “equal rights for gay people” — has never seriously grappled with the hard fact that many gay people had rights based on wealth, race, gender, and class status that other gay people didn’t have. But worse than this, it has refused to embrace a grander vision — in religious terms, a moral vision — of how the world might be a better place for everyone.

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Related: Courthouse marriage, Equal rites?, Queer eye for the Hawkeyes, More more >
  Topics: News Features , Politics, Culture and Lifestyle, Human Rights Campaign,  More more >
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Five things a retrofitted gay-lib movement should do
1) Rather than simply the fight for marriage rights, the gay movement should work with a wide array of groups to ensure that all families — married and non-traditional — will have the economic and social support to be healthy and happy. This could mean anything from working on programs that would train at-home parents for gainful employment, to establishing new tax codes that would reflect the reality of non-coupled families and blood relatives who live together.

2) Gay organizations should collaborate with workers’-rights groups on issues such as comprehensive child-friendly work leave; domestic-partnership rights for straight couples, gay couples, and households of people who are not sexually involved; and greater employee participation, profit sharing, and company management.

3) While always insisting on a strict separation of church and state, gay organizations should work with faith-based groups on economic and social issues in which they are both invested. Working with black churches to preserve federal poverty programs or with the US Conference of Catholic Bishops to oppose capital punishment would create points of social and political contact on which both could build.

4) The gay movement should form alliances on comprehensive-health-care issues — including access to all forms of birth control, pre- and postnatal care, revamped Medicare and Medicaid, sexual-health education, and functional (i.e., non-abstinence-based) AIDS prevention.

5) It should urge and support gay and lesbian people to become involved in their immediate communities. Openly gay people serving on school committees, zoning boards, urban-planning committees, crime-watch groups, local diversity-training groups, and social programs such as Meals on Wheels will not only ensure a high degree of queer visibility, but will ensure that issues of specific importance to gay men and lesbians are discussed.

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