Before
you open that bottle of champagne, can of beer, or bottle of Hennessy
in celebration of last week’s decision by the California Supreme
Court upholding Proposition 8 and the ban on gay marriage, did you
ever stop to think maybe the jokes on us?
I mean think about it. Last
November, Blacks voted overwhelmingly in support of Proposition
8, ensuring that lesbian and gay couples, including Black couples,
continue to be treated as second-class citizens. Everyone had an
opinion from the tennis courts to the pulpit. And no matter whether
Black support of Proposition 8 had more to do with religious beliefs
or just plain old fashioned homophobia, the fact still remains that
two people getting married, same-sex or not, has no financial impact
whatsoever on the rest of us. None. We may not like it, but at the
end of the day, gay marriage doesn’t take food from anyone’s mouth,
clothes off of anyone’s back, or a roof from over someone’s head.
But judging from the way we acted, you would have thought that it
did.
Flash forward and California
finds itself in the middle of a never-ending fiscal nightmare. A
nightmare that has Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger threatening to
put vital programs, including health insurance for the poor, financial
help for unemployed single mothers, and a State program that provides
antiviral drugs for people living with AIDS, on the chopping block,
to close a $24.3-billion budget deficit. Cuts that will surely have
the hardest impact on Blacks living at or below the poverty line
in California. Cuts that will take food from someone’s mouth, clothes
off someone’s back, and a roof from over someone’s head and yet
with us, it’s business as usual.
Which leaves me to question
if Blacks are more concerned about whether two men or women commit
to loving and caring for each other than they are about cuts to
vital programs that affect all of us? Because let me tell you, me
getting married tomorrow isn’t nearly going have the same impact
on Black California as hundreds of thousands of out of work, hungry,
and homeless Black people are. You think crime is bad now, you just
wait and see. Message!
Lest I forget to mention that
our support of Proposition 8 only ensured that gay organizations
fighting for marriage continue to raise hundreds of thousands of
dollars to keep the fight going, while many Black organizations
are operating on the brink of bankruptcy. Message!
Now
I’m the first to admit as a Black lesbian that there wasn’t too
much about the “No on Prop 8” campaign that I liked. It was a poorly
run campaign predicated on the premise that because we’re Black
(in my case Black and gay) and benefited from the Civil Rights Movement
that by osmosis we’d oppose the measure. My no vote on Proposition
8 had absolutely nothing to do with “No on 8s” campaign. Yet and
still, whether I like it or not, I have to give props where props
are due to the gays for being able to do something that Blacks haven’t.
Make the issue of gay marriage an issue for everyone, including
President Barack Obama.
Just six months into his term
and gays “called out” President Obama during a recent trip to California.
Angry because of the Courts decision to uphold Proposition 8, the
gay community reminded the President of his promise to support equality
for gays and their support of his candidacy after their beloved
then Senator Hillary Clinton was no longer an option. Even though
both Clinton and President Obama have made it painstakingly clear
that they support civil unions over marriage for gays, the gay community
made it clear that it is not going to take no for an answer. A message,
I guarantee you the President heard loud and clear.
I wonder if Blacks would ever
think of protesting their first Black President to make sure that
he addressed issues relevant not only to middle class Americans
but to those Americans living at or below the poverty line. I’m
just saying, while I don’t always agree with the gay community’s
tactics, they sure do know how to make their voice heard. Message!
With all the issues facing Black
Californian’s today - home foreclosures, unemployment, homelessness
- gay marriage remains at the forefront of the Democratic agenda
for Black elected officials and that’s not by accident. This is
thanks mainly in part to a gangster-like mentality that dictates
either you’re with us or against us and if you’re against us there
are consequences. Consequences that include withholding political
contributions and endorsements of Black candidates, this even though
the majority of white gays do not live in districts represented
by African-Americans and could care less about the issues that are
most important to the Blacks who do. This is evident by the gay
community’s refusal to address any other issue besides gay marriage.
Even though, just as all Blacks aren’t heterosexual and homophobic,
all gays aren’t white and concerned with marriage. Message!
And while many of our Black
churches were so instrumental in making sure that their congregations
supported Proposition 8, I can’t say that the same energy has been
put into making sure that we’re aware of the impact by the Governor’s
proposed budget cuts on Blacks in California.
So I’ll say it again, maybe
the joke is on us. Because even though the Courts upheld Proposition
8, it’s not white affluent gays by and large who are unemployed,
with homes in foreclosure, living at or below the poverty line,
it’s us. It’s us who are stressing out over the rent and the bills
while making the liquor store owners and the State richer with every
bottle of Hennessy and lottery ticket bought.
I
don’t confess to being the best at keeping it pretty, it is what
it is. And what it is, is that Blacks’ support in denying gays the
right to get married isn’t going to make gays heterosexual or force
them to stop having sex with each other - nor is it going to guarantee
Blacks who supported Proposition 8 their passage into heaven. There
ain’t no law that will ever be able to legislate or guarantee that.
In the meantime, our support of non-relevant issues like Proposition
8, while ignoring the real issues that affect us all, will ensure
that Blacks continue to be at the bottom of the food chain in California - even with a Black President in Office.
Black people need to stop focusing
on issues that we have no control over and that do not affect our
pocketbook and quality of life in the least bit and shift that energy
into addressing the issues that do affect all of us and that
we can control - starting with the Governor and the Legislature.
We can start by adopting the same gangster-like mentality that the
gays have taken on - either the Government and elected officials
are with us or against us and if they’re against us, there should
be consequences - not re-elections and passes.
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist, Jasmyne Cannick, is a critic and commentator based in
Los Angeles who writes about the worlds of pop culture,
race, class, and politics as it relates to the African-American
community. Her work has been featured in the Los
Angeles Times, Los Angeles
Daily News, and Ebony Magazine. A regular contributor to NPR, she
was chosen as one Essence Magazine’s 25 Women Shaping the World.
Click here
to contact Ms. Cannick. |