I’ve
got some friends who claim to be “men of God.” I dare doubt
them, but I listen and watch their belief and rhetoric in
action…especially, the Christian ones. I’ve
been having some heavy conversations with those peers about
an issue that is and will be front-burner in the socio-political
arena: gay rights. The majority of my peers are working-class
and black folks. Most of them are totally against bestowing
“civil rights” on gays and lesbians. I challenge them using
an irrefutable tool: their faith.
We’ve
conversed about what gays should be allowed to do in our
society: fight in the military, get married to each other,
adopt children or preach in the pulpit. There are a host
of other activities that I broach after my peers holler
“no” to each one. They usually stand firm in their positions
until I remind them of the icon of their faith.
I
bring to the table the acts of grace and redemption practiced
by a man named Jesus. Some call him a “savior of the world,”
others, a prophet. But whatever the case, he is arguably
the most recalled human to ever walk the earth. More books
referencing him have been written (same narrative too!)
than any other manuscript, so that should give his words
some degree of credibility.
I
remind them that, as a holy man - or “man of God” - he sat
down with the tax collectors and prostitutes. He commanded
- as a condition of salvation - that men everywhere ought
to forgive other men for their “failures.” That men are
commanded - by God - to accept people right where they are…and
as they are.
More
relevant beyond the spiritual aspect is the social piece:
that poor people, that black people don’t ever want to become
the thing they hate. Acting as racists do is unacceptable.
People afflicted by discrimination cannot make way to “do
as the Romans.”
I’m
straight, but that has nothing to do with what other people
choose. I can’t choose it for them. I caution the men I
mentor that “you can’t make anyone do anything.” If you
spend your energy thinking about changing someone else,
the best way to do that is to do what you do - if
it’s allegedly right!
Opponents
of gay marriage are challenging the principle of judicial
neutrality in San Francisco. In a courtroom this week, they’re arguing that a federal
judge who struck down California’s ban on same sex marriage last year was biased because
he’s in a same-sex relationship. That’s got to be the most
insane arguments one could make!
As
the trial challenging California’s Proposition 8 got under way last year,
media began reporting that the federal judge overseeing
the case was gay. No one would “openly” say anything, but
they threw it out there. It never came up during the proceedings,
but a few months ago, as Judge Vaughn Walker was retiring
from the bench, he spilled the beans. He told the press
that he was in a long-term relationship with another man.
"Judge
Walker’s 10-year same-sex relationship creates this unavoidable
impression that he was just not the impartial judge that
the law requires," says Andrew Pugno, one of
the attorneys defending Proposition 8. The issue here isn’t
Judge Walker’s sexual orientation - not exactly - but rather
that his relationship left him in the same shoes as two
same-sex couples who wanted to get married, said Pugno.
Now, isn’t that special…
Let
me get this straight…the logic is that if you’re gay and
have to rule on a gay issue and you rule for the
gays, then you’re biased? Okay, using that logic, let me
replace the noun with another noun: if you’re straight and
have to rule on a straight issue and you rule for the straight,
then you’re not biased? Or better yet, if you’re a white
male and have to rule on a white, male issue and you rule
for the white, male, then you’re biased? Of course
not, it doesn’t make sense to you either…
Black
people can be as prejudice as they want. Everyone is. What
they can’t be is discriminatory. Blacks are the most despised
beings in this country. Whites will choose dogs over Negroes!
Whites cut social services from municipal budgets and close
homeless shelters, while they build dog parks in our city
with taxpayer money. For all of those who think racism is
dead and that discrimination is passé, get real. Whites
are unabashedly repealing all legislation that remotely
evened the playing field. Out of the 535 members of congress,
there are 42 Black people - and you think everything is
fair? That’s 8% of the whole when we are 12% of the nation’s
population.
I
said all of that to say this: if you’re fighting for a voice;
if you are fighting for your rights, then why would you
deny someone else theirs? How “godly” is that? Just because
you disagree with how someone else runs their life, don’t
think for a minute that you want someone else running yours…’cause
you don’t! If you don’t want a gay marriage, then don’t
get one. More important than that, don’t become the thing
that you hate. You surely wouldn’t want anyone putting you
in that bag.
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist, Perry
Redd, is the former Executive Director of
the workers rights advocacy, Sincere Seven, and author of
the on-line commentary, “The
Other Side of the Tracks.” He is the host of the internet-based
talk radio show, Socially Speaking in
Washington,
DC.
Click
here to contact Mr.
Redd.
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