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Jonathan Wolfman

Jonathan Wolfman
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Maryland, Northwest of The District,
Birthday
January 26
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FEBRUARY 9, 2012 7:11AM

BOUND in HATE: U.S. Senators/Church Bigots/Uganda's Gov't

Rate: 11 Flag

  Ugandan A Ugandan newspaper, yesterday.

The private and public media and the government, spurred on by U.S. ministers and politicians, and by Ugandan ministers and politicians, appear to be on a mission to expose-as-criminals large numbers of gay citizens.

 

     I was delighted to be able, Tuesday, to report that a panel of the Ninth Circuit Federal Court in San Francisco ruled that California's Prop 8, undoing marriage freedom, was unconstitutional and void. The case will almost certainly be further adjudicated at the Supreme Court in 2013. I believe the case has a shot because it is possible that Fourteenth Amendment/Equal Protection arguments may well sway a fifth vote, perhaps Mr. Justice Kennedy's. I hope they do.

     I'm pleased, too, to tell you that the Washington State Senate has passed by a twelve vote margin a same-sex marriage bill that the State House then endorsed. Governor Gregoire will sign the legislation shortly, adding her state to the six others and Washington, D.C. that already have stepped up for equality. It's a good day.

     And yet we here in the United States and the West generally, simply have no real understanding of just how miserable some government and church alliances make the lives of LGBT citizens in other regions. I have shared here what the situations look like in Zimbabwe and Uganda, for example. This week the Ugandan Parliament, urged on by several touring American Baptist ministers--I have written here about their African tour previously and in detail--has begun debate on what papers there call the "Kill The Gays Bill."

     Being gay can, right now, result in decades of imprisonment in Uganda. Were the bill to pass, the government, with the majority of Uganda's ministers' approval, would be able to sentence to life or execute citizens  for no other alleged crime than his or her homosexuality. The bill might have well been passed yesterday save for the fact that when the planned vote arose, many female parliament members walked out in protest and the measure was tabled for at least a week.

     U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has, as we know, levelled strong condemnation of this specific barbarism. She and many of Europe's foreign ministers three years ago fought against the fourteen-year sentences to hard labor of two Malawi men for holding a party at which they announced that one day they wished to marry. Their sentences were overturned and the men exiled.

     Here is a statement from Amnesty International on the current situation:

         "Uganda is a country where American-style evangelical Christianity is exploding, and there are close links between many American anti-gay preachers, politicians, and activists, and their Ugandan counterparts.

     "Mr. Bahati, the Anti-Homosexuality Bill’s sponsor, is the secretary of the Ugandan branch of The Family, the American evangelical organization whose members include Sens. James Inhofe, Jim DeMint, and Tom Coburn.

     "Martin Ssempa, a Pentecostal preacher who has championed the bill, was a protégé of Rev. Rick Warren and, during the Bush administration, a recipient of at least $90,000 of American aid earmarked for abstinence promotion. Another major anti-gay activist, Stephen Langa, the head of Uganda’s Family Life Network, is an affiliate of the Phoenix-based group Disciple Nations Alliance. 

     "...the ideology underlying the bill comes from American conservatives. It is Americans who have elaborated a vision of homosexuality as a satanic global conspiracy bent on destroying society’s foundations, akin to the Jewish 'octopus' in classic anti-Semitic narratives. According to Warren Throckmorton, an evangelical psychology professor once associated with the ex-gay movement, when Uganda’s anti-gay activists speak about homosexuality, they cite materials by Scott Lively and Paul Cameron, two of the fiercest American opponents of the so-called homosexual agenda."

     Reverend Scott Lively was among the U.S. touring missionaries who held dozens of seminars three summers back in over a dozen African parliaments, congresses, and for heads of state. More have followed and still others have offered advice and support from here. While no U.S. missionary recommended death sentences for being gay, per se, they all insisted, and in every meeting, that only nations wishing to invite God's wrath and who wanted homosexuality to rot the foundations of civil society would allow gay citizens any real measure of freedom. And, again, 'Amnesty' makes it clear just who some of the American pols are who support these ministers' work.

      Justice will, I have no doubt, eventually prevail. Freedom always does. But until it does, people will be killed by bigots egged on by the Ugandan press, its government, and their American church and politician-collaborators who, of course, when challenged, will neatly claim that they really don't approve of outright murder.

     Americans of good conscience, every single decent one of us, ought to be ashamed of this complicity and roundly condemn it. The aiding-and-abetting is being done in my name and in yours.

     Expect better.

     Demand better.

-----

 

    

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Whether or not you're moved to make a call, it's important to know what's done in your/our names.
I'm glad Proposition 8 was defeated. The message needs to be disseminated continually that LGBT citizens are equal. The Ugandan situation is alarming but I'm glad you brought it to light.

Rated/Bud
I hope freedom for all will succeed.
Rated
Bud Thanks so much and yes, you're right.
Just because it's overseas doesn't mean these Americans should be excused for encouraging murder.

They are an Abomination.
And they wonder why they've turned so many people off "the church." Rated.
Deborah to be clearer...these ministers, the ones referred to here, are non Catholics; they are Protestants.
Yeah, but, "the church" has done a lot to damage people over the centuries, too, obviously, and evangelicals have ticked off a lot of people in Latin America, too. ... Just FYI: A good friend, a South American Catholic, lived in Salt Lake City for a few years, and everyone always asked her, "Do you belong to the Church?" They were talking about the Mormon church.
Deborah uhmhmm :) I tht to make the distinction clearer here; whatever the record of the Catholic Church in Africa or elsewhere---and I've written much on it, these particular ministers are Baptist Protestants.
My senators and representatives hear from me so much they think I'm seventy. We are at least free to not embrace this kind hate ourselves. This is why despite my growing disdain with the democratic party, I keep voting for them. They at least are not tied to the evangelical Taliban. That is what these people are. No difference except the name of their god and even he is the same god. I love it when they start talking about Allah as if there were any difference, the god of Abraham is the god of Abraham despite the name. We see a growing threat of this kind of theocratic control of politics and we fail to see the danger, even the Egyptians are afraid of it. The crossroad grows ever closer. When we take the path to religious control we loose our freedom and become the same kind of slaves that exist in any country that puts god above freedom.
I cannot even imagine how awful it is to be gay and live in one of these countries.. what am I saying?
Even with the Prop 8 overturn yesterday there are still so many hateful minds around. Yes baby steps but some of these haters will never change.
HUGGG
Linda no; many won't change...but writers such as you and I don't write for them. :)
American evangelical religious ( I use that term loosely, religious) whipping up more hate globally....just what we needed. Shades of more killing and terror sanctioned by our own representatives.
Sheila uhmhmm when hate is paraded as God's work we've gotta speak, :)
What pains me tremendously is the FACT that homosexuality has been demonized at a level that allows people all over the world to treat us like cock roaches, squashing us, while so called "good people" remain silent. Watching and experiencing this for an entire lifetime makes one very adept at understanding the underlying problem.

Organized religion operates in this world from a position of false respect! People tiptoe around criticism, fearing reprisal that is swift and often brutal from an organization they put on a pedestal. In reality organized religion is responsible for more suffering and evil, than any other entity that exists in the world. Even as a victim, one runs the risk of being labeled a "non-believer," which carries the sentence of eternal damnation. Just look around at the most evil, arrogant, selfish bigoted people in the world, and more often than not they will carry the banner of believing in God! And should you question "their" God, they will unleash their version of Hell on earth.

At this very moment, in the God fearing, super religious nation of the United States of America, the hypocrisy and insanity has reached a level that should make every single critical thinking person shake in their boots. But no! Many sit in silence as if the entire slate of Republican candidates were actually qualified to hold the highest office in the land, when in fact they should be hospitalized in a mental institution!

But what horrifies me as a Gay man, is how they are allowed by their fellow Republicans, their fellow citizens, the media and the so called religious institutions, to use Gay American citizens as political footballs. They are no less evil than the Jew hating Nazis, no less bigoted than the racists of the American South, and the culture as a whole is no less responsible than the good Germans who said nothing!

As a victim of their relentless abuse for an entire lifetime, let me tell you what is most disturbing from my vantage point. That insidious aspect of organized religion that brainwashes children to fear God. That is the part that makes otherwise good people step back and say "well maybe they are sinners after all!" The part that makes people ignore their eyes and their hearts.

My life has brought me through a lot of suffering that has informed me on the temporal level and made me understand spirit from a very intimate point of view. Because of that I can tell you that I do not believe in someone else's God! I believe in truth and love and compassion and understanding.

And as one of those who bears the brunt of the evil hatred that has consumed this nation, I, like the Jews of Germany did, and the African Americans of the American South did, I must warn you that YOU ARE NEXT!
SF Thanks so mush for this...and you're 100% correct.
Rachel Maddow interviewed Bahati on her MSNBC program on 12/9/10. His ties to and funding from US fundamentalists were clear. You can view the interview on her website. It gave me a sick stomach that lasted days after I first saw the interview.
beauty thanks very much!
The irony, of course, is that crime pays. I've left comments at FB as well.
B. It can, yes. And thanks so much for the FB comments. :)
SpiritManSF,

Here in North Carolina, a mainline Protestant church in the Triangle (Raleigh-Durham-Chapel hill) recently announced its decision to refuse to handle the legal portions of marriage, only the spiritual, until it becomes legal for them to marry gay couples in the church. Until then, the minister will marry couples before God but they need to go to the Courthouse for the marriage license.

Here, about an hour or so west, my rabbi gave an impassioned sermon at a joint Jewish/Protestant MLKing Jr. Day service about how gay rights is the civil rights struggle of today. That is the opinion of a lot of this congregation, probably a serious majority. He was congratulated by congregant after congregant.

Don't assume for a minute that all organized religion opposes you. That's not true by any stretch of the imagination. Many of us who participate in organized religion believe that this anti-gay crap is uncompassionate bigotry of which our God does not approve.

Sure, you have enemies in organized religion. You also have friends, not in spite of our religious beliefs but because of them. Don't discount us.
"...hey are allowed by their fellow Republicans, their fellow citizens, the media and the so called religious institutions, to use Gay American citizens as political footballs"

People in some of their actions don't speak for me even though they do for the majority of what they do. You tar and feather all Republicans and you practice quilt by association of a few names in your piece.

I find it laughable that you connect a few good people to a few nut jobs and claim the few are also nut jobs. Why won't you speak out about some of the murders that started President Obama's political life. The Weather Underground made no bones about the fact they blew up buildings and killed people and after all these years still claim they didn't do enough. Why don't we apply the same rules to President Obama as you did these Senators.

As for the nut jobs, they have always been here and always will be. Just try to name them individually instead of an entire political party.
Cantillon Gosh you swallowed the swill abt Obama and the SDS? Wow. So how can I take anythong else you say here seriously?
Kosh thanks very much for this. :)
@Koshersalaami: Please do not misunderstand me. No one knows better than I, the number of people within religious communities who stand up for what is right. But as the criticisms of my post begin to appear, I can only say "I rest my case." The idea that religion or organized religion is above criticism is what drives the ability of people to hide behind God to justify their prejudices and hatreds. As for the Republican party, they have only their lock step boot marching to blame for those who see them as all the same! I, as a Gay American man, understand generalizing an entire population of people. Nowhere in my post did I say "all" organized religion, or "all" people in organized religion. But over and over again, I hear accusations directed at me and my people that are very inclusive in their condemnation. It is not enough to say that a few good people will rise up to do what is right if the entire "brand" has been hijacked by a lunatic fringe. You either need to take it back from them or create a new brand.
SF I can only try to assure you that Kosh and I understand the ethical limitations of many of our fellow Jews and yet we also know that the vast majority of us are wholly on the side of equality.
Jonathan, I understand that too. Heven't seen any Jews picketing funerals lately. It's my own Christian/Catholic upbringing that irks me the most. I just have a hard time swallowing that line about "we are all sinners" that is so often used to excuse everything.
SF I sure do get that.
It's why Sarah P paraded her unwed mom daughter 4 yrs ago to connect w the we-are-all-sinners crowd.
And that 'crowd', of course, cannot stand Jews as well as LGBT.
Taking the challenge. "As for the nut jobs, they have always been here and always will be. Just try to name them individually instead of an entire political party."

To start: Mitt Romney, Newt Gingrich, Rick Santorum, Ron Paul, Rick Perry, Michele Bachmann, Herman Cain, Rick Santorum, Tim Pawlenty
SF they can all go hang.
OK. I'm still working on the challenge from the perspective of equality for the LGBT community. Since there are SO MANY Republicans in the Congress, I thought it would be easier to list the ones who support equality. They are three! Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-Fla.), Senator Susan Collins (R-ME) and Congressman Richard Hanna (R-NY) Source: Log Cabin Republicans! To tell you the truth, I'm surprised there are three!
SF you may well be buoyed by the address I'll give on 24 April at the D.C. leg of the World Wide Equality Marches. I think it'll be filmed, and, in any case, I'll publish it here in May.
Catnlion (neighbor):
"they are allowed by their fellow Republicans, their fellow citizens, the media and the so called religious institutions, to use Gay American citizens as political footballs".......

I don't think that SpiritManSF was smearing all Republicans any more than he was smearing all citizens, all the media, and all the so-called religious institutions. He was, however, including most of them of the complicity of silence. For most of each of those populations, that's a fair accusation.

The GOP's public face is, at the moment, the Presidential candidate campaigns and debates. Let's face it - they haven't exactly been long on defending gay rights, nor has there been a lot of visible Republican backlash to the anti-marriage crap.

Speaking of anti-marriage crap, we'll see what happens in our mutual neighborhood in the next election. That particular issue looks to be a really contentious one.

Regarding Obama: He's not old enough to have been involved with the Weather Underground. He has an acquaintance/ally who was but that association came way, way after the fact and is sillier than SpiritMan's allegation.

Just so I get what annoyed you about SpiritMan's comment: I have followed you closely enough to know that you're conservative (in part from the joint project with Oahusurfer) but not closely enough to know your feelings about gay marriage or gay rights in general. Do I take it that you don't line up with the majority of the GOP on this issue? I would certainly understand that: The conservatives from the sixties who actually worried about the intellectual consistency of their positions, guys like Buckley and Goldwater, would probably favor gay marriage on the grounds that to do anything else would be to favor government interference in a private matter. The current crop believes in what I might call Populist Subjectivity, except for Ron Paul, a man whose understanding of certain issues may be simplistic and faulty but who is at least serious about being intellectually consistent, which is why he has a devoted following.
Well, the Prop. H8 decision is in and, for reasons I explained, it’s actually better than many of the complainers claim. It appears to have been crafted to bring Justice Kennedy into our court so-to-speak. If the Prop. H8ers seek an en banc hearing (I hope they do) the result, I think, will be a much broader ruling on our favor and make in more likely that SCOTUS will grant cert. But do search here and notice how little has been written about the decision. Telling? Not much LGBT readership or participation here.

As to the situation in Uganda: that has been brewing for a long time and you are right, the complicity of Americans is despicable. Just goes to show you what you can get away with in America if your shove the word ‘Reverend” in front of your name.
Francoise Thanks so very much!
Directed here by SpiritManSF, whom I thank. Reading the comments is always an education. Yes, the "Haters" have always been with us, but the conspiracy of silence from too many institutions, and individuals feeds and inflames the horrid bigotry of these folks. As long as we remain silent in this matter, we are complicit, as I see it. As Eldridge Cleaver said, "If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the problem."

I believe that anything that diminishes another, diminishes us all. For me, it starts with one's own spiritual growth, and is fed by our modeling. In that spirit, may we all move towards love of one another.