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ACTION ALERT:
The Only WINNING Way
to Fight the Ban on Gay Marriage
The Religious Right's campaign against homosexuals is entering new
terrain now that President Bush has endorsed the constitutional
amendment banning gay marriages that will be debated this week in
Congress.
We need to step up as an alternative voice.
Below, Rabbi Lerner suggests one strategy for doing so. However,
if you disagree with the analysis and strategy he suggests, find
another strategy and implement it. What is important is that you SPEAK
UP in the next week in the public sphere. Write a letter to your local
media, and also to your Senators and Congressional leaders. Let
them know that you are an activist in the Network of Spiritual
Progressives, and that Spiritual Progressives oppose any attempts to
stigmatize homosexuals or to deny them rights that are given to
heterosexuals. And then, if you do agree with Rabbi Lerner's analysis,
incorporate that into your letter (you are welcome to use the entire
piece below or any part of it and send it as part of your letter, or
send it as a statement by Rabbi Michael Lerner with which you happen to
agree, or rewrite it in your own language. Just do something immediate
and strong to let the world know that you do not accept any attacks on
gays and lesbians.
There may be enough sane
voices in the Congress to prevent the Constitutional Amendment approach
(not necessarily because of support for gay rights but because of fear
of using the constitutional amendment approach to achieve any end). But
the assault on gays and lesbians has proved too valuable a tool, for
reasons explained below, for the Right to abandon it. So the ideas
presented below will be relevant for many years to come regardless of
the outcome of the immediate struggle being fought this week. We intend
to discuss this in more detail in a future communication (please read
the September issue of TIKKUN magazine in which we will present this
and alternative perspectives.
Here is Rabbi Lerner's statement (which you may also ask local media to
print as an op-ed--they can contact him directly at
rabbilerner@tikkun.org or by calling 510 528 6250 of they wish to
interview him on this topic, though we'd prefer if you asked them to
also interview YOU on this topic).
The Only Winning Way
to Fight the Ban on Gay Marriage
by Rabbi Michael Lerner
Now that President Bush has endorsed a
constitutional amendment banning gay marriages, those who hope to
stop it need to understand why their strategies have been so
unpersuasive in the past.
Gay and lesbian groups have tried to use the
language of “equal rights” as their launching pad for mass support,
posing themselves as a victim of discrimination akin to that suffered
by African Americans. But while many Americans stand with them in
relationship to issues of non-discrimination in hiring or equal rights
to visit their partners in hospitals or inherit their partner’s
property, they draw the line at marriage.
The opposition to gay marriage comes from two
different kinds of concerns, each of which can be effectively fought if
the supporters of gay marriage stop placing all their eggs in the equal
rights basket and instead seek to understand what might be reasonable
in the position of those who oppose gay marriage, and how to respond to
those reasonable concerns.
There are two such concerns. The first is that there is a huge crisis
in family life today, and the Right has been able to convince
people that the crisis is in part generated by homosexuals. A movement
to defend gay rights must address that family crisis.
That’s why the Network of Spiritual Progressives, which recently held a
national gathering and teach-in=to Congress in D.C. in May to
reconstitute a religious left made the first plank of its eight part
Spiritual Covenant with America a commitment to build a world based on
love and caring—to counter the ethos of materialism and selfishness
that are rooted in the world of work and in the me-firstism and
“looking out for number one” that have increasingly become the
yardstick of “common sense” in advanced capitalist societies.
All day long people work in corporations that teach them that their own
worth is dependent on their ability to contribute to “the bottom line”
of maximizing money and power. People quickly learn that their own
ability to succeed requires learning how to see other people through a
utilitarian or instrumental frame: “how can these others be of use to
me in showing the people who have power over my employment that I am
going to be useful to them in terms of contributing to their bottom
line?” People who spend all day long learning how to use others to
maximize their own advantage bring home with them a consciousness that
tells them that “everyone is just out for themselves” and that it is
self-destructive and irrational not to be a maximizer of self-interest.
It is this way of seeing each other that undermines loving families.
Increasingly people make commitments to each other within this kind of
utilitarian framework: “I’m with you as long as I think that you are
able to satisfy MY NEEDS better than anyone else who is likely to want
to be my partner or spouse.” Instead of seeing the other as an
embodiment of the sacred who deserves to be loved and cherished, the
legacy of the old bottom line of the marketplace is to teach us to
think in terms of how others will satisfy our own needs, and to discard
them if we can ever find someone who wills satisfy yet more of our
needs.
No wonder, then, that so many people feel insecure in their families.
And the homophobic sections of the Right have then used that insecurity
to blame the problem on homosexuals. Yet there is nary a family that
has ever broken up because there were homosexuals in the neighborhood.
Those of us who oppose the consttutioanl amendment banning gay marriage
would be far more effective if we were to become the progressive
pro-families movement that sought to advance a “New Bottom Line”:
corporations, legislation, government practices, social institutions
should be judged efficient, rational and productive not only to the
extent that they maximize money and power, but also to the extent that
they contribute to our capacities to be loving and caring, kind and
generous, ethically and ecologically sensitive, and capable of
responding to others as embodiments of the sacred and repond to the
universe with awe and wonder.
Spiritual progressives could show that this New Bottom Line, when
applied to our econmic and social institutions, could actually make a
difference to families, while no families at risk of break up will be
helped by a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage.
The second objection to gay marriage comes from those who point to
marriage as a holy sacrament whose dimensions have for most of human
history been set by religious communities. They are correct, and for
that very reason marriage ought to be taken out of the state entirely
and replaced with civil unions with agreements like other contracts
enforced by the state. Let all marriages be conducted in the private
realm with no legal sanction by the state, and then those religious
communities that oppose gay marriage will not sanction them, and those
like mine that do sanction gay marriage will conduct them, and the
state will have no say one way or the other, nor any role in issuing
marriage certificates or divorces. It will enforce laws imposing
obligations on pepople who bring children into the world, and it will
enforce contracts between consenting adults (civil unions), but it will
get out of the business of giving state sanction to what had always
been a sacred sacrament.
This strategy could prove far more powerful. Imagine if we could create
a culture of resistance to state power over personal life that led tens
of millions of liberal heterosexuals to simply stop using the state's
marriage as a legitimator, and instead had spiritual ceremonies (some
based in religious communities, others based in secular spiritual
communities or friendship circles that affirmed marriage, using their
own criteria for who could be married. These couples could then draw up
their own legal contracts that were the equivalent of a "civil union"
and enforceable by state laws just as any other contract would be. As
this movement spread, the power of the state to accept or deny
homosexual marraiges would become irrelevant, because gays and lesbians
would be getting the same kind of marriage as everyone else--the one
that heterosexuals were voluntarily getting in order to protect and
identify with homosexuals. Within a decade this would create tremendous
pressure on the state to either rescind its anti-homosexual legislation
or validate this new kind of reality in which most people were not
going to the state for marriages but instead going to their own
spiritual community to insist that marriage is a sacred and not
state-power-dependent relationship.
But of course in the meantime, with the struggle being waged in the
public sphere to explicitly deny homosexuals the rights granted to
heretosexuals, there needs to be a powerful movement against those
offensive measures. If that struggle focused on the commitment of both
hetero and homo sexuals to lead a campaign in defense of the family by
challenging the Old Bottom Line and demanding changes in all our
institutions to foster in us the capacities of love, caring, etc. that
nurture our abilities to be loving, and rejecting the ethos of the
marketplace that undermines those capacities, we'd be far more
effective than with any struggle that was simply an attempt to demand
"equal rights" and frame the struggle entirely in the language of
"rights."
This approach is far more likely to be a winning strategy for those who
wish to beat back the ongoing assault on gay rights.
Rabbi Michael Lerner is editor of Tikkun Magazine, National Chair of
the Network of Spiritual
Progressives (NSP), and author of ten books, most
recently:
The Left Hand of God:Taking Back our Country from the Religious Right
(Harper San Francisco, 2006). He is the Rabbi of Beyt Tikkun synagogue
in San Francisco.
RabbiLerner@tikkun.org
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