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Face Down the God Squad & Win Votes!

December 20th 2009 02:08
Preacher
What do you mean, I'm a fraud?


Labor supporters continue to propagate the myth that the party can’t embrace marriage equality because they would lose the Christian vote and hence their grip on power. GLBTI advocates have long held that this was hogwash, and now we have the proof.


Associate Professor Dr Rodney Smith of Sydney University has analysed voting at the 2007 elections, and his findings strongly indicate the opposite..

According to The Age Really Long Link he said, ''The events of the 2007 federal election are impossible to square with the view that Australian electoral politics are coming increasingly under the influence of right-wing Christian groups.''

The good doctor found that instead, that in seats where right-wing Christian groups directly targeted Labor and the Greens, the two parties actually increased their vote.

The study also explodes the myth that there is any such thing as a unified Christian point of view.

Again according to The Age, Dr Smith says “ it is misleading to lump all Christian groups under the label ‘Christian right’ “… His analysis … shows the contributions of church groups to the election were not dominated by a single view, but covered diverse issues with competing views on key policy issues. “ Among those ‘competing views’ are many Christians who support marriage equality.


In other words, the “Christian” community is no more united than the GLBTI community .The Australian Christian Lobby is only one voice among many, representing only a minority of its co-religionists.

Yet successive governments – including the current administration - have prostituted themselves for votes the Lobby cannot in fact deliver, and used Lobby demands as an excuse to dilute and delay GLBTI equality- and as a smokescreen for their own homophobia.

At the same time those same governments have refused to act on the advice of disparate gay groups on the grounds that each was only one voice among many, and the gay community was “not dominated by a single view, but covered diverse issues with competing views on key policy issues. “

No, Labor’s refusal to embrace marriage equality is not based on the fear of the consequences at the ballot box – they will be minimal, and could even be positive. It is based on the fear of confronting the homophobia within itself, and of opening up a split within the party. The ghost of Bob Santamaria is stalking the corridors of power.

As one source put it (I’m paraphrasing), ‘it’s not about principles, it’s about finding a compromise everyone within the party can live with.’

It suits Labor to aim us at Jim Wallace and the Australian Christian Lobby, because that diverts our attention from the real roadblock to marriage equality – the Labor Party itself, and in particular the malign influence of the Catholic right, propped up by votes of the Shoppies Union led by North-Korean-style President for Life, the dinner companion of Cardinals, Joe de Bruyn.

This conveniently allows Labor pollies who don’t much like us, but need our votes to hold onto their Green-challenged inner-city seats, to pose as friends whose hands are unfortunately tied by electoral necessity – and, they remind us, with gentle threats, the Liberals would be worse.

That may once have been true, but now the Liberal Party is frantically narrowing its appeal, energising it’s very conservative base (unconsciously aping its American mentors, the Republicans) and gifting the centre ground to Labor.

Labor now not only has room to shift to the left, it will be forced to do so to avoid losing many valuable inner city members, principally to the Greens. And not just – or even principally – because of their intransigence on marriage equality.

Inner city Labor voters - especially the under 35s - are baffled by Canberra’s recalcitrance on same sex equality. But they are also vehemently opposed to the proposed government censorship of the internet. And they are furious at weak and ineffective climate change policies that turn the notion of ‘the polluter pays’ on its head, creating instead a policy of ‘taxpayers pay polluters.’

On the one hand, Mr Rudd wants to paint Labor as the party of the future, of change, of technological advance. But siding with crusty old ‘Christian’ colonels makes his banner of progress and modernity seem nothing more than a flag of convenience.

But when these zealots attack Labor instead of embracing it, the Labor vote goes up. Because that seems to validate Labors progressive credentials.

Facing down the God Squad is, in short, a vote-winning strategy. If only Rudd can find the will and the courage to face down those in his own party who are holding him back.
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Rainbow Report on Community

April 9th 2009 01:55
Pride Flag Manchester

Our topic on the Rainbow Report tonight is community – what exactly is this thing we call ‘the gay and lesbian community? Does it really exist? And if it does, then what does it want?

Politicians say it’s divided, and doesn’t know what it wants. This is the excuse for the rather weak stance on same-sex relationship recognition in the Labor Partys draft national platform, which says nothing about marriage and is allegedly weak on civil unions.

This issue has given rise to a lot of sniping online, with activists divided over whether this is an issue worth fighting over.

However, rather than argue over what we want, surely it’s better to ask. A couple of researchers have set out to do just that.

Sharon Dane, a psychologist and researcher at the University of Queensland, is asking how we want mainstream society to recognise our relationships , and what different types of relationships we form.

While Dr Warwick Hosking of Victoria University is also interested in gay mens relationships. His survey is looking at the role of monogamy, what the rules or arrangements are set up or established within relationships, and do those arrangements affect safe sex practices?

Taken together these two surveys should shed some light on the workings of the GLBTI community and what we expect from the rest of society.

One of the collision points with the mainstream is where the gay community meets up with God. And one of the most difficult relationships we’ve had in recent years – and it’s not getting any better – is with the Roman Catholic Church.

Except in Brisbane, where Father Peter Kennedy has been welcoming same-sex couples and even the gay and lesbian choir at St Marys, until his archbishop threw him out. He’ll join us tonight to give us the latest.

And finally Kaye Sera will ponder just what community means as she peers beneath the bonnet.

That’s all on the Rainbow Report Thursday April 9, 7-8pm AEST. Join in on (03) 9699 2949, text 0427 JOY 949 or email onair@joy.org.au.

"When the Pope marries her son to his boyfriend in St Peters, Rome, we'll know we're getting somewhere."
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A Gay Christmas List

November 23rd 2008 01:56
Kevin Rudd
Hey, look, I can do this 'blessing' thing, too!!


Santa Kev is on track to deliver my Christmas present: the Omnibus Bill removing the discrimination against same-sex couples identified by the Same Sex: Same Entitlements report. A big thank you to the Australian Human Rights Commission, to the government for keeping its promises, and to everyone working towards equality. But there’s lots of other things on my list for Santa Kev.

Last minute present for 2008: fix up benefits and entitlements. If we’re in a relationship, from July our entitlement will be calculated on our income as a couple. If I’m on benefit and partnered with a high earner, Centrelink will give me less money, or maybe none at all. If we’re both on benefit, we’ll drop to the couple rate. It’s going to be a struggle.

I’m not asking for a continuation of the special treatment we’ve had up to now. Instead, lift everybody’s benefits to a level we can actually live on. We’re with the old people and the disabled and everyone else on this.

The gift you left out this year: private same-sex superannuation. Your reforms only helped 10% of us – those in Commonwealth superannuation schemes. For the 90% of us with private super, you left it up to the funds to decide whether they could afford to treat us equally. We have to ask them if they do, and if they don’t, move our money to one that does – and hope they don’t change their minds later.

Next years BIG present: new anti-discrimination laws. State anti-discrimination laws cover sexuality, but they don’t work very well. I know from experience that under Victorian law it’s very difficult to prove discrimination. The process is slow, complex, expensive, and bureaucratic.

And there’s a huge loophole. You can discriminate against GLBTI people if 'the discrimination is necessary for the ... [offender] to comply with the ... [offender’s] genuine religious beliefs or principles'. Other state anti-discrimination laws contain similar loopholes, though none so obscenely wide.

This legalises discrimination in ‘religious’ schools, universities and hospitals, all paid work arrangements, the provision of goods and services and all other areas covered by the Act, in adoption, employment, medical services, education, training, and housing. All these ‘religious’ businesses – including the well-known food company Sanitarium – are also tax-exempt. It’s OK – and tax-free - to be a bigot, so long as you’re a religious bigot. That can’t be right.

Please fix up Commonwealth anti-discrimination law so that it includes discrimination on the grounds of sexuality, overrides all those confusing state laws, and cuts out the ‘religious’ exemptions.

A little something for the kids:
make sure the new national curriculum includes GBLTI issues, for example, in history, culture and sex and relationship classes. We’re sick of being the invisible Australians.

The “Daddy, Daddy, can I please have a pony NOW?” present:
marriage. Of which I’ve written more than enough already.

I know this looks pushy. I haven’t even got this year’s present and already I’m asking for 2009. But this way you’ll get my letter before anyone elses!!

Oh, and one more thing. Tell those whingers from the CMST (church, mosque, synagogue, temple) lobby they have to play nice next year or you’ll take away their lucrative tax exemptions and government contracts and give them to somebody who deserves them (hint)!!
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Gay Marriage Works!

July 13th 2008 04:36
Heinz Mayo gay kiss
Hold the mayo! From the canned Heinz ad

Sure it can look odd – even to a dyed-purple-in-the-womb old pouf like me – to see two grooms or two brides standing at the altar, or pushing a stroller. That’s because we’re not used to it yet – it’s too new.

[ Click here to read more ]
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A Gay Marriage

July 7th 2008 03:10
As I’ve gotten older, I’ve tended to ignore my own birthday, but this year I decided I would have a little celebration. Nothing fancy, just a buffet lunch on Sunday afternoon with a few of the people who matter to me. I could have invited at least a dozen more, but it’s a while since we’ve entertained and I didn’t want to take too much on.

My partner was initially angry because I sent out the invites without telling him my plans, but he came round. It saved a lot of arguments! As I’ve learned from dealing with editors and program managers, it’s better to do it first and apologise after, if necessary, than to spend hours in fruitless argument


[ Click here to read more ]
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Gays & Muslims Marriage Alliance?

June 26th 2008 02:55
polygamy
Polygamy is suddenly all over the Australian media. Where did that suddenly come from?

Keysar Trad, president of the Islamic Friendship Association, backed calls by Sheik Khalil Chami of the Islamic Welfare Centre, for polygamous relationships to be recognized in Australia


[ Click here to read more ]
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