Prop. 8 aftermath

The fact that California’s 55 Electoral College votes went for President-elect Barack Obama was of no surprise on Tuesday. What has confused liberals in our state and across the nation is the passage of Proposition 8, amending our Constitution to define marriage as a union between a man and a woman. And those on the opposing end have taken to visibly demonstrating their anger, targeting the Mormon church.

Outside the Los Angeles temple Thursday, dozens of protesters screamed “Bigots” and “Shame on You” at half a dozen men in button-down shirts and ties who looked out at the demonstration from behind the temple’s closed gates.

Opponents organized a similar rally outside the Salt Lake City temple , as well as launching groups on Facebook and a website to challenge the church’s tax-exempt status. Least we not forget their call to boycott Utah’s tourism industry and Sundance Film Festival, despite the fact that the proposition was on the California ballot. Whether their efforts are successful or not, it’s interesting that gay marriage advocates have chosen to blast their discontent solely at the LDS church. Several organizations and churches endorsed Prop. 8, including the Roman Catholic Church (with $1 million coming from the Knights of Columbus), Rick Warren’s Saddleback Church, the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America, and Focus on the Family.

True a large number of contributions came from Mormom individuals, as well as non-Californians, but is the outrage directed at Mormons due to past prejudice? Should Catholics be prepared for protests outside our parishes on Sunday? Perhaps, but have these activists forgotten to field a protest in Compton, with polls showing 7 out 10 African-Americans voted in favor of Prop. 8? Or are they waiting to take the streets of Santa Ana in storm because it would only be “fair” to call the more than half Latino population that also supported Prop. 8, “bigots?”

7 Responses to “Prop. 8 aftermath”

  1. Chino Blanco Says:

    African-Americans didn’t pay for the lies that were told and broadcast daily by the Yes campaign.

    Here are some YouTube clips of the local coverage:

    I. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i52JL5_N-XE

    II. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XdWsJcteW4Q

    III. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=02P3g3L9m-Q

    IV. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UXFX9abHyNs

    V. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hgmXHXLu0s8

  2. Natalie Says:

    But a majority of African-Americans did vote in favor of it. I think the No on Prop. 8 camp underestimated the black community, thinking that they would see gay marriage as a similar “equal rights” fight in their own quest for civil rights in our country. However, the black civil rights movement was pretty much driven by the black church itself, thus making it hard for them to distinguish their Christian beliefs from influencing their vote, even as they turned out overwhelmingly in favor of Barack Obama.

  3. prop8discussion Says:

    chino blanco posts on everyone’s blog. it’s very sad because he just posts links instead of actually participating with his own brain.

    The response to marriage being weakened by divorce and an individualistic society is not to make it completely meaningless by extending the definition to make it genderless.

    gender matters. it especially matters in parenting.

    i voted for prop 8 because i see traditional marriage as our society’s ultimate expression of equality: it takes one woman and one man.

    i think this is important especially when it comes to parenting. as a woman, the issue of families and children is really important to me. it’s important to me that my state do everything it can to protect families.

    a mom and a dad create the best possible situation for children. the government has an interest in promoting and providing incentives for this situation.

    this is cool link discussing separation of church and state

    http://preservingmarriage.blogspot.com/2008/11/prop-8-american-history-lesson.html

  4. Chino Blanco Says:

    You know, prop8, I’m the guy who uploaded those clips to YouTube. Sorry if I didn’t also weigh in with some deep insight while dropping of the links here.

    In any case, I see that you also shared a link. Although, of course, the links you post are better than mine. And the reasoning, the sheer brainpower you bring to the discussion. Wow.

  5. prop8discussion Says:

    at least i’m attempting to converse. you post very divisive and frankly misleading comments/links. I’m just signaling to the owner of this blog…that you really aren’t interested in what they have to say. you really just want people to watch your videos.

  6. Natalie Says:

    I deleted a comment from a different visitor because the use of hateful language towards the LDS church made editing the comment nearly impossible. As noted in the comment policy, I do not allow hateful language on this blog. Although I am not Mormon, I believe discussion can take place without vulgar and mean-spirited language.

    Interesting link prop 8. I think this line, By prohibiting a religious test, the Framers aimed not to destroy the influence of religion on politics but to purify it, hits it square on. I can understand why many same-sex couples believe voters the voted in favor of Prop. 8 believe it was done out of “homophobia”, but the ones I know that were in the Yes camp, chose to exercise their vote on the basis of their belief that marriage is a sacrament between a man and a woman, not because they “fear” gay people or what not.

  7. Joe of St. Therese Says:

    the big mistake was equating “gay rights” to the civil rights movement! That’s what got 7 out of 10 blacks to vote yes on it. It’s offensive to the generation that suffered true oppression, as compared to this one, whose life in hollywood and San Fran is rather well off since they already have rights under the law, they just fail to utilize them :)

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