How much is this “comprehensive test of the military draft machineryâ€
going to cost taxpayers? If, as it claims, the Bush administration does
not intend to try to reinstate the draft, why mount this expensive
“test�
Bush gazed further into his opaque crystal ball in his December 20
press conference: “I am predicting that it’s going to take a while for
the ideology of liberty to finally triumph over the ideology of hate.â€
Bush should certainly know about the “ideology of hate.†He deployed a
strategy based on it in both his presidential campaigns. And those
retrograde Republicans who wish to follow in his ignominious footsteps
are still at it.
New York Times columnist Frank Rich made the case in a recent
article:
This time around, ballot initiatives banning same-sex marriage drew
markedly less support than in 2004; the draconian one endorsed by
McCain in Arizona was voted down altogether. Two national politicians
who had kowtowed egregiously to their party’s fringe, Rick Santorum and
George Allen, were defeated, joining their ideological fellow travelers
Tom DeLay and Ralph Reed in the political junkyard. To further confirm
the inexorable march of social history, the only Christmas season
miracle to lift the beleaguered Bush administration this year has been
the announcement that Mary Cheney, the vice president's gay daughter,
is pregnant. Her growing family is the living rejoinder to those in her
father’s party who would relegate gay American couples and their
children to second-class legal or human status.
Yet not even these political realities have entirely broken the
knee-jerk habit of some 2008 Republican presidential hopefuls to woo
homophobes.
Chief among those wooers is Republican Sen. Sam Brownback from Kansas, the state that
redefined “scienceâ€
to include metaphysical explanations for natural phenomena. The
senator’s vehement antigay views are well known. He brags about them
and plans to base his campaign on them:
Brownback would define candidacy by opposing gays
Sam Brownback said Thursday [December 21, 2006] that conservative
values like opposition to abortion and same-sex marriage will
distinguish him from others vying for the 2008 Republican presidential
nomination. â€I think there’s room in the field for someone with
full-scale conservative values,†the Kansas senator told about 80
people at a conference room of a branch of the Spartanburg, S.C.,
Regional Healthcare System.
Brownback was in the news recently for holding up the confirmation of
Michigan state judge Janet Neff to a federal district court because, in
2002, she attended a lesbian commitment ceremony in Massachusetts. A
year or so later, that state’s Supreme Court declared same-sex couples
could not be barred from the civil institution called “marriage.â€
As the
New York Times reported,
Judge Neff, a Michigan state court judge, attended the commitment
ceremony of the daughter of a family who had lived next door to her for
26 years. She said that attending and delivering a homily was like
joining in an important event in the life of one of her own daughters.
Mr. Brownback, one of the most conservative senators, considered it to
be a disqualifier for the bench. Later, he made an equally
objectionable offer: he would allow a vote on Judge Neff if she agreed
to recuse herself from cases involving same-sex unions. The Senate does
not get to tell federal judges what areas of law they may rule on.
Brownback eventually backed off and promised to allow a vote of Judge Neff’s appointment. The
New York Times editorial made the critical assessment:
Senator Brownback now seems to be calculating that even in the
Republican Party, the sort of extreme bigotry he has shown toward gay
people would not be a selling point. At a time when Vice President Dick
Cheney’s lesbian daughter is pregnant and President Bush has declared
himself “
happy for her,†Mr. Brownback’s hostility puts him far out on the political fringe.
Mr. Brownback says that although he will allow Judge Neff’s nomination
to come to a vote, he is still likely to vote against her. If he does,
he should be asked to explain his vote if he hits the presidential
campaign trail. Whether someone has attended a same-sex commitment
ceremony is not a worthy litmus test to impose on someone seeking an
important office. Whether someone holds hateful views toward gay people
certainly is. [link added]
“Hateful views toward gay people†– and unmitigated
hypocrisy – are also the forte of Pope Benedict XVI, leader of the
institution that concealed decades of
pedophilia and child abuse by its priests. In his December 22, 2006 year-end
speech
to Rome’s clergy the pope urged they rally the faithful to oppose laws
that would support gay and opposite-sex unmarried couples.
Meanwhile, some “
Catholic leaders†in America were already taking matters into their own hands:
Police have filed an assault charge against the executive director of
Boston-based Catholic Citizenship in the attack on a woman protesting
the group’s antigay rally Saturday outside City Hall in Worcester,
Mass. Sarah Loy, 27,
a straight supporter of same-sex marriage, says she was pushed to the ground by Larry Cirignano at the rally.
Cirignano, 50, Catholic Citizenship’s leader, used the rally to call on
the Massachusetts legislature to vote on a proposed state
constitutional amendment to halt same-sex marriages there. Last month
state lawmakers recessed for the year without acting on the antigay
proposal.
Loy, who attended with her husband and a few gay allies, went to the
rally and staged a counterprotest. She held a sign saying “No
discrimination in the constitution.†When Cirignano saw Loy, she said,
he stepped down from the podium and lunged at her, tackling her to the
ground.
“You need to get out. You need to get out of here right now,†he
threatened as he pushed her, her head slamming against the concrete
sidewalk, according to the
Worcester Telegram & Gazette. [link added]
Aside from his ongoing crusade on behalf of prejudice and disenfranchisement, Benedict’s December 22
remarks
were prompted by the Italian government’s promise to enact legislation
guaranteeing civil equality and equal rights for all unmarried couples,
including same-sex ones, by the end of January 2007. The pope doesn’t
like that:
“I cannot silence my worry about the laws on unmarried couples,â€
Benedict said. “Many of these couples have chosen that road because,
for the time being, they don’t feel up to accepting the judicially
ordered and binding cohabitation of marriage.â€
“And so joining a man and a woman, and two people of the same sex
becomes the same,†Benedict said. “With that, the ominous theories that
deny any relevance to the human person’s masculinity and femininity are
tacitly confirmed.â€
In the first statement, Benedict acknowledged that marriage is a “judicially orderedâ€
civil
institution. Civil judiciaries all over the world have ruled that
discrimination is illegal. The pope doesn’t like that either. He’s
still furious with Canada and Spain for legalizing same-sex marriage.
Every so often Benedict fires off a tirade against the governments of
both countries. In response, they have repeatedly told the pope to butt
out of their civil affairs.
As for Benedict’s other point, there are a significant number of
same-sex couples worldwide ready, willing and able to enter into the
“binding cohabitation of marriage.†Many of them are already rearing
children or plan to do so. How sad the pope is intent on
disenfranchising these couples and their children who would benefit
socially and economically from their parents’ marriage being legally
recognized.
Benedict’s second statement really made no sense at all. He claimed
that recognizing same-sex civil unions would “deny any relevance to the
human person’s masculinity and femininity.â€
How would recognizing same-sex civil unions affect other people’s
“masculinity and femininity� Does the pope think recognizing same-sex
civil unions would cause all heterosexual men and women to view their
masculinity or femininity as irrelevant? Or is it more likely he’s just
playing on old stereotypes and prejudices in order to divide and
conquer?
In a truly stunning display of Machiavellian hypocrisy, two days later in his
Christmas Eve speech
the pope urged all people to strive to “overcome preconceived ideas and
prejudices, tear down barriers and eliminate contrasts that divide – or
worse – set individuals and peoples against each other, so as to build
together a world of justice and peace.â€
Benedict and his theopolitical “church†are in the forefront of
advocating prejudice against gay people and erecting barriers to keep
them, their committed unions and families marginalized. In relation to
gay people and their struggle for civil rights, the Catholic Church has
consistently sought to “set individuals and peoples against each other.†And the Church has
never sought to work with gay men and women “to build together a world of justice and peace.â€
So as Christians celebrate the Christmas season’s message of peace on
earth and good will toward all, George “we’re going to win†Bush looks
for new ways to send more young men and women into a bloody, no-win
war, presidential wannabe Sam Brownback brags about his bigotry, and
Pope Benedict offers anything but good will toward all by proposing new
“reasons†to deny some people civil equality. Makes you wonder, doesn’t
it?