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    Trans woman dead after double stabbing

    August 27th, 2009

    By LOU CHIBBARO JR, Washington Blade
    Aug 26 2009

    One transgender woman was stabbed to death Wednesday and another was in stable condition with stab wounds from an unknown assailant following an incident along the 200 block of Q Street, N.W., according to sources.

     A police spokesperson said the incident occurred between 2:30 and 2:45 p.m. Wednesday.

     Police Chief Cathy Lanier, who spoke at the scene, told reporters that investigators were looking for nearby residents who might have witnessed the stabbings. She referred to the victims as “persons” and declined to disclose their gender.

     A police spokesperson would neither confirm nor deny that the victims were transgender.

     Lanier said investigators did not immediately know the motive behind the stabbings.

     A law enforcement source described the victims as male-to-female transgender people, with one believed to be 18 years old and the other believed to be 27.

     The stabbings occurred about two blocks from the North Capitol Street offices of Transgender Health Empowerment, a private social services group that provides drop-in services to transgender people, including transgender youth.

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    Most Americans oppose same-sex ‘marriage’

    August 27th, 2009

    Charlie Butts – OneNewsNow – 8/27/2009

    Research still shows the majority of Americans are against homosexual “marriage.”

    Carroll Doherty is a spokesman for the Pew Research Center, which conducted the research. “We found 35 percent overall in favor of it, [with] 54 percent opposed,” he says. “The opposition is slightly higher than it was the last time about a year earlier, up from 49 percent, but these attitudes have been fairly stable for the past few years.”

    Then researchers asked participants their opinion of same-gender civil unions that grant most of the privileges of traditional marriage. “You’ve got 53 percent [in] favor. You really do get just a slight majority in favor of it, 39 percent opposed,” Doherty adds. “So you see that [same-sex] marriage obviously draws much more opposition….”

    The research indicated that African-Americans as well as born-again Christians are against homosexual marriage. About half of Democrats favor it, while Republicans oppose it nearly five-to-one.

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    Maine Catholic Church Spends Crazy Money to Kill Gay Marriage While Shutting Down Parishes

    August 27th, 2009

    -by Michael A. Jones, www.gayrights.change.org

    catholic

    The Catholic Church is Maine is one of the leading forces behind efforts to take back civil rights for gays and lesbians this coming Election Day. A former public relations official with the Catholic Diocese of Maine, Marc Mutty, is the spokesperson for the anti-gay marriage movement in Maine, and the Catholic Diocese of Maine gave $100,000 in recent weeks to help support a ballot initiative that would end gay marriage.

    This past weekend, the Catholic Church in Maine announced that they were closing two parishes to help with cost-cutting measures, while another two parishes had their names put up on the chopping block, waiting a verdict on whether they will close.

    Huh. Makes you wonder how the Catholic Church spells “Prioirties.” While they throw money out of their ears to criminalize same-sex marriage, they are closing parishes down and breaking a part faith communities because of no money. And that’s only the tip of the iceberg.

    Rumors have it that the Catholic Church in Maine is ready to spend up to $2 million to kill gay marriage. Yet parish after parish after parish continue to get shut down because of a lack of funding.

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    Sen. Edward Kennedy Leaves a Lasting Legacy of Fighting for LGBT Rights

    August 26th, 2009

    -by Michael A. Jones, www.gayrights.change.org

    senkennedy

    Sen. Edward Kennedy, the lion of the U.S. Senate and the man who President Barack Obama called ‘the greatest Senator of our time,’ has died after more than a year’s struggle with brain cancer. While Sen. Kennedy leaves behind a legacy on a number of issues, from education to health care, his contributions to making the world better for gays, lesbians, bisexuals and transgender folks cannot go unnoticed. His legacy of fighting for LGBT rights made him one of the best straight allies ever to serve in the halls of Congress.

    Sen. Kennedy was one of only fourteen votes in 1996 to vote against the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), proving that Kennedy was not only willing to put himself out there on a limb for LGBT rights, but be the type of politician who was ahead of his time. Efforts to repeal DOMA have never been stronger. They started with that ‘No’ vote that Kennedy and thirteen other Senators cast.

    Subsequently, Kennedy fought to block a constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage, championed by a number of conservative Senators. As early as June 2002 Sen. Kennedy supported adding sexual orientation and gender identity to federal hate crimes laws.

    And in the wake of Massachusetts becoming the first state in the country to legalizing same-sex marriage, Sen. Kennedy didn’t back away from commenting on the historical impact for civil rights that this decision had.

    “The nation’s eyes were on Massachusetts today, and they saw a triumph for civil rights and fundamental fairness. Today’s historic vote will have a national impact on civil rights for years to come. Massachusetts has led the nation in education, in health care and in biotechnology, and today Massachusetts renewed its commitment as a proud leader in civil rights.”

    And those words certainly rang true, as Massachusetts has been cited as a leader as neighboring states (and Iowa) have moved toward marriage equality.

    Sen. Kennedy earlier this year also became one of the leading co-sponsors of a Senate ‘Employment Non-Discrimination Act’ (ENDA). Joining Sens. Jeff Merkley, Susan Collins, and Olympia Snowe, Kennedy said: “Ensuring equality for all Americans is the least we can do in living up to the standards of inclusion that this nation is built upon. There is no place for discriminating against any of our citizens for whatever reason and I commend my colleagues for their willingness to champion equal rights for every American.”

    Today the world will remember the legacy of Sen. Edward Kennedy. Part of that meme must include his tireless work to fight for equal rights for LGBT Americans.

    UPDATE: Chris Geidner over at Law Dork adds that in addition to Kennedy’s opposition to DOMA and his support for same-sex marriage, the good Senator was championing a federal gay rights bill as early as 1993.

    And for more great coverage of Ted Kennedy’s legacy here at change.org, check out our Women’s Rights, Immigration, and End Homelessness bloggers. They’ve all got memorial pieces running that show just how much of a champion this Senator was for the causes that so many of us believe in.

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    NOM Asserts that Marriage Equality is a Popularity Contest

    August 26th, 2009

    Submitted by David Hart on Wed, 08/26/2009 – 13:52

    nom

    We will have considerably more regarding the Opus Dei connection to National Organization for Marriage this week. Meanwhile, Ms. Gallagher and Mr, Brown are seeking more ways to raise money to finance their many anti-gay campaigns in many locales. Lately, the common thread has been that same-sex marriage is not supported by the majority of Americans. Now they are trying to scare people in New York and New Jersey into donating money to the cause. They are not even bothering to try to make much of an argument that same-sex marriage is illegal or that same-sex couples will eat your pets and children. The notion of what is popular seems to suffice. Well, not completely, NOM continues to fall back on old tricks from time to time.

    … the ideal for children is a husband and wife working together in marriage.

    What does that have to do with same-sex marriage? The same couples will still be bearing the same children — either way. The same couples will still be divorcing at about a 50% clip — either way. BTW, the same gay couples will still be adopting the same (generally) at-risk children with the same result — either way. Studies find that gays are good parents whose children do as well as their heterosexual counterparts.

    … gay marriage will change what all our kids are taught by our own government.

    Children being taught about fairness and equality is a bad thing? I hate to be the one to break it to NOM but children already know that gays in some states are permitted to marry. That hasn’t caused the planet to spin off its axis. At least I think not.

    … there is something wrong when “civil rights” is taken over to mean the right of two men to insist that we all view their relationship as a marriage, whether we like it or not.

    It looks like they are trying out a new talking point. Nice try. This has nothing to do with anyone “insisting” anything about anyone else’s views. Equal treatment under the law does not require that we seek NOM’s approval. They are free to view a married gay couple’s relationship any way that they choose. Legal recognition with the attendant rights and responsibilities of marriage has nothing whatsoever to do with the religious views of Gallagher and Brown. These are all the exact same arguments that were made in opposition to legal recognition of interracial marriages.

    Marriage is not a partisan issue. It’s not about party politics — it is about doing what’s right.

    I could not agree more! What is right is to not allow religious fundamentalists to impose their views on everyone else. Equality and fairness have always been “what’s right” in this country.

    Dear Friend of Marriage,

    Is New Jersey next on the gay marriage target list?

    We listened in to a panel of pro-gay-marriage experts at the “netroot nations” conference discussing what they need to win.

    Monica Hoeflinger, who works for LGBT Mentoring in Maine, made a big concession: “Nationally, voters’ attitudes on marriage equality have plateaued…. While we made really important gains in the early part of this decade, for the last four or five years they have essentially been stagnant.”

    Monica knows her stuff.

    In spite of four or five years of public protests, hundreds of millions spent by the top gay rights groups, attacks on donors to Prop 8, and a sympathetic press, the American people are just not on board on this gay marriage thing. People’s views have stopped “evolving” in the direction Monica hopes.

    Monica goes on to admit, “We have never successfully defended [gay] marriage at the ballot box. …The good news is that as a national community I believe that we care about this more than they do.”

    Really, Monica? At NOM, we beg to differ. AT NOM we are 500,000 people who believe in standing up straight and tall together, for God’s truth about marriage in Maine and all across this great country.

    Monica’s conclusion: “It is very critical we do everything we possibly can do. …As Maine goes, so goes the nation.” NOM has put enormous effort and resources into helping the people of Maine fight for marriage. But not just Maine.

    Here’s the thing: About 50 minutes into the panel at Netroots Nation a woman from New Jersey stands up. She identifies herself as a documentary filmmaker, but she makes it clear that her goal is to produce a “documentary” to show to New Jersey legislators right before the gay marriage vote in the Garden State.

    When exactly will that vote take place?

    “New Jersey will vote in the lame duck, after the election is over,” she says bluntly. That’s the word on the street to gay rights groups.

    This November.

    Why after the election? Because like Monica, the Trenton politicians know the people aren’t behind this effort. They want to minimize your chance to make your voice heard.

    The New Jersey doculady goes on to say something else interesting: “But we’re having a huge, really hard time finding subjects for our documentary who are members of the quote-unquote ‘minority community.’ …I would like some advice about how I can get these people to be a part of it … a Latino or an African-American. …I’ve been doing my best to get them on board and they almost get there and then they ‘chicken out.’ I’d like some advice on how I can get these people to see the bigger picture.”

    Maybe they do see the bigger picture: Maybe they understand that it’s just plain wrong for government to mess around with the meaning of marriage. Maybe New Jersey minority community members understand that the ideal for children is a husband and wife working together in marriage, and that gay marriage will change what all our kids are taught by our own government. Maybe they do not want to see the moral education of New Jersey’s black or Latino children co-opted to serve the interests of wealthy donors to the Democratic Party. Maybe they understand that there is something wrong when “civil rights” is taken over to mean the right of two men to insist that we all view their relationship as a marriage, whether we like it or not.

    Here’s one thing I can promise you: We will be focusing like a laser on attempts by GOP politicians to sell out marriage voters. We’ve already promised to raise $500,000 and use it for a primary challenge to any GOP senator in New York who betrays his constituents by voting for gay marriage. Do New Jersey politicians need a similar warning? Fight back against Trenton insider politics! By pledging just $20 this week, you can make an impact in New Jersey–and remember, the earlier we get moving to protect marriage, the more likely we are to succeed!

    In New York, the special election race for the 23rd Congressional district has yet to be announced, but already Dede Scozzafava is catching heat for her extremely liberal views. Over at the Red State website, Erick Erickson writes, “I am on record repeatedly saying that disaffected conservatives should not agitate for a third party. … There are, however, some situations where exceptions must be made in order to pressure the Republican Party of a particular state into doing what is right.

    “Now the race in NY-23 pits two liberals against each other in the two major parties. Sadly, the person furthest to the left is the Republican, Dede Scozzafava.

    “Dede Scozzafava is to the left of the party on abortion, taxes, spending, marriage, guns, everything. She is a terrible candidate. The New York GOP had a chance to do right by the people of NY-23. They failed.”

    We’re staying on top of this race looking at all the alternatives. We’re going to make sure every politician knows: You care about marriage, and you vote! (To help us get your voice heard in New York, can you donate to our New York PAC? Whether you can give $5, $50, or more, it all makes a difference!)

    Marriage is not a partisan issue. It’s not about party politics–it is about doing what’s right. Thank you for all you have done to help us make a difference for you, your family, and our shared values.

    God bless you!

    Brian S. Brown

    Executive Director

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    Anti-gay rights ref. signature check tops 100k

    August 25th, 2009

    Posted by Chris Grygiel at August 24, 2009 6:26 p.m

    Elections officials say they’ve now checked more than 100,000 signatures for Referendum 71, an attempt to overturn Washington’s new “everything but marriage” same-sex domestic partner law.

    The totals as of Monday evening are: 103,898 checked, 91,716 accepted and 12,182 rejected. R-71 sponsors need 120,577 valid Washington voter signatures for the measure to be placed on the November ballot.

    “The overall error rate is 11.72 percent, barely up from 11.68 percent, which we reported Friday,” Brian Zylstra of the secretary of state’s office said in a blog post. “In order to make the November statewide ballot, the referendum’s overall rejection rate must not go over 12.4 percent.”

    The secretary of state’s office hopes to finish the count by the end of this month.

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    US judge nixes controversial gay marriage case

    August 25th, 2009

    By The Associated Press
    08.25.2009 9:04am EDT

    (Santa Ana, Calif.) A same-sex marriage lawsuit that created a public rift between President Barack Obama and his gay supporters was dismissed Monday on a technicality.

    U.S. District Judge David O. Carter ruled the case – the first of several pending challenges to the federal Defense of Marriage Act – must be refiled in federal court.

    Carter said the suit had been improperly filed in state court before it was transferred to his jurisdiction. As a result, the judge said, he would not entertain arguments on its merits, at least not yet.

    “There is no point for us to go down the line of decision-making and waste time,” he said during the hearing in Santa Ana.

    The case, brought on behalf of a gay Southern California couple, argues that the Defense of Marriage Act, or DOMA, violates the U.S. Constitution by discriminating against gay men and lesbians.

    The 1996 law bars federal recognition of gay unions, including the granting of Social Security survivor payments and other government benefits to couples. , Six states have now legalized same-sex marriage, but the federal law still bars those couples from receiving the benefits.

    Gay marriage supporters accused Obama of betraying them this summer, after U.S. Justice Department lawyers filed court papers in the lawsuit strenuously defending the federal law. As a candidate, Obama pledged to work for its repeal.

    Following the outcry, the president issued a memorandum extending some benefits to federal employees with same-sex partners, held a White House reception commemorating the 40th anniversary of the birth of the modern gay rights movement, and otherwise sought to reassure restive gay leaders.

    Last week, when Justice lawyers filed a new round of papers seeking to dismiss the California case, Obama issued a statement saying he still wants to get rid of the federal law, but the government has an obligation to defend the laws passed by Congress.

    Richard Gilbert, the lawyer handling the case for the plaintiffs, said he would accept Carter’s invitation to submit it again.

    Gilbert said he took the suit to state court only after another federal judge refused to waive court fees for his clients, Arthur Smelt and Christopher Hammer. The Orange County couple are disabled and live on fixed incomes, he said.

    Monday’s action was the latest episode in a five-year legal losing streak for the couple. With Gilbert representing then, they first went to federal court to challenge both the federal law and California’s refusal to grant them a marriage license in 2004.

    A federal judge ruled against them, and in 2006 the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals did as well, saying marriage laws were a state matter and that Smelt and Hammer were ineligible to challenge the federal law because they were unmarried and hadn’t tried to secure any federal spousal benefits.

    The couple were among the 18,000 same-sex couples who got married in California last year, before voters amended the state constitution to ban gay marriage. They renewed their complaint after Proposition 8 passed in November.

    “They keep trying to kill Smelt and Hammer, and it just won’t go away,” Gilbert said of the ongoing litigation.

    Brian Raum, a lawyer for the Alliance Defense Fund, a Christian legal group that has joined the government in defending the federal marriage law, said Carter was right to dismiss the case on procedural grounds.

    The federal government cannot be sued in state courts, Raum said.

    Smelt and Hammer’s lawsuit could be back in a federal court in a matter of months, when “ultimately it will come down to the merits,” he said.

    Earlier this year, a gay rights group in Massachusetts filed a lawsuit challenging the Defense of Marriage Act on constitutional grounds, and the state brought a separate case arguing that the law interferes with its right to establish its own marriage laws.

    In 2004, Massachusetts became the first U.S. state to legalize same-sex marriages.

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    Anti-gay group to fight marriage efforts in D.C.

    August 24th, 2009

    National Organization for Marriage relocates to city, seeks to block DOMA repeal

    By LOU CHIBBARO JR.
    Aug. 21, 2009

    In a little noticed development, a national organization credited with playing a lead role in persuading California voters to ban same-sex marriage through Proposition 8 moved its headquarters last month to Washington, D.C.

    The National Organization for Marriage plans to use its projected 2009 budget of $6 million to, among other things, help ban same-sex marriage in the District of Columbia and prevent President Barack Obama and a Democratic-controlled Congress from repealing the Defense of Marriage Act, according to Brian Brown, the group’s executive director.

    “The fight over Proposi-tion 8, as far as the ballot initiative, is over. We won,” Brown told the Blade in a telephone interview. “So right now I think both sides agree that the real focus is on what’s happening in the Northeast.”

    Brown said that in addition to focusing on D.C. and Congress, his group is working to overturn through a ballot measure a same-sex marriage law in Maine and head off pending same-sex marriage bills in New York and New Jersey.

    He said NOM also is closely monitoring developments in Massachusetts, Connecticut and New Hampshire, where same-sex marriage has been legalized, to “document” the harm his organization is certain will occur to families, the institution of marriage and society in general as a result of the legal recognition same-sex marriage.

    A recurring theme in the group’s literature and public statements is that legalizing same-sex marriage will forever change the definition of marriage, causing profound societal consequences, many of which the group says won’t become apparent until it’s too late to reverse them.

    “Once you put same-sex marriage into the law, what you’re putting into the law is that there is no difference between two men and two women and a man and a woman, in terms of marriage, and anyone who says otherwise is a functional equivalent to a bigot or a racist,” he said.

    Same-sex marriage advocates take strong exception to Brown’s assertions and those of NOM founder, conservative activist Maggie Gallagher.

    Groups such as the Human Rights Campaign and Freedom to Marry argue that no valid research data or scientific studies can be found to back up NOM’s claims that same-sex marriage has or will in the future harm families or the institution of marriage.

    But Brown said that a solid majority of voters in every state or jurisdiction in which same-sex marriage has been placed on the ballot has voted down same-sex marriage — or similar legal rights for same-sex couples granted through domestic partnership benefits.

    “Whenever we’ve been able to have a direct vote on the issue, we’ve won — in 30 out of 30 states,” Brown said.

    He said his organization is poised to help local ministers fight plans by the D.C. City Council to pass legislation this fall that would allow same-sex marriages to be performed in the District.

    He said NOM also will join local opponents of same-sex marriage to seek to overturn the law passed by the Council in May, and later cleared by Congress, that allows the city to recognize same-sex marriages performed in other jurisdictions.

    Brown said NOM would “definitely” contribute funds to pay for a court challenge of D.C. Board of Elections & Ethics and D.C. Superior Court rulings that stopped a ballot measure on the issue from taking place.

    Both the election board and a Superior Court judge ruled in June that a referendum calling for overturning the same-sex marriage recognition law could not be held because, if approved, it would violate the city’s Human Rights Act, which bans discrimination based on sexual orientation.

    “The people of D.C. deserve the right to vote on this issue,” he said. “It really sort of boggles the mind that one of the key issues in the District is the idea of voting rights. There’s a lot of support for voting rights, especially coming from some of those who support same-sex marriage.

    “And while there’s a push for voting rights and the idea that D.C. would have a right to vote in Congress, it’s a little incongruous that there’s this attempt to block the right of D.C. voters to have their say on an issue of this much import — the very definition of marriage.”

    Michael Crawford, president of the marriage equality group D.C. for Marriage, said Brown and other opponents of same-sex marriage misrepresent the city’s efforts to win voting rights for the city in Congress by linking it to a marriage referendum.

    He said the marriage recognition law approved by the City Council occurred through the democratic process of a local representative government, the Council, which was elected by the people.

    “So really, what this is, is an attempt to go around our elected officials to attack gay and lesbian families,” Crawford said.

    NOM created a stir this spring when it launched a series of TV ads aimed at states where same-sex marriage laws were pending before state legislatures or where the issue was expected to come before voters in a ballot measure.

    One of the ads, which became known as the group’s “Gathering Storm” TV spot, was denounced by gay rights and civil liberties groups as a blatant attempt to use scare tactics and factual distortions to build opposition to same-sex marriage. The ad used actors to portray citizens who expressed alarm that same-sex marriage laws would force elementary schools to promote same-sex marriage among their children and would force religious organizations to allow same-sex marriages to be performed in buildings they own.

    The Human Rights Campaign issued a statement pointing out what it said were inaccuracies in each of the ads’ assertions about the alleged harmful effects of same-sex marriage. And New York Times columnist Frank Rich joined other critics of the ad in pointing out that its dramatic backdrop of storm clouds and sinister lighting resembled the 1960s-era horror film “The Village of the Damned.”

    Brown called criticism of the ad unfounded, saying all of its “factual assertions” can be substantiated. He said polling data shows that a majority of voters agree with the basic contention of that and other NOM media ads — that same-sex marriage is a serious threat to the traditional family and the institution of marriage.

    He said NOM would assess whether ads like the “Gathering Storm” spot would be used for a possible voter initiative in D.C. next year on same-sex marriage, an initiative that NOM is working to place on the ballot along with Bishop Harry Jackson, the Maryland pastor who has emerged as the lead opponent of same-sex marriage in the District.

    NOM’s critics, meanwhile, have complained that the group has yet to release information about its finances. Fred Karger, founder of the West Coast group, Californians Against Hate, sent a letter to the Maine Commission on Governmental Ethics & Elections Practices, which monitors election campaigns, alleging that NOM might be “laundering” money from anonymous Mormon donors to the referendum campaign seeking to overturn Maine’s same-sex marriage law.

    Brown called the accusation “ridiculous.”

    “We welcome contributions from all religious donors, including Mormons,” he said.

    He said NOM won’t release the names of individual donors because doing so would subject them to “intimidation” from same-sex marriage advocates, whom he said attempted to badger and intimidate people who contributed money for Proposition 8.

    Brown promised to release to the Blade NOM’s 2007 IRS 990 finance reporting form and said the group also would release its 2008 990 form as soon as it completes its processing. He said the group submitted the 2008 report to the IRS last Friday.

    The 2007 report was not available from the national non-profit monitoring group Guidestar, which publishes all 990 forms it obtains from the IRS.

    A Guidestar spokesperson said the IRS did not provide it with the 2007 report from NOM.

    © 2009 The Washington Blade | A Window Media Publication

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    Two Teens Charged With Gay Boy’s Beating

    August 21st, 2009

    By The Associated Press
    08.21.2009 11:48am EDT
    (Portage, Mich.)

    A 15-year-old Michigan boy says two other teenagers beat him because he is gay.

    The boy says the 15- and 16-year-old males called him slurs as they struck him about 20 times in the head and face Aug. 13 in the parking lot of a Portage apartment complex.

    The Kalamazoo Gazette reports the two teens were charged as juveniles with aggravated assault. The 16-year-old pleaded guilty to the charge Tuesday and will be sentenced in Kalamazoo County Circuit Court Family Division on Sept. 14.

    Police say the suspects may have targeted the boy for his sexual orientation. But Kalamazoo County Prosecutor Jeff Fink says the suspects aren’t charged with a hate crime because the state’s ethnic-intimidation law doesn’t address sexual orientation.

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    WeHo To Honor Gay Marriages

    August 21st, 2009

    By On Top Magazine Staff
    Published: August 21, 2009

    The City of West Hollywood will honor the marriages of gay and lesbian couples with a plaque inscribed with a quote from Nelson Mandela, the Los Angeles Times reported.

    The rectangular plaque will be permanently installed at West Hollywood Park, the site of many gay marriages during the brief June to November window when it was legal in the Golden State.

    West Hollywood councilman Jeffrey Prang

    West Hollywood councilman Jeffrey Prang

     

    “It happened on a single day but it went on for months,” openly gay Jeffrey Prang, a former West Hollywood mayor and current councilman who sponsored the idea, told the paper. “And it meant something much bigger than that.”

    Inscribed on the rectangular plaque will be a quote from former South African president Nelson Mandela: “I am not truly free if I am taking away someone else’s freedom, just as surely as I am not free when my freedom is taken from me. The oppressed and the oppressor alike are robbed of their humanity.”

    The state Supreme Court struck down a gay marriage ban in the spring of 2008 but by the fall voters had reeled in the decision with Proposition 8, the ballot initiative that placed a gay marriage ban in the state’s constitution. The high court ruled the ban constitutional this year.

    During the six month window of legal gay marriage, the city of West Hollywood issued more than 1,000 marriage licenses to gay and lesbian couples. Some of the first ceremonies took place in the West Hollywood Park.

    City Council is set to unveil the plaque at its September 8 meeting.

    Opponents of the plan called the marker a bad idea.

    “If you support what is healthy and natural, you can’t support this marker,” Randy Thomasson, founder and president of SaveCalifornia.com, told the Times.

    The social conservative group is also heading the fight against a proposed bill that would set aside a day to recognize slain San Francisco politician and gay activist Harvey Milk.

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