So how
about that Gov. Rick Perry, eh? Awesome alert! Am I right?
"I wish
Rick Perry was my daddy and/or boyfriend," say all gays everywhere, obviously.
Not that
Perry is gay. In fact, he recently pinkie swore that he wasn’t gay by telling a
group of conservatives, "I can assure you that there is nothing in my life that
will embarrass you if you decide to support me for president."
Not that
folks aren’t trying to dig stuff up. "Rick is a closet homo" rumors have been
flying for years, but nothing has really stuck.
Of
course, Perry can’t be gay. After all, he is "a marriage champion,"
according to National Organization for Marriage president Brian Brown. And if
there’s one thing gays want to destroy, it’s marriage.
Brown
made his declaration after Perry signed a NOM-sponsored pledge that he would do
everything in his power to keep marriage out of the clutches of the queers.
"Perry
makes crystal clear that, contrary to the conventional wisdom, gay marriage is
going to be (an ) even bigger issue in 2012 than it was in 2008," Brown
said about Perry’s pledge signing, "because the difference between the GOP
nominee and President Obama is going to be large and clear."
I would
like to make a comment about how the people of America have far more important
things to worry about in 2012 than ladies marrying ladies and guys marrying
guys, but no doubt this is a big concern for folks who really need to
pull their heads out of their NOM-holes long enough to take a good look around.
Still,
no matter who gets the Republican nomination, I guarantee that the difference
between them and Obama will be pretty obvious. Marriage pledge or no.
By
signing the pledge, Perry has vowed to support a anti-gay marriage amendment to
the U.S. Constitution, defend the Defense of Marriage Act in court, support the
overturning of Washington D.C.’s marriage equality law, and, most bizarrely, to
round up a posse to "investigate harassment of traditional marriage
supporters." Because that’s apparently a problem so big that it needs to
be handled at the executive branch level.
The
American Civil Liberties Union’s Ian Thompson hit the nail on the head when he
declared that NOM’s marriage pledge was nothing more than a wish list for a
group seeking "a free hand to attack the legitimacy of gay and lesbian couples
and their relationships through the spread of fear and disinformation while
remaining free from public scrutiny, accountability, or even active, organized
opposition."
Personally
I think we should be concerned about a presidential candidate who pledges to
personally get involved in the squabbles that arise from uncivilized discourse.
Yes, comments on all sides of the marriage debate can be ugly. But that’s not a
national emergency worthy of a president’s attention. Plus, NOM’s assertion of
constant harassment isn’t even based in an objective reality.
"While
organizations like NOM would like to have people believe that their supporters
face systematic harassment and intimidation because of their anti-gay views,
the reality is quite different," Thompson continued. "Any incidents of actual
harassment or political violence employed as part of a political campaign is
entirely unacceptable, but ... this is not the same thing as constitutionally
protected (if heated) disagreement, criticism, and advocacy."
Thick
skin doesn’t seem to be NOM’s strongpoint. Being criticized, lampooned, or even
called names isn’t the same thing as systemic harassment worthy of national
attention. Now if they were constantly compared to pedophiles, or denied the
right to visit their loved ones in the hospital because they "aren’t family,"
or were fired from their jobs simply for being in a relationship with someone
of the same sex, well, that would be something to worry about.
Mind
you, Perry is not the first GOP presidential contender to sign the pledge
(Michelle Bachmann, Mitt Romney, and Rick Santorum have as well), signaling
that the GOP is banking hard to the right as usual. As for whether or not Perry
has anything in his life that will embarrass the anti-gay right, well, only
time will tell.