>>>So, since we can't trust the people we elect (shock) and I'm too busy this week to overthrow the government...what do you have in mind?
My belief is that this is a societal change. And societal change, as I've said, happens from the bottom UP, not from the top DOWN. Think of the advances that were made on the gay-marriage front over the last eight years or so. Eight years ago, we were hoping maybe someday there might be some sort of civil union thing. Now, gay marriage seems like an actual possibility, and to some, a near-inevitability. Gay marriage has become legal in a few states, and it seems to be gaining ground in many others.
And all this happened under W. A president who wasn't exactly spearheading the change. In fact, his main move when it came to homosexuals was to warn America that voting for his rival would be tantamount to allowing gay marriage, which was a true threat to "real" marriage and the American way of life. (A stance which, four years ago, helped clinch his victory.)
My point is that great strides were made even under what you might term a hostile regime. And I think a lot more progress can be made under this one. Yeah, if Obama was actively supporting it, I think we'd have an easier time of it. But I wasn't counting on his support. I didn't vote for him expecting him to "do our work for us". I expected him, at very best, to be a passive ally, and voted for him based on other criteria.
I'm not discounting the importance of voting. But there's more to changing the world than putting a HOPE sticker on the back of your car. Politics and change don't just happen every leap year. Change happens daily, down at the local and personal level. The few states with gay marriage didn't sit around waiting for the president to give his thumbs-up. They fostered support at the state and local level, they elected judges who were sympathetic to the cause, and they fought the good fight. And, hopefully, they're continuing to do so to keep things from overturning.
Yeah, it'd be easier if Obama just did it for us. But, as I said, I never expected him to. Instead, it's up to us. To work on things at a state and local level. And I think just by being gay-out-and-proud, we're helping the cause. Most of the people I find out are anti-gay-marriage don't KNOW anybody gay. Once they do, they start questioning their beliefs. Because it's easy to demonize gays if you don't know any. They're just a bunch of sex-crazed, anti-family sinners, right? Then they meet one...and they're forced to think about things. "Why can't Lex and Pubert get married?" Why can't these real-life, human beings enter into a marriage with the one they love? And person by person, I think the tide turns in our favor.
No, it's not fast, and no, it's not easy. But how bad do you want it?
Lex