-Caveat Lector-

Poll: Most Blacks Oppose Gay Marriage


Activists Say Don't Compare Civil Rights, Gay Struggles

POSTED: 7:33 a.m. EST November 26, 2003 UPDATED: 7:35 a.m. EST November 26, 2003 
BOSTON -- Every time the Rev. Talbert Swan II hears the fight for gay marriage 
compared to blacks' struggle for equality, it "sticks  in my craw," he said. By that 
measure, the Springfield, Mass., minister, who is black, had an aggravating week.

Supreme Court Justice Margaret Marshall cited landmark laws that struck bans on 
interracial marriage in her majority opinion last week, which declared it 
unconstitutional to deny same sex couples the right to marry.

Since, numerous editorials and columns have linked the struggles. In Wednesday's 
Democratic debate, both black candidates, Carol Moseley Braun and the Rev. Al 
Sharpton, declared support for gay marriage, and both compared it to past 
discrimination against blacks.

But Swan said the struggles of the groups don't compare, and a recent national poll 
indicates little support for gay marriage among blacks.

Blacks were lynched, denied property rights and declared inhuman, Swan said.

"Homosexuality is a chosen lifestyle," he said, "I could not chose the color of my 
skin. ... For me to ride down the street and get profiled just because of my skin 
color is something a homosexual will never go through."

The Rev. William Sinkford, a black man who is president of the Unitarian Universalist 
Association, said both sides have had different experiences, but have seen similar 
discrimination. The struggle for gay civil rights is this generation's great 
challenge, he said, just as equality for blacks was the last generation's.

"I think there's very little to be gained by trying to create a hierarchy of 
oppression," Sinkford said.

A poll released by the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press on Nov. 18, 
the day of the Supreme Judicial Court ruling, indicated 60 percent of blacks opposed 
gay marriage. They were also less likely than both whites and Hispanics to support gay 
marriage, with just 28 percent in favor.

When asked if they favored legal agreements with many of the same rights as marriage, 
51 percent of blacks opposed, with 37 percent in favor, again fewer than Hispanics and 
whites.

Michael Adams, an attorney with the gay advocacy legal group, Lambda Legal, said the 
split with the black community seems to revolve around the marriage issue, noting 
polls show black support gays in other areas, such as workplace equality. Strong 
conservative religious values that predominate in the black community may explain 
that, he said.

He added that there's no question of key differences in the two movements, including 
slavery and forced segregation, which gays never experienced. But the groups have seen 
similar discrimination based on deeply held prejudices, he said.

Emory College professor David Garrow said the legal histories of the two movements 
have abundant parallels, including the arguments that marriage between the races and 
sexes is unnatural and against God's law. Homosexuals have also seen similar bias in 
the workplace when they've made their sexual orientation known, he said.

But Mychal Massie, is a conservative columnist and member of Project 21, a Washington 
D.C.-based political alliance of conservative blacks, said the comparisons simply 
aren't valid.

"It is an outrage to align something so offensive as this with the struggle of a 
fallen man, a great man such as Martin Luther King," said Massie, who writes for 
WorldNetDaily.com.

"The whole thing bespeaks of something much deeper and more insidious than we just 
want to get married," he said. "They want to change the entire social order."

Alvin Williams, President and CEO of the Washington D.C.-based Black America's 
Political Action Committee, a conservative group, said the gay marriage issue looks 
like an equal rights issue at first, but becomes a "special rights" issue after closer 
examination because it's about behavior, not ethnicity. He added he understands why 
gays want to associated with the civil rights movement.

"It seems like it would be a good fit," he said. "A lot of people have a lot of good 
will associated with the civil and voting rights movement. If they could make a 
comparison, it could create sympathy."

Adams said gay marriage advocates refer to the civil rights movement only because it 
was so successful, not to make any gains by association.

"It is the model how to fight," Adams said.

Copyright 2003 by The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be 
published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. ,

--------------------------
-iNFoWaRZ
The definition of Marriage is "a union between a man and a woman".
Silly faggots.

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