Manny Diaz is Being Considered for WHAT?!?
[Re: “Abandoned Property Peril” by Angie Hargot, published Oct.
23]
It is hard to believe that Miami Mayor Manny “Cement” Diaz would
be considered for an appointment in the Obama administration.
We should all advise the Obama transition team change.gov/page/s/contact
to research the fiasco that Diaz has made of
Miami before rewarding him with an appointment. Diaz helped to
create a glut of condo units, which has resulted in
Miami
being second only to Las Vegas in the number of foreclosures.
Even though we want him to depart
Miami, we certainly don’t wish him to be up in D.C. where he
will have more opportunities to do even greater damage to the
entire USA.
Harry Emilio Gottlieb
Coconut Grove
BTW: The ACLU Has an Opinion About Amendment 2
[Re: “A
Spectrum of Emotions” by Angie Hargot, published Nov. 13]
The vote approving Amendment 2 — and the votes in
Arizona and California — was a devastating but temporary setback
for the cause of equal treatment for all.
On Election Day, voters rejected abortion restrictions in
South Dakota and, in Colorado, a bizarre measure to declare a
fertilized egg a “person.” Michigan voters approved medical
marijuana and stem cell research; in Washington voters approved
“Death with Dignity” legislation.
But in Florida, by a 1.9 percent margin, voters prohibited
allowing same-sex couples the opportunity to have their
relationship legally protected, denying the religious
institution of their choice the authority of law “invested in
the institution” to bless the relationship.
Despite the propaganda, “gay marriage” was not on the ballot.
What Floridians approved was a prohibition on the legal
recognition of anything “that is treated as marriage or the
substantial equivalent thereof.” It will take years of lawsuits
and countless lawyers to sort out the intended and unintended
consequences of this measure.
The forces behind Amendment 2 have said that their mission is
accomplished; marriage has been protected. But none of the
economic and social pressures on marriage that have resulted in
the terribly high divorce rate have been addressed. That would
have been an honest program to “protect marriage.”
It remains a mystery how the institution of marriage is
“protected” by denying the right of some people the ability to
enjoy its benefits.
Despite its passage, Amendment 2 does not bar health or other
benefits that same-sex couples currently receive from public or
private employers. Nor does the amendment prohibit hospital
visitation, medical decision-making or the right to make funeral
arrangements for a deceased loved one.
But should other zealots target these benefits, or should any
government agency decide — wrongly — that Amendment 2 prohibits
these benefits, we will move this battle from the voting booth
to the courtroom.
In
America,
change that matters always faces resistance; its path is never
smooth or easy.
America
is in a civil rights revolution. The current revolution is
different, but it shares similarities with struggles to make the
Constitution’s promise of equality a reality for women, for
racial minorities, for people with disabilities — for everyone.
In 1977,
Miami-Dade
County became the first jurisdiction to enact an ordinance
prohibiting discrimination based on sexual orientation. It was
repealed in the infamous referendum led by Orange Juice Beauty
Queen Anita Bryant. But in 1999, the County Commission
re-enacted the ordinance, and it survived a referendum in 2002
aimed at repealing it.
In 1982,
San Francisco
became the first jurisdiction to grant domestic partner
benefits. The ordinance was vetoed by then-Mayor Diane
Feinstein. This fall, 26 years later, she campaigned to defeat
California’s
same-sex marriage ban.
Thanks to even a very conservative U.S. Supreme Court, it is no
longer a crime to be gay in
America. Within 17 years (from Bowers v. Hardwick in 1986
to Texas v. Lawrence in 2003) the Supreme Court reversed
itself and declared that states could not criminalize sexual
intimacy by same-sex couples. (“…liberty protected by the
Constitution allows homosexual persons the right to choose to
enter upon relationships in the confines of their homes and
their own private lives and still retain their dignity as free
persons.”)
The world is changing. The forces behind Amendment 2 can delay
the inevitable, but they cannot stop it.
Soon, same-sex marriage will be legal and ordinary. It is
already happening —
Ontario,
several northern Europe countries, Spain, South Africa and, as
of this writing,
Massachusetts
and Connecticut allow same-sex marriage.
New York
and Rhode Island recognize such marriages that are conferred
elsewhere.
Bigotry and prejudice frequently ride in on a horse of
high-sounding moral principles. Sometimes even the best leaders
can convince themselves that their support for a mean-spirited
proposal is based on something other than bigotry and prejudice
or animus.
Religious leaders who sold Amendment 2 as “Biblically based”
public policy need to rethink whether that washes in
America. In this nation—the most religiously diverse on
earth—the laws must reflect the fact that we live in different
religious traditions, with different interpretations of the
Bible, and indeed different bibles.
One day, we will look back on the idea that government could
have the power to dictate who adults can marry with as much
bewilderment and embarrassment as we now, shamefully, wonder how
we allowed government the power to ban interracial marriage —
that is, until the U.S. Supreme Court ended the legal basis for
that prejudice in the landmark 1967 ACLU case of Loving v.
Virginia.
Howard L. Simon, Ph.D.
Executive Director
American Civil Liberties
Union
of Florida
Comments? E-mail
letters@miamisunpost.com.
|
All
contents copyright © 2008 Caxton Newspapers, Inc. |