Must pass along the good news: my former representative in Congress, Tom DeLay, has been convicted of money laundering and faces a possible sentence of life in prison–the American jury system triumphs, even over the powerful and well-coifed! More later…
Category Justice
Equal justice for all: the gay rights tide has turned
The fight to keep homosexual Americans from enjoying the full rights of citizenship is over; the opposition is giving up. A federal judge has enjoined the Pentagon from enforcing the “don’t ask don’t tell” policy anywhere in the world, and the expected reaction to that news was…nowhere to be heard.
Sure, hard-core haters had their say, but I’m struck by just how quiet it has been. At the risk of fanning the flames, I’d say it looks like the usual suspects in the anti-gay effort have finally run out of steam, perhaps because it’s so clear that courts are going to enforce the Constitutional protections that have been denied to homosexuals.
First, the DADT (ugh!) policy is a crock and it should be repealed; it should never have been imposed. Was anyone really in favor of a regulation that permitted gays to remain in the service unless they were discovered? How in any important way is that any different than the old system, where gays were discharged when they were discovered?
The law’s days are clearly numbered. Although the Justice Department asked the judge not to halt enforcement of the law while it prepares an appeal, the president has promised to get rid of the law—and Congress almost did so earlier this year!
The secretary of defense and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs favor repeal of DADT, but they want to go slow. Excuse me, gents—why? Because it would force an immediate change to benefits or buildings, or protocols for social events? That’s why you want to wait until an internal review is completed, in a month a half? Really?
I never understood the argument that allowing gay people in the service to be open about their sexuality would hurt morale (and hurt it even worse in time of war, or wars). I don’t believe that most men and women in the armed forces are so closed-minded and prejudiced on this topic, because I don’t think most Americans outside the military are, either.
Think about the reality of the situation: if DADT has legally cleared the way for gays to serve since 1993, then people in the military have had at least since then to get used to the idea that gays are there: to get used to the idea that they don’t leer at you in the shower or rape you in your bed, at least not in any greater numbers than heterosexuals do those things; to get used to fighting next to them in a shooting war, and to know that they can be brave and trustworthy comrades, at least to the same extent that heterosexuals can be.
We can proclaim not to understand why people are homosexual, or embrace a religious belief that homosexual activity is a sin, but none of that matters in a tolerant, secular, civil society. The experts can’t say why a person is sexually attracted to one gender or the other. And it violates the rights of due process and free speech guaranteed to each American in the Constitution to treat someone differently because of their sexual orientation just as it would to treat them differently because of their gender or their ancestry.
The tide has turned. Homosexual activity is no longer illegal. If you read or watch Ted Olson’s argument as presented on Fox News in August, the same argument he made in the California court case, you can see that the case for gay marriage will prevail. States are giving up trying to stop homosexuals from adopting children. Republican political strategists recognize that opposing gay rights is a long-term losing proposition. One officer discharged under DADT has successfully sued to be reinstated in the Air Force.
You don’t have to “understand” gay people any more than you have to “understand” people of a different race or a different religion. You only have to understand that these people are Americans like you, who believe in American rights like you do, who want to enjoy American freedoms like you do, who support our country with their work and their taxes like you do, and who want the opportunity to serve to protect this way of life, just like you do.
It makes a fella proud to be a Texan
Cinderella story, comin’ outta nowhere…when you don’t expect it but can really use the boost:
It just so happens that it was a Princeton professor’s column which reminded me today that it was a Texan who stood up and declared to the world with crystal clarity nine years ago that the United States was at war, but not against a religion or its believers:
“The face of terror is not the true faith of Islam. That’s not what Islam is all about. Islam is peace. These terrorists don’t represent peace. They represent evil and war.”
I fervently hope that we all remember that, and not take the easy course of venting pain and frustration on innocents who offer a convenient target. Quite a few leaders from across the spectrum did speak up in defense of American values last week, to their everlasting credits.
Like a small group in Amarillo did on Saturday: when one of their neighbors decided to take up the cross of Quran burning (pardon the mixed metaphor), they responded with quick show of civil ingenuity:
"Any time you burn books, that’s ignorant," Danielson said. "For us to burn their religion is showing hate."
Protesters threw their hands on the grill Grisham planned to use to burn the Quran, someone took his lighter and Isom stole the Quran, leaving him with just lighter fluid.
The would-be book burner went on about his business, the local imam offered the address of his mosque so anyone who was interested could come on by, and that was that. Another lazy Saturday in Texas…gotta love it.
The gentleman from Pearland yields…
…to the Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist from The Washington Post, Tom Toles:
Friday rant, Declaration of Incoherence edition
Apparently now we not only hold SOME truths to be self-evident, but also just about ANY POSITION we happen to prefer. It’s pretty self-evident that Obama is not a U.S. citizen because we don’t like him. It’s clear that he wants to take everybody’s guns away because that’s what a president who isn’t a real citizen would do. He’s somehow against white people because he just MUST be. The economic rescue package didn’t do any good because it was Democrats spending money. It’s Democrats who are the worse deficit offenders because Republicans keep saying so. Tax cuts pay for themselves because we don’t like taxes. Climate change is a hoax because we don’t like the implications.
Even the most cursory examination of evidence is now too much to ask. Climate change deniers continue to send me their strange little clutch of misleading factoids and sly questions as if I had never seen that stuff before. But it’s pretty clear that they have not themselves read the overwhelming case for climate change, or simply are unable to evaluate or even grasp the concept of PREPONDERANCE OF EVIDENCE. It’s not that the political spectrum drifts left or right, it’s that’s it is cascading into absolute fantasy. It is impossible to engage in debate with these strange fevers, because they emanate from HOT HEADS. Excuse the cold water, but all opinions are NOT created equal.
Somewhere (perhaps in Miami) Leonard Pitts, Jr. is smiling.
USA 234, HIPRB! 1
Happy 4th of July, all you American patriots…the rest of ya, too. I’ve got a gift for you, even though you’re not the one turning 234 years old: I invite you to remove your shoes and stroll barefoot among the new tabs at the top of the page, up there under the site title (I gotta get a better title).
For almost a year I’ve been using this page to show off my ideas, but mostly to practice putting one word in front of the other on a regular basis again. When I discovered that there can be more than one page here, I knew how I wanted to use them.
For years I’ve been saving quotations that appealed to me. Some I saved just because they were so well written but most of them are ideas I agree with, expressed more ably and eloquently than I am capable (of). (See.)
Choose from ideas about American law and government and politics, thoughts about my first post-college profession, a section of funnies, and a collection of philosophical takes on life. I hope you enjoy them, and offer your comments pro and con. I’ll be adding to the sections as new material is discovered.
So, what did you get me?

