% IssueDate = "2/23/04" IssueCategory = "Pen Points" %>
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Talking About Marriage President, Human Rights Campaign |
These critical distinctions boil down to unfairness. With every paycheck, GLBT employees pay into the Social Security system - allowing spouses and children to access Social Security survivor benefits when a loved one passes away. These benefits can easily total more than $1,800 a month. (See www.hrc.org/familynet for examples.) But couples in a civil union have no access to these benefits. Even if you have no desire to marry, you're still paying into a system that discriminates against same-sex couples. Couples in a civil union have no access to the federal laws like Family and Medical Leave Act, to equal immigration rights, to continued health care coverage. Under federal law, same-sex couples are strangers. Some also feel that civil unions are a necessary compromise, given the public's struggle with marriage. But civil unions are not the solution. Even if civil unions provided all the same legal protections of marriage - which they don't - they would still be a separate and unequal system. Ten years ago, many said that domestic partnerships were unrealistic. Five years ago, civil unions were cutting-edge. We are at a moment in history where marriage is a reality. We must not cede that right just because people are uncomfortable. Sure, there are many of us who may not be ready to settle down now. However, our poll reflects that 78 percent of our community wants to be able to marry. For the 22 percent who don't, this should still be their personal choice to make, not the government's. Speaking of the government, President Bush is prepared to enshrine this unequal treatment in our nation's Constitution. And the press is reporting that he will endorse the Musgrave anti-family amendment to our Constitution. This would not only forever ban any state from allowing same-sex couples to marry but could strike at the heart of a state's ability to provide even limited legal protections or civil unions to same-sex couples. Officials said Bush was planning to announce this as a way to "to start the general election campaign on a fresh issue." Make no mistake, President Bush is trying to win this election on our backs. He is playing politics with our lives and our families. It's intolerable, it's shameful and it's an ugly way to run a campaign.
Some may say that our greatest enemies are extremist groups like Focus on the Family - who are dangerous, loud and well-funded. But at this moment, our greatest challenges are silence, ignorance and apathy. The majority of Americans care about equality. Most just don't know we lack it. It's time for us to do some talking. Cheryl Jacques is president of the Human Rights Campaign. |
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