'Wrong' to Dismiss Adoption Suit |
Compiled By GayToday Miami, Florida--A federal judge in Miami has dismissed the ACLU Lesbian & Gay Rights Project's lawsuit challenging a Florida law which prohibits children from being adopted by lesbians and gay men. Doug Houghton and his son, Oscar. Houghton is the only father the boy has ever known, yet he cannot adopt him The following statement was issued Thursday by Matt Coles, Director of the ACLU Lesbian & Gay Rights Project: "We are surprised and deeply disappointed by today's decision. We also think the decision is wrong.
"From the start, the state's attempt to defend this law has been nothing but a collection of smokescreens for homophobia. The adoption ban is the lasting legacy of Anita Bryant's anti-gay crusade in the 1970s. The state defended the law in court by saying lesbians and gay men are immoral and that children should be adopted by married couples. "This was never about whether married couples provide a better home than gay couples who cannot marry. In fact, 25% of the children in Florida who are adopted out of foster care go to single parents; in Miami/Dade County, it's 40%. This case was about the fact that lesbians and gay men provide all of the love, support and guidance children need -- but because they're gay, that's not happening in Florida. "As for morality, virtually every form of discrimination this society has once tolerated -- from keeping women from voting, the Irish out of the workplace, Asians out of court, etc. -- has been defended on the basis of morality. There are 3,400 children in Florida who are waiting to be adopted. As a result of this decision, many of them will spend their entire childhood being bounced from one temporary placement to another, when they could have had real homes. We'll leave the question of who is moral to those who made that happen." |