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When
Good Men Don't Do Nothing
by Daniel Patrick Welch
OpEdNews.Com
Perhaps,
after all these years, Edmund Burke may have got it wrong: All that is
necessary for the triumph of evil is not, as the wise Englishman once
opined, for good men to do nothing. Sometimes men blunder into evil by the
sheer force of their own cowardice. Evil was done in Massachusetts this
week, and it was as unnecessary as it was pointless. From the first, we
need to tease apart the lie that the state legislature "made
room" for civil unions; or worse, that they were trying to avoid
"promoting gay marriage."
When the SJC's Goodridge decision demanded that same sex couples be
allowed to marry, local lawmakers could have done a number of things. They
could have jumped for joy, knowing that they would witness the inevitable
triumph of the power of love and progress over ignorance and bigotry-all
without having to lift a finger or spend any precious political capital.
No heroics, no "promoting the gay agenda," whatever the hell
that means. Just the slow wheels of Justice grinding their inexorable,
logical, inevitable way through history, adapting to the obvious reality
that if civil marriage is a state function and not a religious sacrament,
then biblical concepts of coupledom have no place in the debate.
Instead, the august body went ahead and did something. And boy, did they
ever. Scared to death that Massachusetts might actually light a beacon of
progress by being the first state in the Union to recognize same-sex
marriage, they decided they would rather be known for a different first.
Our beloved Commonwealth just took away a right which the Supreme Judicial
Court just told us was constitutionally protected-in fact, it was
precisely because of having been told it was protected This bears
repeating: all the claptrap about "legalizing gay marriage" is,
quite deliberately, I think, putting the cart before the horse. The courts
are increasingly waking up to the realization that same sex marriage is
legal, that the structure of the law cannot survive the hypocrisy of
continuing to exclude one group from legal protections offered to others.
So in response, the religious right, along with its craven allies in both
parties, is trying to turn back this clock, to put the genie back in the
bottle-or the closet, as it were. All the arguments, from
"tradition" (where is Tevye when we need him most?) to "the
right to vote" are nothing but smokescreens to hide this grim
reality: gaybashers helped along by what one former Massachusetts Governor
once referred to as "gutless wonders." I have not seen a single
argument against same-sex marriage that I did not consider either craven,
cynically expedient, or flat out bigoted. With one exception: Alexander
Cockburn calls the gay marriage hoopla a "sidestep on the road to
freedom," basically by saying that since the institution itself is a
bourgeois sham, it does not further human progress by shackling yet
another demographic in its tentacles. While I adore Cockburn's writings, I
could not, as a straight man who chose to get married (and could),
sincerely argue against another's wanting to do so.
In fact, the two experiences are more related than it might seem. It is
with some irony, and a heavy heart, that my wife and I celebrate our own
seventh anniversary as the dust settles on the creepy Constitutional
Convention. Half a century ago, our own marriage would not have been
legal. The SJC referred to this historical analogy in its Goodridge
decision, saying, in effect, that it was no more logical to restrict
marriage rights on the basis of gender than it had been earlier to do so
on the basis of race. I'm sure there are still counties where a majority
might still be "uncomfortable" with our union-but of course, the
law requires them to stuff it. Basically, who cares what the majority
thinks? When minority rights are subject to nullification by the vote of
the majority, democracy has begun to devour itself.
But it is just this aspect of the whole episode that is the most chilling,
and the one which has the least to do with the content of any amendment.
The money and the power of the Church has certainly played a shameful and
inordinate role in this charade; but it is not the fire and brimstone of
the right which made the difference. The final vote of this round passed
by only four votes: those of the leadership…Democrats….liberals. Not
all, of course, put their consciences in blind trust. Ted Speliotis, of a
district adjacent to mine, had this common sense observation: "Two
people love each other. They want to get married. Who the hell am I to
tell them they can't get married? You have no business being a state Rep.
if you can't stand up for this decision." Indeed.
And yet, many Democrats, liberals among them, will try to mischaracterize
this as a victory. There is absolutely nothing positive about slowing the
path of progress with a permanent, constitutional ban on same sex
marriage. Unless, of course, one were to point out that it was positively
reactionary...positively spineless. Gay marriage is now legal in
Massachusetts, and my prediction is that it may never be illegal again.
The ban has several hurdles yet-not the least of which is being ratified
again by the same body after a new set of elections, thousands of happy,
legal couples, and the slowly dawning realization that one group's
attaining rights doesn't diminish those of another. The Framers, it seems,
were wise enough to know that weaseling politicians couldn't be trusted
not to cave in to baser instincts.
All this, sad to say, will be accomplished without the help-and largely
against the active opposition-of party "leaders." Serves them
right. They think they have dodged a bullet, when in reality they have
missed an opportunity. They really think they will lose zillions of votes
by taking credit for the slow expansion of civil rights. So be it. Their
calculus has always been curiously lacking as to how many they would lose
by not having a backbone. They can't avoid being slammed as the Queer
Party: hate crimes legislation, anti-bias statues, not to mention that
almost all elected gays seem to be Democrats. They still have a shot,
however, at picking up another mantle: the party that turns its back on a
loyal part of its own base. For that alone, they deserve the losses they
will reap. Craven or bigoted isn't much of a choice to offer people.
Edmund Burke must be rolling over in his grave: sometimes, it seems, the
only thing necessary to prevent the triumph of good is for weak men to
refuse to just shut up and sit down.
© 2004 Daniel Patrick Welch. Reprint permission granted with credit and
link to danielpwelch.com. Writer,
singer, linguist and activist Daniel Patrick Welch lives and writes
in Salem, Massachusetts, with his wife, Julia Nambalirwa-Lugudde. Together
they run The Greenhouse School. His website is at danielpwelch.com.
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