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  WINDY CITY TIMES

2003 Top Stories, Year in Review
by Bob Roehr
2003-12-24

This article shared 1929 times since Wed Dec 24, 2003
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Pictured: Queer Eye for the Straight Guy. The U.S. Supreme Court. Photo by

Bob Roehr. Amazing Race. And Lt. Colonel Stephen Loomis. Photo by Tracy Baim

U.S. Supreme Court Strikes Down Sodomy LawsCanada MarriageMassachusetts MarriageGay Episcopal Bishop'Don't Ask' Under AttackA Queer Eye for TVThe U.S. Supreme Court added a fitting capstone to a month of gay pride celebrations when on June 26 it struck down sodomy laws that remained on the books in 13 states. The decision was Lawrence v Texas. In one sense the ruling had more of a symbolic impact than a legal one. Sodomy laws were seldom used to directly prosecute sexual acts but they often were used to stigmatize gays and lesbians as criminals and by extension to deny them equal treatment under the law in matters ranging from employment to child custody. Perhaps the most satisfying portion of the decision was its blunt and complete rejection of the 1987 Court decision that had allowed states to regulate sodomy. 'Bowers was not correct when it was decided, and it is not correct today. It ought not to remain binding precedent. Bowers v. Hardwick should be and now is overruled,' Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote for the majority. No less satisfying was the broad language of the decision that embraced gay and lesbian Americans as equal citizens, fulfilling the promise of 'Equal justice under law' that is carved into the gleaming white marble atop the Court building. 'The petitioners are entitled to respect for their private lives,' wrote Kennedy. 'The State cannot demean their existence or control their destiny by making their private sexual conduct a crime. Their right to liberty under the Due Process Clause gives them the full right to engage in their conduct without intervention of the government.' 'This is an historic, transformative decision ... it was a recognition of gay people's humanity,' said Ruth Harlow, the attorney for Lambda Legal who guided the case through the legal system. 'This is constitutional rights in our real lives, in our homes, in our relationships,' she said. It 'changes the landscape. It sends a signal to not only courts but also to legislatures that we deserve equality and full respect.' The 'sodomy' provision of Article 125 of the Universal Code of Military Justice ( UCMJ ) is perhaps the last standing sodomy law in the U.S., and an underpinning of the antigay military policy known as 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell.' Lt. Colonel Loren Stephen Loomis used the Lawrence decision to appeal his discharge from the military, in a case filed on July 7 in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims in Washington, D.C. That decision is expected in early 2004, though the case may be decided on non-constitutional grounds. Politics It was a very quite year in Congress in terms of legislation directly affecting the GLBT community; rhetoric was another story. The Republican leadership of both Houses made sure that neither hate-crimes legislation nor the Employment Non-Discrimination Act ( ENDA ) came up for a vote. In past years a hate-crimes measure had been attached to an appropriations bill in the Senate, though it didn't survive a conference with the House. But this year many of those bills have not yet been approved, despite the fact that the fiscal year started Oct. 1, and much of the government is operating on a continuing resolution. The silver lining is that social conservatives have been equally restricted in offering their anti-gay amendments. Perhaps all that will change when Congress returns in January. Sen. Rick Santorum, R-Penn., generated a firestorm of controversy in April with his homophobic remarks. Anticipating the possibility of the Supreme Court striking down sodomy laws, he said, 'You [ then ] have the right to bigamy, you have the right to polygamy, you have the right to incest, you have the right to adultery. You have the right to anything.' Long-time gay activist Frank Kameny said, 'It's obvious that [ Santorum ] is a moral fascist, and is becoming the voice of the American Taliban. He is one of the ever more strident family fanatics. What he misses, among many other things, is that society exists for the individual; the individual does not exist for society.' 'John F. Kennedy drew a distinction between his public role as president of a diverse country and his own private religious convictions, Santorum explicitly argues the opposite,' wrote gay conservative Andrew Sullivan on his blog. 'How can we have any hope of creating a democratic government in Iraq free from domination by repressive religion if we cannot free our own laws of official faith-based biases inflicted on our fellow citizens? ' So it was more than a bit ironic when Rev. Steve Torrence stepped to the podium of the U.S. House of Representatives to deliver the opening prayer May 1, the U.S. National Day of Prayer. He wore the crisply pressed uniform of the Key West Police Department, where he serves as a police officer and chaplain. He is a former pastor of the MCC Church in Key West. He was the first clergyman from the Metropolitan Community Church ( MCC ) to have that honor, and he is believed to be the first openly gay person to deliver that prayer. 'It is important to have diversity in Congress and it is important to understand that sexual orientation does not determine one's faith,' said Rep. Ileana Ros-Lentinen the south Florida Republican who invited Torrence to offer the prayer. The promotion of General Robert T. Clark, the man in charge of Fort Campbell, Ky., when PFC Barry Winchell was murdered in an anti-gay assault in 1999, continued to twist slowly in the wind for much of the year. It was approved only in November, some 14 months after the nomination was first made. C. Dixon Osburn, executive director of the Servicemembers Legal Defense Network, which led the fight to deny Clark his promotion, was 'disappointed' though not surprised by the confirmation. He took solace in the fact that 'For the first time in history, Senators have closely scrutinized an officer's record on preventing anti-gay harassment.' The anti-gay policy known as 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell' continued to take public hits, particularly over the discharge of trained Arabic linguists even as their services were needed in Iraq. And for the first time, in December, two retired generals and an admiral came out as gay. They are the highest-ranking officers ever to acknowledge their sexual orientation. Society Another great symbol of changing attitudes towards gays and lesbians was the election of V. Gene Robinson as Episcopal Bishop of New Hampshire in June, his confirmation by that church' convention in August, and his installation in November. Archconservatives within the Church, both domestically and especially internationally, were apoplectic about the development and continue to threaten schism. The controversy played out prominently across the media, and as time worn on, it seemed increasingly silly to most Americans. Same-sex couples began getting married in Toronto, Canada June 10. Ontario's Court of Appeal ruled the federal government's definition of marriage was unconstitutional and ordered the Toronto city clerk to issue marriage licenses immediately. Toronto and other Ontario municipalities responded that they would issue a marriage license to any same-sex couple that otherwise met the license criteria. The ruling declared 'the existing common law definition of marriage to be invalid to the extent that it refers to 'one man and one woman.'' Prime Minister Jean Chrétien later said the federal government would not appeal the ruling and would rewrite the marriage laws to include same-sex couples. Just a few months later, after much delay, the first state court in America shook the foundations out from under this country's right wing. The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court granted gays full marriage rights in November, and Lambda Legal and other groups vowed to push forward to win marriage for same-sex couples in New Jersey and other states. Legal scholars and state elected officials are debating how to implement the ruling—and they are also debating what the court meant by the same benefits of 'marriage.' Some believe it means actual marriage, while some conservatives are trying for a civil-unions-type compromise. The progress for gays on marriage has caused the expected backlash among the right wing. The once-fringe Federal Marriage Amendment is now being pushed to the top of the conservative agenda, to 'save marriage,' and it is even somewhat backed by President Bush. All of this means that gay marriage is all of a sudden a hot-button issue that even the most progressive Democratic presidential candidates are trying to walk a tightrope on. Speaking of candidates, most of the Democrats are eyeing the queer vote for the 2004 race, with John Kerry, Howard Dean, Joseph Lieberman, Dick Gephardt, John Edwards, Carol Moseley Braun, and Dennis Kucinich all touting their gay support to different degrees. Dean even campaigned at a Chicago gay bar just before receiving former Vice President Al Gore's endorsement, while Gephardt's lesbian daughter is helping dad.Must-See TV Queer Eye for the Straight Guy became the surprise hit of the summer tube and made waves far beyond its limited cable distribution, even morphing over into an edited version on NBC. The Fab 5 are branching out with many sponsorship deals, and now the concept is getting twisted for straights to advise the gays. A Boy met a Boy for Bravo, and Reichen and Chip showed that gays could be buff, cooperative hunks and win The Amazing Race. Showtime started to promote its early 2004 The L Word lesbian series, and HBO received massive coverage for its Angels in America two-part movie. And Ellen DeGeneres' talk show has even been renewed. All of that was reinforced by news coverage, demonstrating that gays and lesbians are everywhere and increasingly are becoming part of the mainstream of American life. — Also contributing: Tracy Baim


This article shared 1929 times since Wed Dec 24, 2003
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