Tuesday, March 11, 2008

It’s Personal

Check out this touching and informative article in the Los Angeles Times:

Same-sex union -- it's personal

As the high court considers the legality, couples who wed in the Bay Area savor the joy of the institution.

By Mary Engel

March 6

When Jackie Goldberg and Sharon Stricker headed to San Francisco to get married four years ago, they saw their wedding as a political statement. It surprised them both when, halfway through the ceremony on the steps of the City Hall rotunda, the usually stalwart Goldberg burst into tears.

"It felt much different than I expected," Goldberg said Wednesday, a few days shy of the March 8 anniversary. "I thought I was going to be proud and pleased and happy. But I didn't expect to be emotionally moved."

Read the entire article…

Wednesday, March 5, 2008

our day in court

Yesterday, we witnessed a moment in history.

Hundreds of supporters gathered at the California Supreme Court and thousands more tuned in to the oral arguments over whether same-sex couples should continue to face exclusion from marriage with all the security, protections, responsibilities and respect it brings them and their kids and loved ones.

A telling exchange came when the justices asked whether the concept of equality evolves, and, if so, why this is the time to accord same-sex couples their freedom to marry.

In response Therese Stewart, San Francisco Chief Deputy City Attorney, cited the Court's own historic 1948 decision striking down a ban on interracial marriage, the first such ruling in America, which declared that "the essence of the right to marry is freedom to join in marriage with the person of one's choice."

She added,”…just because society doesn't see something as unequal until a given time, that doesn't mean it wasn't always unequal or unjust, it just means we were blind to it."

My friend Shannon Minter, Legal Director of the National Center for Lesbian Rights, added: “People want to marry the one person who to them is irreplaceable. We demean ourselves as a society… if we do not give individuals that freedom to choose whether to marry and whom to marry.”

Sometime in the next 90 days, the Court will decide whether to end the denial of the freedom to marry to same-sex couples. We must use these precious days to create the climate that enables the judges to do what is right -- through conversations, organizing, and engagement. Based on what I saw at oral arguments yesterday, there is every reason to think that if we do our part, the judges can do theirs.

The Let California Ring team will keep you posted in the coming weeks. Thanks for all you’ve done on behalf of this movement.

Sincerely,

Evan Wolfson
Executive Director and Founder
Freedom to Marry


P.S. If you missed the live broadcast of oral arguments, click here to watch an archived version.

Monday, March 3, 2008

March Forth for the Freedom to Marry!

It's Time to Make History.
Be There, tomorrow!

After four long years, the legal battle for the freedom to marry has reached the California Supreme Court.

TUNE IN to watch the oral arguments.

Tuesday, March 4
9 a.m. to 12 noon

Watch the Live Webcast on:
http://www.calchannel.com/


The Freedom to Marry @ the Oscars

Support for the freedom to marry has hit Hollywood!

Freeheld, a documentary about a woman struggling to secure benefits for her partner as she dies of cancer, won an Academy Award, bringing acclaim and visibility to this important issue.

Read about it in the New York Times…