Monday, December 29, 2008
MARRIAGE EQUALITY USA ANNOUNCES NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTIONS TRACKING POST-PROP 8 COMMUNITY FORUMS AND ON-LINE SURVEY RESULTS
San Francisco, CA: “To win marriage equality, we must empower and enlist the grassroots in each community,” said Molly McKay, Marriage Equality USA (MEUSA) Media Director. “In the devastating aftermath of the passage of California’s Proposition 8 campaign, MEUSA hosted community forums across the state to invite participants to constructively examine the campaign and provide input on where we go from here. MEUSA also created an on-line survey which collected responses from an additional 3,000 people across the nation to check the pulse of where things stand within our national marriage equality movement following the November 15th Stonewall 2.0 revolution.”
“Through both the community forums and on-line survey, MEUSA received input from thousands and thousands of voices throughout California, as well as from individuals in 45 other states and 15 countries,” said Pamela Brown, MEUSA Policy Director. “Throughout the month of January, MEUSA will release a three part series of the ‘collective wisdom’ gathered by summarizing the main themes and sharing these perspectives and experiences collected. On Monday, January 5th, MEUSA will release the first of three reports that summarizes grassroots input on what we learned from the Prop 8 campaign. As a preview, today, we share MEUSA’s 2009 resolutions based on the themes and wisdom collected from our grassroots input.”
To End Homophobia, We Must Not Practice It. As Harvey Milk once said “they’ll vote for us two to one if they get to know one of us.” The LGBTI community must be visible in our campaign to secure marriage equality because we know our real images and stories are the only way to replace stereotypes. We must share our stories through earned media, door to door canvassing, and other visibility actions.
We Must Focus on our Families. We will never allow LGBTI families to be pushed into the closet. Our families are raising children and serve as our front line ambassadors with other families. Our lives and experiences, including the fear and harm their children face from these anti-gay campaigns, like Prop 8, must be shared to increase understanding and support. We must work with family-focused organizations, both LGBTI and other family-focused groups.
We Must Challenge Institutionalized Privilege within LGBTI Organizations. It’s not just about outreach; it’s about inclusion in our marriage equality movement. We will promote, support, involve and fund leaders and organizations of color and create messages and messengers that reflect all communities as a priority, early and often, not as an afterthought.
We Must Engage in all 50 States and in California, in all 58 Counties. Just as it was wrong to exclude the transgender community from the Employment Non-Discrimination Act, it was wrong to exclude the Central Valley from California’s No on Prop 8 campaign. Same-sex couples live everywhere; therefore we must campaign in every community and not ignore less supportive communities where there is so much room to gain and where the marriage equality outreach and education is essential.
We Must Empower Communities of Faith. We believe faith leaders and faith communities, not focus groups or consultants, should determine the messages and the best way to engage other people of faith in this movement. We can’t oversimplify and restrict our faith leaders and other faith based allies to talking points that don’t adequately give space to reflect their diverse beliefs or limit their participating to phone banks that keep these leaders out of the public eye. We need these faith leaders to be visible and vocal in building bridges to other faith communities. They are uniquely situated to respond to some of our most ardent opponents.
We Must Ensure our Straight Allies Have a Larger Voice in our Movement. Our marriage equality movement must not be restricted to the LGBTI community. We must embrace and incorporate our straight allies as leaders in our movement by providing outlets and invitations for them to join us in fulfilling our collective Constitutional promise of equal justice and treatment for all people.
We Must Recognize the Interconnectedness of our Lives and the Broader Social Justice Movement. We cannot just ask for support for LGBTI equality and not step up for other social justice movements. Our goals and our opponents are similar and by participating as good coalition partners, we can support the broader progressive movement for equality and justice.
We Must Commit to a National Grassroots Infrastructure and Strategy. We must have a proactive, sustained marriage equality educational movement and national dialogue to create the environment necessary to be able to overturn the federal Defense of Marriage Act and promote support for marriage equality nationwide. When these ballot measures arise, each state should not reinvent the wheel or have to start from scratch. We need to create effective modes of communication within the grassroots structure and share good ideas and practices. By capitalizing on technology, we can allow every state or volunteers in supportive communities to effectively participate in building our national vision.
We Must Provide a Place and a Space in this Movement for Everyone. Our community must be invited to do more than check writing and organizing house parties. We must be engaged in organizing and educating our communities, being visible, contributing our voices and sharing our unique talents and resources to assist the movement. We will allow anyone of any educational background and economic class to participate to the extent they are interested and we will provide materials, training and assistance to maximize and plug in all available talents and resources to promote volunteer-grassroots leadership and participation during this watershed civil rights movement for LGBTI equality.
>> This is an official press release from the National Media Center of Marriage Equality USA, a national organization whose mission is to secure legally recognized civil marriage equality for all, at the federal and state level, without regard to gender identity or sexual orientation.
“Through both the community forums and on-line survey, MEUSA received input from thousands and thousands of voices throughout California, as well as from individuals in 45 other states and 15 countries,” said Pamela Brown, MEUSA Policy Director. “Throughout the month of January, MEUSA will release a three part series of the ‘collective wisdom’ gathered by summarizing the main themes and sharing these perspectives and experiences collected. On Monday, January 5th, MEUSA will release the first of three reports that summarizes grassroots input on what we learned from the Prop 8 campaign. As a preview, today, we share MEUSA’s 2009 resolutions based on the themes and wisdom collected from our grassroots input.”
To End Homophobia, We Must Not Practice It. As Harvey Milk once said “they’ll vote for us two to one if they get to know one of us.” The LGBTI community must be visible in our campaign to secure marriage equality because we know our real images and stories are the only way to replace stereotypes. We must share our stories through earned media, door to door canvassing, and other visibility actions.
We Must Focus on our Families. We will never allow LGBTI families to be pushed into the closet. Our families are raising children and serve as our front line ambassadors with other families. Our lives and experiences, including the fear and harm their children face from these anti-gay campaigns, like Prop 8, must be shared to increase understanding and support. We must work with family-focused organizations, both LGBTI and other family-focused groups.
We Must Challenge Institutionalized Privilege within LGBTI Organizations. It’s not just about outreach; it’s about inclusion in our marriage equality movement. We will promote, support, involve and fund leaders and organizations of color and create messages and messengers that reflect all communities as a priority, early and often, not as an afterthought.
We Must Engage in all 50 States and in California, in all 58 Counties. Just as it was wrong to exclude the transgender community from the Employment Non-Discrimination Act, it was wrong to exclude the Central Valley from California’s No on Prop 8 campaign. Same-sex couples live everywhere; therefore we must campaign in every community and not ignore less supportive communities where there is so much room to gain and where the marriage equality outreach and education is essential.
We Must Empower Communities of Faith. We believe faith leaders and faith communities, not focus groups or consultants, should determine the messages and the best way to engage other people of faith in this movement. We can’t oversimplify and restrict our faith leaders and other faith based allies to talking points that don’t adequately give space to reflect their diverse beliefs or limit their participating to phone banks that keep these leaders out of the public eye. We need these faith leaders to be visible and vocal in building bridges to other faith communities. They are uniquely situated to respond to some of our most ardent opponents.
We Must Ensure our Straight Allies Have a Larger Voice in our Movement. Our marriage equality movement must not be restricted to the LGBTI community. We must embrace and incorporate our straight allies as leaders in our movement by providing outlets and invitations for them to join us in fulfilling our collective Constitutional promise of equal justice and treatment for all people.
We Must Recognize the Interconnectedness of our Lives and the Broader Social Justice Movement. We cannot just ask for support for LGBTI equality and not step up for other social justice movements. Our goals and our opponents are similar and by participating as good coalition partners, we can support the broader progressive movement for equality and justice.
We Must Commit to a National Grassroots Infrastructure and Strategy. We must have a proactive, sustained marriage equality educational movement and national dialogue to create the environment necessary to be able to overturn the federal Defense of Marriage Act and promote support for marriage equality nationwide. When these ballot measures arise, each state should not reinvent the wheel or have to start from scratch. We need to create effective modes of communication within the grassroots structure and share good ideas and practices. By capitalizing on technology, we can allow every state or volunteers in supportive communities to effectively participate in building our national vision.
We Must Provide a Place and a Space in this Movement for Everyone. Our community must be invited to do more than check writing and organizing house parties. We must be engaged in organizing and educating our communities, being visible, contributing our voices and sharing our unique talents and resources to assist the movement. We will allow anyone of any educational background and economic class to participate to the extent they are interested and we will provide materials, training and assistance to maximize and plug in all available talents and resources to promote volunteer-grassroots leadership and participation during this watershed civil rights movement for LGBTI equality.
>> This is an official press release from the National Media Center of Marriage Equality USA, a national organization whose mission is to secure legally recognized civil marriage equality for all, at the federal and state level, without regard to gender identity or sexual orientation.
Saturday, December 20, 2008
MARRIAGE EQUALITY USA STATEMENT ON CALIFORNIA ATTORNEY GENERAL JERRY BROWN’S BRIEF ASKING THAT PROPOSITION 8 BE OVERTURNED
Proposition 8 proponents are trying to strip the 18,000 couples who married of their marriage licenses. They are like the Grinch attempting to pull every last shred of happiness and hope from same-sex couples. The Court cannot allow the bullies and bigotry to pollute our Constitution that has heretofore stood for equality and justice for all.
"We are incredibly encouraged by the Attorney General's thoughtful and courageous decision to urge the California Supreme Court to stand up for its historic role in protecting minorities against the tyranny of the majority," said Media Director Molly McKay. "The lives of thousands of couples and their children hang in the balance. We are hopeful that the outpouring of support from every major civil rights organization and dozens of cities and legislators will encourage the Justices that the right thing to do is to find that Proposition 8 is a revision to our Constitution and not allow it to stand. We have fundamentally altered the checks and balance of our democracy if a prejudiced minority is entitled to only the fundamental rights that they can persuade the majority to extend to them."
“Proposition 8 proponents are trying to strip the 18,000 couples who married of their marriage licenses,” said Pamela Brown, MEUSA Policy Director. “They are like the Grinch attempting to pull every last shred of happiness and hope from same-sex couples. The Court cannot allow the bullies and bigotry to pollute our Constitution that has heretofore stood for equality and justice for all.”
RELATED: California Attorney General Urges Court To Strike Down Proposition 8 Marriage Equality USA Advisory Board Member Robin Tyler Responds to Challenge to the 18K Married Couples. (more)
"We are incredibly encouraged by the Attorney General's thoughtful and courageous decision to urge the California Supreme Court to stand up for its historic role in protecting minorities against the tyranny of the majority," said Media Director Molly McKay. "The lives of thousands of couples and their children hang in the balance. We are hopeful that the outpouring of support from every major civil rights organization and dozens of cities and legislators will encourage the Justices that the right thing to do is to find that Proposition 8 is a revision to our Constitution and not allow it to stand. We have fundamentally altered the checks and balance of our democracy if a prejudiced minority is entitled to only the fundamental rights that they can persuade the majority to extend to them."
“Proposition 8 proponents are trying to strip the 18,000 couples who married of their marriage licenses,” said Pamela Brown, MEUSA Policy Director. “They are like the Grinch attempting to pull every last shred of happiness and hope from same-sex couples. The Court cannot allow the bullies and bigotry to pollute our Constitution that has heretofore stood for equality and justice for all.”
RELATED: California Attorney General Urges Court To Strike Down Proposition 8 Marriage Equality USA Advisory Board Member Robin Tyler Responds to Challenge to the 18K Married Couples. (more)
Wednesday, December 10, 2008
MARRIAGE EQUALITY USA EXPANDS OUTREACH BY SEEKING MEMBER ORGANIZATIONS TO STRENGTHEN ITS ABILITY TO SECURE MARRIAGE EQUALITY
Louisville, KY -- With the number of chapters it has growing, Marriage Equality USA today announced a new plan to bring statewide, regional, county, and city organizations into the marriage equality movement.
The new plan allows independent organizations committed to Marriage Equality USA's Mission Statement to join as a member organization.
"We wanted a plan to bring existing organizations into the marriage equality movement so they can share resources, ideas, and coordinate efforts with Marriage Equality USA nationally, and with our local chapters," stated Jordan Palmer, Vice President of Development and Organizational Relationships for Marriage Equality USA.
Both member organizations and Marriage Equality USA will benefit by sharing action alerts, organizational successes, set-backs, experiences, information, and knowledge. Joint fundraising activities are also a possibility.
Despite the November election which resulted in three additional state constitutional amendments restricting marriage to be between a man and a woman and another amendment that restricted adoption to married couples, Marriage Equality USA remains committed to marriage equality throughout the United States.
"The unprecedented nationwide rallies in support of marriage equality illustrate this issue is not limited to California but important across the United States," says Jordan Palmer, Vice President of Development and Organizational Relationships for Marriage Equality USA. "We will continue our fight for marriage equality state by state, and thank everyone for their enormous support."
Interested organizations should visit the member organizations section of the Marriage Equality USA website at www.marriageequality.org for additional information.
The new plan allows independent organizations committed to Marriage Equality USA's Mission Statement to join as a member organization.
"We wanted a plan to bring existing organizations into the marriage equality movement so they can share resources, ideas, and coordinate efforts with Marriage Equality USA nationally, and with our local chapters," stated Jordan Palmer, Vice President of Development and Organizational Relationships for Marriage Equality USA.
Both member organizations and Marriage Equality USA will benefit by sharing action alerts, organizational successes, set-backs, experiences, information, and knowledge. Joint fundraising activities are also a possibility.
Despite the November election which resulted in three additional state constitutional amendments restricting marriage to be between a man and a woman and another amendment that restricted adoption to married couples, Marriage Equality USA remains committed to marriage equality throughout the United States.
"The unprecedented nationwide rallies in support of marriage equality illustrate this issue is not limited to California but important across the United States," says Jordan Palmer, Vice President of Development and Organizational Relationships for Marriage Equality USA. "We will continue our fight for marriage equality state by state, and thank everyone for their enormous support."
Interested organizations should visit the member organizations section of the Marriage Equality USA website at www.marriageequality.org for additional information.
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