Showing posts with label civil rights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label civil rights. Show all posts

Saturday, May 10, 2008

Political Notebook: Award recognizes Mixner's pioneering ways

by Matthew S. Bajko
The Bay Area Reporter

There isn't much that David Mixner hasn't done in the course of his 61 years. Nor is there a chapter in American political history over the last five decades in which Mixner didn't play some role.

He became an activist in the civil rights movement over the objections of his parents and protested the Vietnam War. He worked closely with the late San Francisco Supervisor Harvey Milk to defeat an anti-gay measure that would have barred gays from being teachers.

full article

Thursday, April 3, 2008

84 years

In a world where almost anything is possible it’s easy to expect the unexpected.

To expect the unexpected shows a thoroughly modern intellect.
Oscar Wilde

Of course we all favor what is important in our lives. So we hope our desires will be met. But, some would say, it’s selfish to think solely of our own desires.

So we hope we aren’t a minority because it’s not possible to be equally considered if we aren’t part of a majority. After all our society is federalist by design and it’s all about the numbers, right?

I guess that part about “All Men are created equal” was a slip of the tounge.

We’ve seen women obtain civil rights during women’s suffrage. They were a minority. It took 21 years before states started to pass laws in support of women and another 50 years before the federal government would act. Totaling 71 years for federal recognition.

We’ve seen the African American community fight for their civil rights. They were a minority. It took them 80 years to receive federal recognition.

I’m part of the gay civil rights movement. We are a minority. Our fight started in 1924 when The Society for Human Rights, in Chicago, became the country's earliest known gay rights organization. It’s been 84 years so far!

Saturday, December 29, 2007

QUESTION: Civil rights and voting

Place yourself in the timeline of the black civil rights movement (agenda).

If civil rights for blacks were put to a vote......

Well, we all know what the answer is.

So when I see people screaming and yelling about voting on gay civil rights.......

for shame, for shame...