‘Weekend of Action’ for marriage equality


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It’s a hugely important “weekend of action” if we want to win marriage equality for Rhode Island this legislative session. Devin Driscoll of Rhode Islanders United for Marriage has the details:

With a vote expected any day, momentum is continuing to build behind marriage equality legislation pending before the General Assembly. Rhode Islanders United for Marriage will host a Weekend of Action this Saturday and Sunday, April 20 and 21, to connect supporters with their senators and urge them to vote yes on S38.

Volunteers will gather at RI United’s Action Center (3 Central Street, Providence, RI 02907) at 11:30 am to hear from a faith leader, State Representative Frank Ferri and RI United Campaign Director Ray Sullivan. They will then head out to neighborhoods across the state to canvass in targeted senate districts, or phone bank other supporters from headquarters.

Event Details: Rhode Islanders United For Marriage Weekend of Action

Who:  Volunteers and supporters of the freedom to marry, local faith leaders, State Representative Frank Ferri, and Campaign Director Ray Sullivan

What: Action Launch

When: Saturday, April 20 at 11:30 am.

Where: RI United Action Center, 3 Central Street, Providence, RI 02907 (near Central & Classical High Schools, off of Broad Street).

AFSC-SENE to hold vigil for Boston today

AFSC-logoThe local chapter of the American Friends Service Committee will hold a vigil today – 5pm at the Providence Friends Meeting House, 99 Morris Ave. – for those who want to spend time with peaceful people as the Boston Marathon bombings morphed overnight into a manhunt this morning. One of the two Chechnyan brothers suspected of planting the bombs was killed during an early this morning shootout with police in Watertown, Mass. and the other escaped and remains at large.

Here’s AFSC-SENE’s press release:

The American Friends Service Committee will hold a vigil this afternoon at 5pm at the Providence Friends Meeting House (99 Morris Ave, corner of Olney St).

“As the situation unfolds in Boston, we want to offer people an opportunity to gather in solidarity  with the people of Boston” said Martha Yager, Program Coordinator of the South East Office of the AFSC.

“The situation is unfolding, so we will shape the event as the day unfolds” said Yager.  “We will open the Meeting House at 3:00 pm as a place for quiet gathering and hold a more formal vigil at 5pm”

Help stop the bullying of LGBTQ students


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header_logoThe Day of Silence is an annual protest organized by GLSEN, the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network, to protest the bullying of LGBTQ students in High Schools and college campuses across the country. The event, originally a grassroots effort started in 1996, was adopted by GLSEN in 2000 and in 2013 the 18th Day of Silence falls on today’s date, April 19th.

Unfortunately, here in Rhode Island and Massachusetts, this week is April vacation, so either the day will not be observed or will be rescheduled to a time when classes are in session. Either way a feeling of national solidarity will be lost, which is too bad, because this event could serve as a powerful statement in some schools where bullying is a potential issue.

LGBT students are at risk for bullying. Bullying Statistics.org reports that “about 9 out of 10 LGBT teens have reported being bullied at school within the past year because of their sexual orientation,” “gay and lesbian teens are two to three times as more likely to commit teen suicide than other youths” and “about 30 percent of all completed suicides have been related to sexual identity crisis.” These numbers are shocking and should serve as a call to arms.

However, several groups on the religious right have decided that it’s not the rights of LGBT students to live lives free of bullying that we should be concerned with. We should instead be concerned with the rights of Christian students who wish to proselytize to their LGBTQ classmates.  The argument is made that a Christian student’s right to tell an LGBTQ student that they are going to Hell trumps an LGBTQ student’s right to live a life free of such abuse.

This is the same tactic used to oppose marriage equality on the grounds of religious freedom. It’s not about the rights of same-sex couples to marry, it’s about the religious right to discriminate against same-sex couples. In the case of school bullying, it’s not about an LGBTQ students right to feel safe and unmolested, it’s about a religious student’s right to express their disapproval of the LGBTQ student through taunts, intimidation and yes, hate speech.

Laurie Higgins of the Illinois Family Institute has said about the Day of Silence in her state, “The means by which [GLSEN seeks] to end bullying is to eradicate conservative moral beliefs about homosexuality or to make it socially impossible to express them. That’s what people need to understand. This isn’t centrally about bullying.”  Of course, Laurie Higgins is wrong: the Day of Silence is all about calling attention to the problem of bullying and raising awareness about the issue. (In the interest of full disclosure I should point out that Laurie Higgins protested a talk by my niece Jessica Ahlquist when she went to Illinois to talk at three High Schools there about being bullied as an atheist in the wake of the Cranston prayer banner decision.)

In our own backyard, MassResistance, the anti-LGBTQ hate group and founding member of the anti-marriage equality Faith Alliance has come out strong against the Day of Silence, even as they admit that “School districts in Massachusetts and other states have their spring school vacations this week” suggesting that those interested in getting angry about this issue “check with your school as soon as possible.

In concert with 34 groups, including the aforementioned Illinois Family Institute, MassResistance is suggesting to parents opposed to preventing the bullying of LGBTQ students to “Keep your kids home that day!”

When you have to work that hard at hating people, it almost seems not worth it.

The idea of twisting freedom of religion into the freedom to discriminate may seem compelling to the unreflective when it is about the right of photographers to discriminate against same-sex couples getting married or the right of pharmacists to deny women birth control if it violates their conscience, but it seriously breaks down when we talk about the rights of bullies to drive LGBTQ kids to suicide.

Suddenly the betrayal of logic that might seem peculiar, strange or even humorous becomes destructive and deadly to our children. It is well past the time that we call those who peddle such views on their bullshit and start understanding what religious liberty really is.