Let’s not mince words, we were bowling for abortions


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shoesOn Sunday, April 27, I had the pleasure of bowling at a fundraiser that benefits the  “Women’s Health and Education Fund of Rhode Island.” This annual bowlathon is part of a national campaign that funds abortion services for people who demonstrate financial need.  Anyone who needs abortion services should have access to them, regardless of financial state, location or any other of the many factors that keep pregnant people  from accessing necessary reproductive services.

If you clicked the national campaign link above, you will see that our little state is 9th (!) in ranking nationwide. This makes me happier than I can say. I am proud of this work; it is one of the most important things we can do to help people claim autonomy of their bodies and make personal choices regardless of access restrictions.

With a couple of new state bills proposed that would limit abortion access in Rhode Island, we have to take a critical look at our state’s commitment to bodily autonomy and personal choice. The most infamous of these bills, proposed by State Representative Karen MacBeth of Cumberland, has been brought back and struck down every year for the past five.

Karen, move on. Forced ultrasounds are not informing people of the choice they are making. Abortions are a deeply personal choice and quite frankly, none of your damn business. This bill is an act of intimate violation of a person’s body by the government. Every pregnant person has a right to decide what to do with their bodies without your interference.

With H 7303 and other bills like it creeping steadily into our legislation, we need to think about how we phrase our fundraising and work that we do in this state. “Women’s Health and Education Fund of Rhode Island” feels like code. Why aren’t we more transparent about the work we are doing? Why is the word “abortion” skirted around? If you visit the WHEFRI website, you see in clear language that these funds are going to abortion services. The more we use the word abortion, the less stigma there will be attached to it. I encourage the Board Members of WHEFRI to look deeply at the name and think about changing it to bring light to this important work under no cloaks or guises.

I’d also like to address with use of the word “Women.” We have to recognize that abortion services need to be available to everyone, regardless of gender identification. In that I mean that not all people who need access to abortion services are women.  A transgender man may need abortion services. A non-binary person may need services. Keeping around terms like these may limit people’s access to these funds. I do not mean to say that WHEFRI would ever discriminate against someone because of their gender, however I will posit that it may make a pregnant person who does not identify as a woman question whether they would have access to these funds. Inclusive language is something we need to address in the reproductive justice world; without it we are limiting who we reach. If we want all people to have access to abortions, let’s work on how we present our mission and work.

As one of the biggest access funds in the state, we should be shouting loud and proud. Let’s work on ensuring that all pregnant people have access to abortion services and that our work is recognizable as such. I want to make Rhode Island a forerunner for reproductive justice.

Is ‘anti-gay therapist’ Dr. Cretella a therapist or not?


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Matthew Cuddeback
Matthew Cuddeback

The recent cancellation of anti-LGBTQ activist Michelle Cretella’s talk at Providence College by Dr. Matthew Cuddeback has taken a new turn.

Cuddeback initially invited Cretella, a founding member of NOM-RI (dedicated to preventing marriage equality in our state), a board member of NARTH (dedicated to “curing” homosexuality) and vice president of the American College of Pediatrics (a group that broke away from the American Academy of Pediatrics because of its support of adoption by gay and lesbian couples) not to discuss any of that work, apparently, but to “describe her journey to navigate the controversial issue of homosexuality as a physician and a Catholic.

Cuddeback defended inviting an Cretella because she “is not a therapist, and had no intent to speak as one. Her intent was to speak of her journey, as a physician, from rejecter to appreciator of the Catholic and natural law traditions concerning homosexuality.”

If Cretella is not a therapist, and had no intention to speak as one, how does one explain a piece she wrote on LifeSiteNews yesterday in which she said,

No therapy is free from harm. Regarding all forms of psychotherapy for any given condition a surprisingly high 14-24 percent of children deteriorate during psychotherapy.

This sounds like something a therapist might say, especially one who signs her piece as Michelle Cretella, MD and chairs the American College of Pediatricians’ Committee on Adolescent Sexuality. She certainly wants us to accept that her credentials somehow add gravitas to her opinions. Note also that this piece was to appear in the same week that Cretella was scheduled to speak at PC.

The piece she wrote yesterday never once mentions “natural law” or Catholicism. Instead, Cretella lays out her case as a lawyer might, filling her piece with footnotes and links to studies. To some her piece might look like a case made by a scientist or a doctor, but it is not. It is pure religious advocacy, dressed up as science to present an opinion, not fact. Cretella wrote the piece to argue against laws that prevent so-called therapists from attempting to “cure” those under the age of eighteen of homosexuality.

Cretella never mentions what some of these therapies entail. Cures advanced over the years for treating homosexuality have included Prozac, playing sports, hypnosis and gaining weight. One extreme example is aversion therapy, in which victims are shown pornography and their genitals are electrocuted when they react improperly. Ruined lives and suicides are often the tragic result of these techniques, but Cretella, who is not a therapist, is silent. Perhaps because, not being a therapist, she is not qualified to speak on these topics?

Cuddeback, in canceling the talk, said, “Because I sense that Dr. Cretella may be the object of animus were she to present at PC next week, I have advised her that we shall postpone her presentation.”

Cuddeback is being disingenuous. Cretella has earned every inch of animus aimed her way.

Providence College postpones controversial anti-LGBTQ lecturer


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200x229MichelleCretella1
Cretella

From an outsider’s perspective, Providence College seems caught between wanting to be two very different things. On the one side, PC wishes to be an academic institution dedicated to free and open inquiry, pursuing the truth where ever the search may lead. On the other hand, it sometimes seems that there are those who wish this Catholic institution of higher learning to be a defender of the Catholic faith, promoting theology as science with an eye towards influencing public policy.

Back in October, PC came under criticism for canceling a talk by Wayne State University philosopher John Corvino because his lecture, in support of marriage equality, would be “in defiance” of PC’s “fundamental moral principles.” I took some hits from the conservative Catholic right for my position, but the controversy was all but settled when Providence College’s Faculty Senate passed a resolution, by an overwhelming majority, taking Provost Hugh Lena to task for canceling Corvino’s talk.

In seems that Providence College, for the most part, is more interested in being a free and open academic institution than in simply being a forum for Catholic apologetics.

That’s not to say that those interested in inserting pseudoscience and poor philosophy into the public debate have gone away:

Dr. Matthew Cuddeback, sponsor of the controversial “Who Am I?” talk by Dr. Michelle Cretella, has announced the postponement of the event due to concern that “Dr. Cretella may be the object of animus were she to present at PC next week.” Dr. Cuddeback alleges inconsistency in campus support for academic freedom.

Cretella has long been an opponent of marriage equality and LGBTQ rights, often injecting her ideas and opinions into our state’s ongoing discussion over these issues. In 2008 she, along with Bishop Thomas Tobin, joined the board of NOM-RI, the group that led the fight against marriage equality in Rhode Island.

Cretella is on the board of the National Association for Research of Therapy of Homosexuality (NARTH) an organization that claims homosexuality is a mental disorder that can be cured. She is also Vice president of the American College of Pediatrics, “a socially conservative organization that formed in 2002 as part of a protest regarding the American Academy of Pediatrics support of adoption by gay and lesbian couples.”

As Megan Grammatico notes, “Dr. Cretella is… biased. She is the vice president of an organization that was formed originally to oppose adoption by gay and lesbian couples, and relies on bad science to do so. See the heavily criticized research of Mark Regnerus here.” Grammatico’s piece does an excellent job running down why Cretella’s positions and views put her far outside the definition of scientist, and should be read in full.

Apparently a level headed and on point critique of Cretella’s credentials and scientific honesty has caused Matthew Cuddeback to conclude that his invited speaker “may be the object of animus were she to present at PC next week” and so he cancelled the event, but not before playing the victim card:

I am struck that many of the indignant voices raised for academic freedom in the wake of the cancellation of Dr. Corvino’s talk have been absent or ambivalent in the discussion of Dr. Cretella’s talk. Where are those voices now? Some have been silent. Some are harrumphing about NARTH, science, and reparative therapy. Some, who proposed to advocate for a campus-wide discussion that would include all perspectives, are trying to shame faculty who invite a speaker holding one of those perspectives, as irresponsibly insensitive to LGBT students. Do they believe that the freedom to speak belongs only to those who agree with their position?

It is hard to believe that Cuddeback isn’t being knowingly disingenuous here. His line about critics “harrumphing about NARTH, science, and reparative therapy” indicates the value he places on fidelity to good science and honest discussion. John Corvino and Michelle Cretella could not be more different as academic speakers. Whereas Corvino uses peer reviewed research and cogent argument to make his points, Cretella misuses good research and presents discredited studies as fact to spread her theologically biased beliefs. Cretella associates with NOM, an anti-LGBTQ hate group.

In short, Cretella does not deserve academic support because she does not do academic work.

Matthew Cuddeback, who invited Cretella to speak, is no stranger to disingenuous arguments. His testimony at the Rhode Island State Senate marriage equality hearing in 2013 was a pointless, confused and almost incoherent ramble about biological and “psychosexual complimentarianism.” You can watch it here:

Amazing Grace at Providence College


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pcWhat high school senior would want to go to college where you can’t even discuss the not-at-all controversial issue of marriage equality? No-brainer or not,  let’s give PC Provost Hugh Lena credit for allowing a students to hear a lecture the church doesn’t agree with.

“I know that the events of the last few days have engendered a great deal of discussion on our campus, from alumni and friends of the College, and from the media,” he wrote in a statement. “I hope most will agree that rescheduling the event as it was originally proposed is the proper course of action for the College to take.”

“I want to let you know that the event is being rescheduled with Dr. Corvino and Sherif Girgis, a Ph.D. student in philosophy at Princeton University and a J.D. candidate at Yale Law School.  Both individuals have agreed to the event and the likely date will be sometime in the spring semester.  We will keep you apprised as soon as we have the details finalized.”

One of the best parts of the Catholic faith is not its rigid reliance on ancient dogma, but rather its belief in forgiveness. In that spirit, please enjoy one of my favorite renditions of one of my favorite songs:

Providence College nixes lecture on gay marriage


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16109488In what can only be called a blow to academic freedom and intellectual inquiry, Providence College has rescinded an invitation to philosopher John Corvino of Wayne State University because his lecture would be in support of marriage equality and “Catholic institutions should not honor those who act in defiance of our fundamental moral principles.”

Corvino is a nationally known proponent of LGBTQ rights, and frequently engages in friendly debates with marriage equality opponents such as Maggie Gallagher, former head of the National Organization for Marriage (NOM.) In the interest of balance, Corvino had arranged for Dr. Dana Dillon, from Providence College’s theology department, to follow his presentation with a short talk on the Roman Catholic Church’s position on marriage. Provost Hugh Lena, in canceling the event, nixed this idea, saying, “it is simply not fair to [Dr. Dana] to give her less than one week of preparation opposite someone who has been lecturing on this issue across the United States for years.”

As Corvino points out in his response to Provost Lena,

As a fellow scholar I am offended on Dr. Dillon’s behalf. If she felt unprepared to respond, she could easily have declined. For her provost to declare her unprepared, however, is an affront to scholarly autonomy and academic freedom.

Also, Corvino maintains,

It also does not speak well of Provost Lena’s confidence in his philosophy and theology departments that he believes that no one there can persuasively articulate the Catholic position on marriage with a week’s notice.

Corvino may have a point here. During the public testimony phase of this year’s marriage equality debate in both the State Senate and the House, doctors and professors of philosophy and theology spoke five times. Their testimony was often off-topic, rushed and confusing. Professor Matthew Cuddeback, Dr. Gary Culpepper and Dr. Giuseppe Butera presented theology, philosophy and sophistry as a muddled, incoherent mess of unconvincing and unpersuasive ideas.

What these videos demonstrate is that John Corvino’s hunch that Provost Lena lacks confidence in his philosophy and theology department’s ability to articulate cogent and on point arguments against marriage equality may be right on target. If the three representatives of Providence College who testified at the State House are among the best Providence College has to offer, Provost Lena may be right to to believe, as Corvino suggests, that “no one there can persuasively articulate the Catholic position on marriage with a week’s notice.”

PC’s cancelation of John Corvino’s appearance highlights the difficulty if not impossibility of presenting both a “well rounded” and “religious” education. The two ideas work at cross purposes, forming an almost irresolvable paradox. As Corvino states it, towards the end of his response,

My impression, however, is that Providence College actively avoids the airing of views that challenge the Church’s traditional teaching on marriage. The provost seems to want to have it both ways: the appearance of a commitment to vigorous academic dialogue, combined with an isolationist approach to disfavored views; in other words, a Catholic identity defined primarily by what it excludes rather than what it includes.

I suspect the true reason John Corvino is not being allowed to speak at Providence College is because Provost Lena knows what most of us already suspect: Opponents of marriage equality don’t have any good arguments. Their theological concepts might sound good to their fellow Catholics (though polling data indicates otherwise) but what possible argument can be made, in a free society that values freedom of conscience and separation of church and state, for imposing one person’s theology on someone else? Rather than playing a losing hand, Lena decided to tip over the card table while complaining about the unfairness of the rules.

Truth Wins Out has condemned the dis-invitation of John Corvino, and are asking people to “Please give Dr. Hugh Lena a piece of your mind and tell him to invite John Corvino back to Providence College to speak about marriage equality.” You can email Provost Lena at hlena@providence.edu

Video: Marriage party at Providence City Hall


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Video from the Marriage Equality celebration held outside Providence City Hall today from 8:30am to 9:30am.

Rep. Ferri and his husband Tony ready for big wedding day


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You know your wedding is a big deal in Rhode Island when reporters from NBC 10, RIPR, WPRO and the Associated Press all want to interview you about it. Such is the case for state Rep. Frank Ferri and his longtime husband Tony Caparco, who are re-affirming their wedding vows to one another now that their home state recognizes their legal right to do so.

The big day is Thursday, August 1 – for both Rhode Island and Ferri and Caparco.

“We’re very excited,” Tony told me on the phone today and Frank fielded a call from another local reporter. “It just means so much to us.”

Ferri and Caparco have been together for 32 years and they were married in Vancouver in 2006. It was their 25th anniversary together.

“That was a more simple ceremony,” Caparco said. “It was more low key and emotional.”

frand tony first weddingTheir second wedding on Thursday, they both said, will be more of a celebration of their right to marry in Rhode Island – an effort that both were an instrumental part of.

Ferri was politically active in the campaign for marriage equality when they married in 2006, but he was still 14 months removed from declaring he would run for elected office. Fast forward to 2013 and, as a high-profile and highly respected openly gay legislator, Ferri was a crucial part of the very successful campaign to pass same sex marriage rights in Rhode Island this year. House Speaker Gordon Fox, who is also gay and was perhaps even more instrumental in marriage equality, will marry Frank and Tony on Thursday.

While the whole affair has the feeling of a royal wedding, Ferri said it doesn’t seem so from he and Tony’s vantage point.

“It’s a little bit stressful,” he told me when he got off the phone with another reporter. “We’re still pulling all the details together.”

The rehearsal dinner is tonight for the 35 person wedding party. And as Ferri and I chatted, yet another reporter called. In the background I could hear Tony tell him a TV crew would be at their house in 45 minutes.

“45 minutes,” Ferri said to his fiance, “I’m not even shaved yet.”

 

 

RI Council of Churches applauds Boy Scouts

Rhode Island State Council of Churches released a statement today regarding the Boy Scouts of America’s recent decision to allow openly gay scouts to join and participate in the organization:

RISCCResponse to BSA Statement on Gender of Scouts and Leaders

The Rhode Island State Council of Churches applauds the direction taken by the Boy Scouts of America in welcoming openly gay scouts into its ranks. This change in policy moves the BSA in a more inclusive direction, offering their programs to youth without regard to sexual orientation.

We are, however, disappointed that this change did not remove the ban on gay leaders. In the spirit of our recent statement on Marriage Equality, the Council would support a policy that allows each sponsoring agency to make its own determination on the sexual orientation of leaders within their jurisdiction. This would provide adequate protection for those religious bodies that would prefer to maintain the current ban, but also allow others to express their religious convictions by appointing leaders who are gay.

The Rhode Island State Council of Churches has maintained a consistent relationship with the Narragansett Council since the RISCC’s founding in 1937 by providing and supervising the Protestant chaplain at Camp Yawgoog. “As a former scout and a current member of the Executive Board of the Narragansett Council, I am very pleased with the direction of this change in policy and will continue to work within Scouting to encourage a more inclusive policy regarding leadership,” stated the Executive Minister, the Rev. Dr. Don Anderson. Mr. Anderson went on to say that “The BSA can move to a more open policy regarding the sexual orientation of leadership without infringing on anyone’s religious convictions.”

A proud day to be a Rhode Islander


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What a wonderful afternoon it was yesterday in Rhode Island. It was warm and sunny and flowers were bursting through the dirt and blooming from the branches of trees, and the tide was high as a full moon began to rise over Narragansett Bay. And, at long last, the state Senate gave its blessing to marriage equality.

All across our great state, gay men and lesbian women dropped down on one knee and proudly proposed to their partners. The entire LGBTQ community was made more whole in the eyes of the law. We put another nail in the coffin of discrimination, and took another big step towards equality. Love won.

If a picture tells a thousand words, then this picture Ryan Conaty took for his blog at the hearing the day before sums up how progressives feel today:

nesselbush kissing

 

Marriage equality: this is it!


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Senator Donna Nesselbush celebrates yesterday’s vote with her partner Kelly Carse. (Photo by Ryan Conaty – click on the image to see more of the great shots he got yesterday)

Thousands of letters, tens of thousands of phone calls to legislators, and countless hours of hard work have all led up to this moment.

After yesterday’s 7-4 vote in the Judiciary Committee, S-38, the bill that finally extends the freedom to marry to all loving and committed couples, will be voted on today by the full Senate. Thanks to your dedication and diligence we’ve come this far. However, there’s still work to be done: in these final hours, your Senator needs to hear from you NOW.

Does your Senator have a position on marriage equality? Sending them a message right now can help push them into being a supporter. Does your Senator already support marriage equality? Let them know you stand behind them 100%. Click here to send a message right now.

You and thousands of Rhode Islanders like you have carried this bill to the tipping point. We’ve stood together through it all, and built a campaign stronger than any opposition ever thought possible. Now the vote is scheduled for 4pm today. Please, for one last time, let your Senator know that you support the freedom to marry for all couples.

Let’s make history today at the Statehouse.

Rhode Island will win marriage equality today


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Rhode Island will remove the last obstacle standing in the way of marriage equality today when the full Senate votes today at 4 p.m. If I’m right, we’ll become the 10th state in the nation – but the last in New England – to abolish same sex marriage discrimination.

“We think that when the vote is called, we can win,”Ray Sullivan told the New York Times.

WPRI had a great take on how public opinion shifted on this issue, thanks in large part to the efforts of local activists. Referring to the affirmative committee vote yesterday, Ted Nesi/Dan McGowan wrote:

The bill won the support of three committee members who were considered potential no votes just months and in some cases only weeks ago: state Sens. Paul Jabour, D-Providence; William Conley, D-East Providence; and Leo Raptakis, D-Coventry.

“I listened to my constituency and I found that overwhelmingly they wanted me to support this legislation,” Jabour told WPRI.com.

Jabour – who represents one of the most traditionally Catholic districts in Rhode Island, stretching from Federal Hill up through Mount Pleasant – said he was willing to put aside his personal beliefs and listen to the voters in his district.

“I feel that my responsibility was to follow what it was that my constituency wanted me to do,” Jabour said. “It was people from all walks of life in my district. There was a common theme that people want to be treated fairly and equally.”

Senate_Chmbr

 

 

Big vote for marriage equality is today


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Ray Sullivan, of Rhode Islanders United for Marriage, in East Providence last night.
Ray Sullivan, of Rhode Islanders United for Marriage, in East Providence last night.

For Rhode Island progressives, it’s the most widely-anticipated day of the 2013 legislative session. For anyone who values equal treatment under the law, it’s even bigger than that. Today is the day the Senate Judiciary Committee votes on marriage equality.

The House already passed it overwhelmingly, the governor is a big supporter too and the Senate is highly unlikely to reject it if and when it ever reaches the full chamber. On Smith Hill, issues are won or lost behind closed doors, and those outcomes become evident at the committee level. So today the Ocean State learns if, collectively, we are ready to recognize same sex marriage.

From a practical matter, there are three people who control its fate, and two whom will be casting votes today. Senate President Teresa Paiva Weed is famously opposed to marriage equality, but said she won’t weigh in.

Rookie committee members Lou Raptakis, of Coventry, and Bill Conley, of East Providence, have held their cards close and Rhode Islanders United for Marriage have zeroed in on both of them in this home stretch.

That there are two bills up for a vote today – one backed only by the most socially conservative state legislators, out-of-town hate groups and Catholic priests and another that pretty much everyone else likes – gives them some political cover: vote for them both and let the full Senate flush it out.

NOM, Chris Plante: bark is worse than their bite


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From the MassResistance! Website
From the MassResistance! Website

NOM-RI’s Chris Plante is becoming increasingly desperate in his efforts to block marriage equality in Rhode Island. The Westerly Sun reports on Plante’s newspaper ads that contained unveiled political threats against Republican Senator Dennis Algiere:

If he ends up voting ‘yes,’ we will do what we can to unseat him. He will have broken with the Republican Party, and he will have also broken with the people who have elected him.

These are strong words. But does Plante actually have the ability to carry through with his threats? Plante points to New York and Iowa as places where NOM was influential in removing republican state senators and judges who voted for marriage equality.

NOM has a very good track record on unseating Republicans who vote against traditional marriage. The issue is job security, what every politician is concerned about.

I think it more likely that Plante’s job security is at stake: NOM-RI only exists as long as same-sex marriage remains against the law. When he loses this battle he’ll probably go back to selling dangerous, unscientific and discredited “abstinence only” sex education programs to gullible school administrations.

The Sun reports that Plante claimed, “Of the four Republican state senators who joined a Democratic minority to help New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo pass a same-sex marriage bill last year, one was defeated in a primary, another defeated in the general election after barely surviving a primary, a third opted not to run for re-election rather than face a primary challenge, and only one was re-elected.”

NOM Exposed, a site dedicated to refuting NOM’s lies claims, in a piece entitled NOM’s Empty Threats Against New York Republicans sees NOM’s influence a little differently, pointing out that “NOM Claimed It Would Spend $2 Million To Defeat Republicans Who Backed Marriage Equality In New York, But It Raised Less Than $50,000 And Spent Less Than $40,000.”

Mark Grisanti, the Senator Plante says was taken out during a primary was known to be “The Most Endangered Republican In The Senate.”

Senator Stephen Saland, defeated in the general election, lost because a third party candidate fielded by the Conservative Party split the vote, allowing his Democratic challenger to unseat him.

Senator James Alesi decided not to run because of personal problems and because of ongoing problems with the Republican Party: He only voted with his party 52% of the time. He was hardly a senator with Algiere’s record.

In every case NOM’s influence on these elections was minimal to non-existent. Plante is grossly exaggerating NOM’s political influence.

In a phone call with Kevin Nix of HRC, who heads up NOM Exposed, Nix expressed surprise that Plante mentioned Iowa because the judges in Iowa, though elected, are not party affiliated. Further, Nix points out that in the past NOM has made similar claims about Illinois, with equally weak facts to back up their case. MOM is “all bark and no bite” says Nix.

Locally, Plante’s threats sound even more hollow. Algiere is one of the highest ranking Republican politicians in the state. The Rhode Island Republican Party has nothing about marriage equality in its platform, and Republican Senator Dawson Hodgson is an almost certain yes vote on the issue. Plante’s suggestion that a yes vote from Algiere means the Senator has “broken with the Republican Party” is hyperbole at best. Polls show that most Rhode Islander’s want marriage equality and the idea that anger over the issue will still resonate with even the most conservative voters through the next election cycle despite Algiere’s conservative track record is silly.

As usual NOM-RI and Christopher Plante are engaging in bluster and bullshit.

Thank you to Charles Joughin of HRC for help in researching this piece.

CoC leader: ‘Discrimination is bad for business’


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biz leaders marriage equalityThe Rhode Island business community has overwhelmingly endorsed marriage equality, and largely stands opposed to the religious exemptions in the Ciccone bill.

John Duffy, president of the PR firm Duffy & Shapley and chairman of the Greater providence Chamber of Commerce was quite clear, “Discrimination is expensive and bad for business,” he said on a conference call today. “The business community stands opposed to the exemptions in the Ciccone bill.”

He said marriage equality will increase the ability of Rhode Island businesses to attract and retain top talent in our state.

Sally Lapides, president and chief executive officer of Residential Properties Ltd, says that she has specific examples of people being offered jobs and passing on offers in Rhode Island because of the discriminatory nature of of laws.

“If someone is offered a job at Yale, Harvard or Brown [they might] choose to not come to Brown because Rhode Island does not equally respect people.” She added that it is embarrassing for Rhode Island to be the only state in New England without marriage equality. Even when people choose to work in Rhode Island, they often choose to live just over the border in neighboring Massachusetts, which decreases house sales in our struggling state.

Kirsten Dichiappari, president and founder of the Chatter Group, a collaborative consulting company says that business entrepreneurs in the LGBTQ community is a fast growing business sector, and those businesses are largely avoiding setting up shop in Rhode Island.

When asked if business leaders are concerned about any kind of backlash from those opposed to marriage equality because of their stance on the issue, Matt McTighe, who spearheaded Maine’s marriage equality effort noted that experiences in states that have passed such legislation shows that it has been great for business. Non-judgmental businesses, it turns out, have a competitive advantage.

It’s really that simple.

Labor Vision on marriage equality


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labor vision parisi handy rileyTo get ready for the big marriage vote in the Senate Judiciary Committee on Tuesday watch this great Labor Vision (for which I am a sometime contributor!) segment on why local labor unions are working so hard get same sex marriage passed this year. Jim Parisi, of the Rhode Island Federation of Teachers and Health Professionals, interviews Cranston Rep. Art Handy, the annual sponsor of the marriage equality bill in the House and Jim Riley, who represents the United Food and Commercial Workers in Rhode Island.

Labor Vision’s , in-depth

released a one-hour special on why it’s such an important issue for the union movement.

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.

Kiwis passes marriage equality, sings love song


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New-Zealand-MP-Metiria-TureiWouldn’t it be great if marriage equality advocates broke out in song from the gallery seats in the senate chambers, like they did in New Zealand?

The Kiwis became the 14th country to lift the ban on same sex marriage, according to ThinkProgress which posted this video of activists leading the parliament in a traditional local love song.

The question at this point is what kind of exemptions Senate President Teresa Paiva Weed decides to attach to the bill. I just hope she reads Steve Ahlquist’s great post on what is driving the push for such exemptions before she considers doing so…

How the right pushes for exemptions to equality


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marriage equality RallyMarriage equality advocates took lot of hope from April 8th’s front page ProJo article in which Senate President M. Teresa Paiva Weed anticipated “a full Senate vote on whether to legalize same-sex marriage by the end of April.”  Good news indeed, but one needs to continue reading for the unpleasant bit.

Paiva Weed is concerned that the bill’s religious exemptions may be inadequate, and would like to see more comprehensive exemptions. But if marriage equality is the goal, and so-called conscience clauses allow same-sex couples to be discriminated against by wedding photographers, bakeries, flower shops and rental halls, then in what sense will gay marriage be equal?

A sense can be formed of Paiva Weed’s thoughts on this issue. The ProJo reports that Paiva Weed feels that one of the “better explanations” she’s read regarding exemptions was an op-ed piece by Robin Fretwell Wilson, a Washington & Lee University law professor. Fretwell Wilson criticized the Rhode Island House bill for providing only “fake protections,” arguing that “religious liberty and same-sex marriage share an inseparable fate.”

Reading Fretwell Wilson’s piece one might come to the conclusion that the marriage equality legislation under consideration does nothing to protect organized religion. Fretwell Wilson completely ignores the fact that Rhode Island has a robust set of laws already on the books that provide some of the strongest religious liberty and conscience protections in the United States.

Janson Woo, and attorney with GLAD, Gay and Lesbian Advocates and Defenders, in his testimony before the Senate, explained that “Senate Bill 38 and current Rhode Island Law provide broader exemptions for religious organizations than any other state in this country that allows gay couples to marry.” How is this possible? “Current Rhode Island law already has a complete exemption for religious organizations in our sexual orientation and discrimination law.”

Woo continued, “That is an incredibly broad exemption. It is one of the broadest in our country, and even if that were not ample or broad enough for the protection of religious organizations and the protection of religious liberty, Rhode Island also has the Religious Freedom and Restoration Act, or RFRA, which provides additional protections and greater protections than the Federal Constitution [for religious freedoms].”

So why would Fretwell Wilson, who certainly seems to know a thing or two about the law, mis-characterize both the Senate bill and Rhode Island’s long standing commitment to conscience and religious freedom? Perhaps it is because she is part of the “mainstream academic presence” aligned with “Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, a public interest law firm based in Washington, D.C., and the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB).”

A March, 2013 report entitled “Redefining Religious Liberty: The Covert Campaign Against Civil Rights” by Jay Michaelson for the Political Research Associates describes “A highly active, well-funded network of conservative Roman Catholic intellectuals and evangelicals” that “are waging a vigorous challenge to LGBTQ and reproductive rights by charging that both threaten their right-wing definition of “religious liberty.”

The report is comprehensive, well-sourced, and names names. It specifically identifies Robin Fretwell Wilson as being part of a “regular consortium” of scholars who “make highly conservative political arguments, send letters to state legislators, and take direct roles in the drafting of legislation. These academics may well believe that religious liberty is threatened, but their work has been enlisted by a mass movement of seeking to end access to reproductive health care and restrict the civil rights of sexual and gender minorities.” (emphasis mine)

Paiva Weed may also truly believe that she is advocating for religious liberty when she buys into the arguments of the religious right, but she is mistaken. These new calls for “religious liberty” are really calls for the right to discriminate based on gender identity and sexual preference.

In yesterday’s ProJo Bernard Healey, chief lobbyist for the Providence Catholic Diocese, regurgitated these fallacious arguments in an attempt to twist the meaning of religious liberty into its exact opposite.

Schools, health-care facilities and a hospital that are operated by the diocese and “employ thousands of people” would be subject to new rules, some of which violate the diocese’s long-held beliefs, he said. [Healey] pointed to a case in New York, which approved same-sex marriage in 2011, in which a lesbian employee of a Catholic hospital is suing for family benefits.

“If you look in the civil code of Rhode Island, how many times is marriage listed,” Healey said. “It’s not just in the marriage section, it’s in business law, it’s in rental law, it’s in employment law, it’s everywhere. … If that bill that passed in the House is put into law, we would be subject to all types of harassments, lawsuits, litigations.”

Healey makes the extraordinary claim that denying lesbian employees of Catholic hospitals family health benefits is “a long held religious belief.” Healey further claims that his right to discriminate against certain families is being threatened by the marriage equality law. Healey wants the right to open a business, and then discriminate against those his religion deems unworthy of his goods and services. In Healey’s case, this means that LGBTQ citizens need not apply, but other religions might have other ideas, and if their religion demanded different forms of discrimination, the exemptions to the law Healey demands should apply to them as well.

Judge Leon Bazile, in ruling on the Loving v. Virginia case, wrote, “Almighty God created the races white, black, yellow, malay and red, and he placed them on different continents… The fact that He separated the races shows that He did not intend for the races to mix.” Surely this is a “long held religious belief” and under Healey’s logic should be protected by law. Why should we favor Healey’s desire to discriminate over Bazile’s?

Are not both views equally obscene?

As Michaelson explains:

…there should be no mistake: the Right’s “religious liberty” campaign is a key front in the broader culture war designed to fight the same social battles on new-sounding terms, and is part of a movement with old roots in Christian Dominionism (a form of theocracy) and ties to conservative Catholics who launched the antichoice movement. Its deliberate inversion of victim-oppressor dynamic has led to limits on women’s and LGBTQ people’s real freedoms in the name of defending chimerical ones. Proponents may sincerely believe that they are defending religious freedom, but the campaign’s endgame is a “Christian nation” defined in exclusively conservative terms.

And it is thus far inadequately opposed.

Rhode Island Religious Leaders Stand Up For Love


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On Sunday Rev. Geoffrey Black, general minister and president of the United Church of Christ, and Rev. Peter Morales, president of the Unitarian Universalist Association spoke at a rally at the First Unitarian Church in Providence on Benefit St. Though opponents of marriage equality often cloak their arguments in dogmatic, Bible-inspired rhetoric it is important to remember that there is another, more progressive religious voice that fully supports marriage rights for all citizens.

Here’s a video from the event, courtesy of Rhode Islanders United for Marriage:

Warwick City Council Endorses Marriage Equality


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The Warwick City Council last night became the latest to endorse marriage equality. By doing so, the Council joins a very long list that includes mayors, municipalities, churches, religious leaders, the governor, the House of Representatives and a majority of Rhode Islanders. In other words, pretty much the entire state except the Catholic Church and the state Senate.

“We deeply appreciate the Warwick City Council’s endorsement of the marriage equality legislation sponsored by Senator Nesselbush,” said Ray Sullivan, the campaign director for Rhode Islanders United for Marriage. “Along with similar resolutions from the Providence and East Providence councils, and the support of the mayors of Central Falls, Cumberland, North Providence, Pawtucket, Providence and Warwick, this is a powerful demonstration of strong grassroots support for allowing all loving, committed couples the freedom to marry in our communities.”

Thanks in part to a strong outreach effort by the Warwick Progressive Democrats, a new liberal coalition in the West Bay city, the Council unanimously adopted the resolution.

This is a great day for Warwick,” said Jeremy Rix, the city coordinator of the Warwick Progressive Democrats. “A unanimous city council has resolved that all people, regardless of sexual orientation, are entitled to the legal rights and social recognition of marriage, and urges the passage of Senate Bill 38. Thank you to the city council, the dozens who attended and shared personal stories and information on legal rights, and all who have contributed toward this moment through acts as small as discussing the need for equality with a previously unconvinced acquaintance.”

According to the Providence Journal, some 70 people showed up for the debate. For comparison, the local media highlighted that some 100 people attended a hearing on the master lever at the State House last week.

The ProJo reported on Monday that the state Senate may soon leave the Catholic Church as the last big local institution to oppose same sex marriage – or, at least, Senate President Teresa Paiva Weed said she would allow the issue to come up for a vote this month.

 


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