Tampa Bay
Coalition
Posts this Media Release in
Support and on Behalf of;
StopDrLaura & Chicago
Anti-Bashing Network
A message to former StopDrLaura organizers from Robin
Tyler & Andy Thayer:
Dear friends,
It's been quite awhile
since we last spoke with you, and we hope you have positive memories of your
involvement in the successful campaign to stop Laura Schlessinger's daily,
nationwide TV program. We're contacting you because we hope you will
consider organizing an event around the most important LGBT court decision of
our generation -- the Lawrence v. Texas sodomy law decision.
Events
already are being planned in West Hollywood, CA, Washington, DC, Chicago, and
perhaps other cities we don't know about yet, and we hope your city will become
one of them as well. The plan in each city is to have an event at 7 pm the
evening the decision is made, either a protest or celebration, depending on what
the Court decides. Below is a sample message (used in Chicago) about why
it's so important to organize around this historic event.
If you do
decide to organize an event, we will be happy to assist you by providing
downloadable posters and handbills which can be edited to fit your local
situation, promote your event through our national press LGBT press contacts,
list serves and our website, and by offering suggestions with how to organize
your event.
Please contact us right away if you are interesting in
participating in this, even if you're not sure yet about whether you want to
take this on. While a decision apparently has not been made yet today, it
almost definitely will be coming one of these Mondays this month.
We hope
to hear from you soon.
Best regards,
Robin Tyler
RobinTyler@aol.com
Andy
Thayer
CABNstopthehate@aol.com
773.209.1187
www.CABN.org
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Lambda Legal Updates
Community on Forthcoming Supreme Court Decision
Last Thursday Lambda Legal hosted a nationwide conference call
designed to update the community on possible outcomes in the Supreme Court's
forthcoming decision in the Texas sodomy law case. Lambda outlined the two main
legal principles at stake:
1) Our right to equal protection
under the law. In other words, gays, lesbians and bisexuals should not
be singled out for legal discrimination by laws which specifically target
same-sex sodomy, but say nothing about heterosexual sodomy. The laws in Texas
and a few other states do this.
2) Our right to privacy.
Like with the right to abortion, LGBT and straight people living in states which
outlaw sodomy in general have private lives which the state has no business
intruding upon.
If the court strikes down the Texas case on the equal
protection grounds, while this would affect sodomy laws in only a few states,
the effect could be very far-reaching. By enshrining the legal principle of
equal protection for gays, lesbians and bisexuals, the court could be forced to
move along the path of endorsing our rights in a whole host of different areas
such as marriage, military service, employment, housing, equal accomodations,
perhaps even more. Favorable court decisions on marriage, or its equilivent,
across Canada and in Vermont are examples of equal protection under
law.
If the court strikes down the Texas case on the basis of people's
right to privacy, it will likely nix all of the country's sodomy laws, a big
victory for LGBT people particularly in many conservative southern and western
states (the overwhelming majority of those on the conference call). By
reinforcing the right to privacy, this would also help stem the erosion of
Roe v. Wade.
The court may decide to endorse both principles, just
one of the principles, or uphold Texas's retrograd legislation in its entirety.
Which ever way it goes, we are facing the most significant LGBT court decision
of our lifetimes.
Consequently, we must be prepared to
act:
* In CELEBRATION if the court upholds one or both principles of equal protection
and/or privacy. If we win, our community must ACT to press our advantage.
Why? Because history has sometimes seen good court decisions
which remained dead letters because there wasn't yet the public pressure
to force their implementation. Case in point: the famous 1954 Brown v. Board
of Education of Topeka, Kansas decision promised to desegregate the nation's
schools "with all due deliberate speed" . . . but nothing happened until
the Civil Rights Movement heated up in the early 1960s and forced the
federal government to act.
* We will act in
PROTEST if the court upholds the reactionary Texas legislation. It is
dangerous to simply take attacks on our community lying down. If we lose, we
need to send a powerful message to the larger citizenry that Lesbian, Gay,
Bisexual and Transgendered people will not meekly accept rotten court decisions
or legislation. Our self-respect, and our commitment to total equal rights not
only for us, but for future generations of LGBT people, if nothing else, demands
that we protest and begin to organize our community, locally and nationally, to
make our voices heard.
Either way, we need to be prepared to act quite
soon. Lambda said that the decision almost definitely will be announced at about
9:30 am (our time) on a Monday in June. -- i.e., we might need to act as
quickly as today!
We are asking LGBT folk and our straight supporters to
gather at 7 PM on the day of the
Court's decision at the corner of Roscoe and Halsted, Chicago. We will celebrate or protest the court's decision and
indicate what appear to be our next steps.
So please sign up to our
emergency contact list by going to the following website, www.CABN.org/DefendOurRights
to pledge your public
support for this action, or to get more information.
Thank you!
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