LGBT
Related: About this forumWhy It Matters What One Tennessee County Party Does
Memphis is an odd, wonderful town. This city, which has been so integral to the narrative of the Civil Rights Movement, and in which I have made my home for years, still struggles in many ways to achieve the dreams of justice for all advocated by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., who was assassinated here in 1968. On April 4, the 44th anniversary of that event, vigils and remembrances were held around the National Civil Rights Museum in Downtown Memphis, and there was a visible contingent from the LGBT community, joining the crowd in paying homage to Dr. King and keeping alive the spirit of his famous words, the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.
When President Obama announced last month that his position on marriage equality had evolved, it was a turning point here and nationwide on that arc. Though the Civil Rights movement and the movement for LGBT equality are not the same, they share common threads. There are those who scoff at the two being connected in any way, and there are surely gay rights supporters who perhaps inadvertently gloss over the sheer brutality of what happened in Memphis and around the country during the Civil Rights Movement, but as Dr. Kings late wife Coretta Scott King said in 2003, I still hear people say that I should not be talking about the rights of lesbian and gay people... but I hasten to remind them that Martin Luther King, Jr. said, Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.
With those words in mind, it was heartening this month to be a participant, with our organization Truth Wins Out, as the Shelby County Democratic Party took a stand for justice for all people by following President Obamas lead and officially coming out in support of marriage equality. To our knowledge, this county party is the first in the South to take that step, which, considering Memphiss history, seems appropriate.
Folks who arent too familiar with the South might not be at fault for watching the national headlines on most issues involving minorities and concluding that the region is fairly hopeless, and Tennessee is certainly no stranger to embarrassing itself in public when it comes to social and scientific issues. Over the past year, Tennessees legislature has considered bills banning the use of the word gay in schools; banning any sex-ed that discusses gateway activities to sex including, but not limited to, hand-holding, kissing and, presumably, talking; making sure that antigay kids right to bully is protected; and ensuring that the nonexistent debate over evolution be re-opened in schools, in an attempt to send us back to the days before that awful science teacher Scopes had the audacity to teach science in his classroom. Indeed, activists around the state are exhausted from merely attempting to read the barrage of ignorant, hateful legislation introduced by Tennessees finest wingnuts over the last year.
http://www.advocate.com/commentary/2012/06/06/evan-hurst-says-it-matters-tennessee-county-party-endorsed-marriage