Who are the real victims of Prop 8?
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Conservatives have for decades cultivated a politics of victimhood - presenting themselves as victims of some group, usually liberal and often an oppressed minority, in order to gain sympathy for their insane beliefs and to delegitimize progressive ideas and actions. We're witnessing it on Proposition 8 as well, and now the media is playing along. The result is a massive distortion of the true effects of Prop 8, and the normalization of support for discriminatory policy.

The specific case is that of Margie Christofferson, who quit her job as a manager at LA's El Coyote Restaurant under pressure from activists and customers angry at her donation of $100 to the Yes on 8 campaign. Her journey from oppressor to victim has been aided by Steve Lopez of the LA Times, who wrote a deeply flawed column on Sunday casting Christofferson as a sympathetic figure:

Margie Christoffersen didn't make it very far into our conversation before she cracked. Chest heaving, tears streaming, she reached for her husband Wayne's hand and then mine, squeezing as if she'd never let go.

"I've almost had a nervous breakdown. It's been the worst thing that's ever happened to me," she sobbed as curious patrons at a Farmers Market coffee shop looked on, wondering what calamity had visited this poor woman who's an honest 6 feet tall, with hair as blond as the sun.


That sets the tone for a column that blames the victims of Prop 8 for making this poor woman cry, and Lopez isn't above repeating disputed claims that riot police showed up at El Coyote during a recent rally. But perhaps the most troubling part of the column was Lopez' normalization of her support for discrimination:

But I didn't like what I was hearing about the vilification of Margie Christoffersen and others in California being targeted for the crime of voting their conscience.


"Voting our conscience" has been one of the key methods by which Prop 8 supporters have escaped responsibility for their actions or even acknowledging what Prop 8 was - an attack on the legal equality of thousands of Californians merely for their sexual orientation. When framed this way the Yes on 8 position becomes almost unassailable, immune to criticism. "They're just voting their conscience," we're supposed to think, and not be allowed to ask them to face the realities of what they have done, not be allowed to criticize them for voting to take away equal rights and destroy existing marriages, and not be allowed to act with our own conscience by denying those who backed Prop 8 our patronage. Each of those acts is cast as an aggressive and hurtful act, where the oppressed are cast as oppressors.

Lopez mentions almost in passing that "thousands [of gay people] feel as though their civil rights have been violated" but their concerns and views don't get the sob story treatment Margie Christofferson got - even though she knew full well what she was giving money for, and continues to believe that her vote for Prop 8 was the right move. As Lisa Derrick notes she has never apologized to her once-loyal customers for what she did. Obviously she feels no need to offer any such apology.

Lopez' column writes the real victims of Prop 8 out of the story and replaces them with their victimizers. Once again GLBT Californians and their fundamental rights are treated as either deviant or invisible. The only people whose opinions matter are those who oppose gay rights, and if someone dares call it out then they become the oppressors. Standing up for gay rights, for marriage equality, becomes itself an act of hate.

Margie Christofferson is not a sympathetic figure. She is someone in deep denial of reality, who is unwilling to reconcile her relationships with her own intolerance. It's not the rest of Los Angeles's job to play along with it, to enable it, to pretend as if it doesn't exist. Doing so merely continues the decades of injustice that comes when good people do nothing and discrimination is treated as normal.

It would be nice if the traditional media would recognize this. It's not likely that they will. Martin Luther King, Jr. may be venerated today but he was a controversial figure in his day who received FAR more criticism from the media than credit, who was told that the March on Washington was a dangerous provocation that should not be attempted. The Civil Rights Movement rightly refused to let such concern trolling stop them. We who are part of the marriage equality movement would do well to learn that lesson.

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And what is Obama signaling to us?
By Unknown user, Dec 17, 2008 at 8:47:26 AM PT (Updated: Dec 17, 2008 at 8:47:26 AM PT )
And now today, we learn that Obama has chosen Rick Warren of Saddleback to deliver his Inaugural Invocation. Sent a chill down my spine. This man opposes women's rights, gay rights and stem cell research. He basically told his congregation to vote for Prop 8 because God has spoken. So what does this signal to gays for Obama to have this man give his invocation as he takes the oath of office? Obama now has to prove to gays it's not going to be more of the same. I'm offended, to say the least, and waiting to see change I can believe in.
Re: And what is Obama signaling to us?
By Unknown user, Dec 19, 2008 at 7:14:09 AM PT (Updated: Dec 19, 2008 at 7:14:09 AM PT )
This is not a single-issue country. I strongly support marriage for gays. But Warren has shown himself to be an important potential ally for many other social justice causes that have gotten short shrift in the evangelical community and yet are important: poverty and the environment, for example.
The fact is that Obama did not appoint Warren to a cabinet or advisory position. Obama allowed Warren to have a speaking role that will likely not delve into gay issues. Obama has always tried to build a broad coalition, and this is consistent with that approach.
Obama has stated his disagreement with Warren's positions on a number of topics.
Rather than being upset about Warren's invocation, it is more constructive to do what we can to continue the dialogue about why marriage should be open to gays. The Courage Campaign is taking the right approach now with inviting Warren to debate. Unfocused anger manifesting itself in "Day without a Gay" protests or mad letters sent to the inauguration committee is much less effective. We need to get Americans talking, not recoiling.
Re: And what is Obama signaling to us?
By Unknown user, Dec 19, 2008 at 7:36:40 AM PT (Updated: Dec 19, 2008 at 7:36:40 AM PT )
Intolerance and bigotry have NO place in this inauguration, or in
our democracy. Obama's choice to present this man to the world as some moral guide is nothing short of insulting.
  
Why Warren should speak
By Unknown user, Dec 19, 2008 at 7:34:49 AM PT (Updated: Dec 19, 2008 at 7:34:49 AM PT )
Political power is greater when you crush a popular opponent's position after allowing him to speak, rather than letting the opponent's supporters take on the mantle of victimhood about being shut out of the dialogue.
Re: Why Warren should speak
By Unknown user, Dec 19, 2008 at 7:44:34 AM PT (Updated: Dec 19, 2008 at 7:44:34 AM PT )
Here's why I agree that having Rick Warren at Obama's inauguration is a stroke of political genius: Do you realize how many right-wing Christian Evangelicals have got their knickers in a twist over Warren's association with Obama? They're fit to be tied. Sure, many of Warren's opinions are Paleolithic. But by pulling Warren in his orbit, Obama has begun to neutralize the potent Evangelical political acid. Nothing like co-opting a movement to weaken it.
  
Progressive? President Obama
By Unknown user, Dec 19, 2008 at 12:31:12 PM PT (Updated: Dec 19, 2008 at 12:31:12 PM PT )
So President-elect Barak Obama is not as "progressive" as you expected! Joke is on you!
During the campaign how much did he promise of what you want him to do? Not just say nice words but actually promise he'll do.
During the campaign some people said a McCain administration would be like a third term of George Bush. So far it looks like Obama's administration will be like a third term of Bill Clinton. Obama has hired many of Clinton's people and is trying to be president for all the people by appealing to conservatives(inviting Rick Warren), Republicans (two cabinet positions so far) and middle-of-the-road people as well as liberals.
  

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