lumberjack_jeff
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Wed Nov-05-08 03:21 PM
Original message |
My civil rights vs someone else's. |
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Edited on Wed Nov-05-08 03:23 PM by lumberjack_jeff
I'm proud of Hillary Clinton and what her candidacy demonstrated about the progress of civil rights in this country as it pertains to gender. I'm elated about the election, about President Barack Obama and what that says about the state of civil rights as it pertains to ethnic minorities in the US.
I am very disappointed about proposition 8 and what it says about civil rights as it pertains to sexual minorities.
I think that for too long, americans have been predisposed to discriminate between "important" civil rights and "trivial" civil rights. Sadly, affinity politics factors into this greatly. Exit polls show that ethnic minorities voted for prop 8 in a big way. They also show that a great many women voted for it. It has not been demonstrated to them that the struggle for civil rights is bigger than just one or two narrowly defined groups.
We're not immune from that phenomenon here. When I expressed to a LGBT DU'er my feeling that rights for people with developmental disabilities is one of the last frontiers of civil rights, his response was "no, people with developmental disabilities already have more rights than LGBT people do". I don't want to debate that issue, but I do think that it is illustrative of the bigger problem.
Look, we all want people to pull our wagon, myself included. In order to obtain that help, we can't indulge in the kind of finger-pointing I've seen here today. We must rejoice in the victory for the AA community, and work to recruit allies to the broader cause of civil rights.
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GodlessBiker
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Wed Nov-05-08 03:26 PM
Response to Original message |
1. Have the rights of the developmentally disabled ever been put to a vote? |
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Civil rights for the LGBT community appear to be able to be voted away. I don't think that is true for any other group seeking civil rights.
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nomorenomore08
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Wed Nov-05-08 03:37 PM
Response to Original message |
2. I partially blame the right-wing reactionary framing of civil rights issues in general as |
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"special interests." When the subject is framed that way, it becomes easy to see each group struggling for an equal slice of the pie as a separate constituency whose "interests" have nothing to do with the rest of the populace, and for each group to see itself that way as well. So you have, for instance, African-American religious leaders insisting that GLBT rights "aren't the same" as civil rights for racial minorities.
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lumberjack_jeff
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Wed Nov-05-08 07:07 PM
Response to Reply #2 |
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Rights for the disabled to vote, for instance, may be considered a "special interest" but civil rights in general are not.
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Thu May 09th 2024, 06:40 PM
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