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Religion > Religious Right Celbrates End of Interracial ... .
 

Religious Right Celbrates End of Interracial ... .

From Alternet and the Huffington Post...

AlterNet

Religious Right Celebrates End of Interracial Marriage Ban


By Evan Derkacz, Huffington Post
Posted on May 12, 2008, Printed on May 13, 2008
https://www.alternet.org/bloggers/https://www.huffingtonpost.com//85184/

Tony Perkins' Family Research Council may be the brightest star in the Christian Right constellation, with
deep ties to the unholy trinity of the Republican party, James Dobson's
Focus on the Family and even Blackwater USA--the military contractor
whose malfeasance is fast becoming the stuff of legend.

Their
email alerts, which I receive daily, can be distressingly cloying,
deploying middle-age dad puns and witticisms worthy of the uniquely
middle-american craft of crochet-art. Recent subject headings read:
"Ligers, Tigons, and Zonkeys, Oh My!" (warning against the dangers of
genetic engineering) and "Meet the Robinsons" (warning against the
dangers of certain high-ranking, gay Episcopalians getting married).

And, despite connections to white supremacist groups documented by both the Southern Poverty Law Center and the Nation's Max Blumenthal, the FRC throws in the occasional right wing black preacher like Bishop Harry Jackson, nods to a self-serving slice of the Dr. King legacy and, this past week, a
tribute to the Rosa Parks of miscegenation, Mildred Loving, who died on
May 2nd. (Note: the white supremacist connections don't end there by a
long shot. One could--and one still may--devote a whole post or series
of posts to these connections...)

The FRC devotes a significant
portion of its tribute to Loving to caution readers: "Although
homosexual activists are fond of portraying the Lovings' victory as a
precedent for their cause, the Loving case didn't alter the definition of marriage but affirmed it by allowing any man to marry any woman. The nation is indebted to
Mildred for a legacy that so aptly lives up to the couple's shared
name."

There are at least two critical things to keep in mind
while reading this. First, the embarrassing, then the meat. It's not
just "homosexual activists" who see parallels in the Loving case--it's
Mildred herself. On June 12, 2007, the 40th anniversary of the Loving case (a decision handed down just months before MLK was killed in
Memphis, by the by), Mildred penned a public statement that included
these liberal sentiments (full PDF here; italics mine):


Surrounded as I am now by wonderful
children and grandchildren, not a day goes by that I don't think of
Richard and our love, our right to marry, and how much it meant to me
to have that freedom to marry the person precious to me, even if others
thought he was the "wrong kind of person" for me to marry. I
believe all Americans, no matter their race, no matter their sex, no
matter their sexual orientation, should have that same freedom to
marry. Government has no business imposing some people's religious
beliefs over others. Especially if it denies people's civil rights
.


Second,
and perhaps more important, is the tendency for conservative groups to
adjust their views to give the Groundhog Day-like impression that to
believe in what is (now) the culturally appropriate view is eminently
"conservative" (as in: "traditional," "unchanging," or "objectively
true").

Nothing could be further from the truth.
The
fact is, these very welcome props to Mildred Loving and her husband
Richard are deeply, abidingly, and intrinsically progressive values.
They are the values of those whose sense of justice transcends the
tunnel vision of time; of those who have both the vision to question
received wisdom and the guts to express it. The argument that
acceptance of gay marriage might (or would necessarily) lead to people
marrying 5 people, dogs, or lizards finally makes sense. It could only
be birthed from the conservative mindset which, for many of its
proponents, carries the burden of a North-less moral compass when it
comes to reassessing that which is codified in the pew, PTA meeting, or
backyard bbq.

A final note, lest I be accused of negativity: it seems that the arc of justice may not only not be terribly long, it may be more of a zig-zag than an arc. Gay marriage
remains more of an electoral tactic than a moral issue for the majority
of those who have the power to do anything about it legislatively; not
much is bound to happen soon. But, according to Wikipedia,
the author of the 1966 decision to uphold the ban on interracial
marriage, Justice Harry L. Carrico: "was succeeded as Chief Justice by
Leroy Rountree Hassell, Sr., the first black Chief Justice of the
Supreme Court of Virginia." But then conservatives and the religious
right were probably for that from the start.


© 2008 Huffington Post All rights reserved.
View this story online at: https://www.alternet.org/bloggers/https://www.huffingtonpost.com//85184/




posted on May 13, 2008 6:44 AM ()

Comments:

McCain now suggests that 2013 is a good year to be out of Iraq [so do Hillary and Barack]. He can get away with this flip because nobody has asked him about this since last September.
comment by bumpedoff on May 15, 2008 2:39 PM ()

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