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May 22nd, 2009 by dianna

The Prop 8 Oral Arguments on March 5, 2009: The “peaceful” rally, as stated by most of the local news stations, was a very different experience for me. After watching channel 2, 4, 5 and 7 news I couldn’t believe some of the stories they chose NOT to cover.

Sign reads "Dan White Hero for killing Queers"

Sign reads: Dan White was a hero for killing a queer

For example, how about the bus loads of Ukrainians that were brought in from Sacramento with massive “Yes on 8″ signs and scripts/instructions that they were given to say to anyone that would engage in a light debate. What i found most interesting about this group was that they mostly engaged with the young teens/adults in the crowds. When i approached the older men (40-60 age range) with questions of my own, i literally got NO RESPONSE. I found it strange at first, but then realized that they really didn’t have any depth of knowledge on the issue and so anything outside of their script was not something they were prepared for. The young men in that group were much more engaging but all they could say was hateful things about fags and that gay people were going to hell. They also then kindly reminded me that if i was gay i could not have children. They also insisted they would never have fags as kids because, well, it wouldn’t be allowed. I found this group fascinating because it took so little to get 100 of them together with big signs and scripts and have such a presence at this rally. The only thing unclear to me was if this group of young men and a sprinkling of adults had been paid to be there. I couldn’t get that out of them. They even were organized to block the views of those talking on the courthouse steps with their massive signs while the rest of us with small “I DO” signs stood behind. Brilliant!

I just wondered why theĀ ”No on 8″ side hadn’t organized as well. We have more then a handful of organizations that we are all pouring our money into and yet, there was no clear presence of any of them. Why? I’ll leave that topic for another blog post.

The next “Yes on 8″ group was church organized. They had red shirts that said something like, “Marriage = 1 Man + 1 Woman” along with small white tabloid size signs. They handed out to anyone interested the red T-shirts and the signs - another smart move since the shirts were so loud. This group was about half the size of the first group. They were a bit more respectful, also engaging in dialogue with the opposing side, but with some emotion in the conversation unlike the above more organized (potentially paid for) group.

Lastly, there were the normal, unorganized group of “Yes on 8″ individuals that were few and far between. They clearly put themselves in the middle of the organized group for safety reasons, but stood quietly with their signs.

The debates were not always respectful, there was a lot of yelling, cursing, and even physical contact with many of these people. The police got involved in at least 5 altercations that i was also involved in. I was hit, and hit a few people back. Signs were ripped out of peoples hands, and the emotions were beyond boiling point for most of the day.

Amazing that the Mormons were not visibly present, unless they actually were indirectly via the organized group…

Below are some of the faces of those people along with their messages:

Man quoted as saying okay if kids commit suicide if gay

Man quoted as saying okay if kids commit suicide if gay

Ukranian Yes on 8 Teenager - Hates Fags

Ukrainian Yes on 8 Teenager - Hates Fags

Yes on 8 Marriage = 1 Man + 1 Woman T-shirt crowd

Yes on 8 Marriage = 1 Man + 1 Woman T-shirt crowd

Now, on the “No on 8″ side it was an eclectic group of unorganized individuals that more than tripled the presence of the “Yes on 8″ groups, but because of the lack of one voice, it appears to be much smaller of a group. The one visual that stands out for me during this entire day was a single woman with her “I Want the Freedom to Marry” sign, standing in the center of the “Yes on 8″ crowd, often standing with silent tears running down her face as individuals were yelling at her. She was the most beautiful presence at that rally.

SF Prop 8 Oral Arguments Rally: Ashley Rojas behind a "Yes on 8" Protester

SF Prop 8: Ashley Rojas stands alone

SF Prop 8 Oral Arguments Rally

SF Prop 8 Oral Arguments Rally

There were also the young kids from King Middle School in Berkeley that were as strong and bold as any seasoned activist. They were heard and felt throughout the rally as they yelled at the “Yes on 8″ groups with a passion that was so refreshing to see.

November 13th, 2008 by dianna

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November 8th, 2008 by dianna

I wrote the following letter to my mom, hopeful and fearful of the transition i am taking with this site. Hopeful that it allows me to further find my voice, and fearful for the people in my parents community that are going to read it and share their disappointment with me, or worse, my mother. I keep looking at the words at the top of my blog and hearing my fathers voice as he says them: Love, Accept, Forgive, Pray, Do Good, Love with Agape love (LAFPDL). When i read it, it calms me down, as his words always have…

_________
Mom, I’ve been meaning to write you a note sharing with you the transition i am taking with the website i originally created to house dads work and bev’s scholarship after they died. It has been 8 years since their passing and i find myself wanting to use it for more than that memory now.

I want to take a moment to share with you where i think i am going with it. In my heart i think that the subject of posts i make on the LAFPDL blog will vary over time but will topics focused around: Humanity, Equality, Christianity, Philanthropy and Life. Right now it looks like all around Prop 8, but over time it will also be about the philanthropic work i am doing personally with all of you (Bev’s scholarship) as well as efforts i am developing through my work. I will also talk about things on my heart and mind that i want to share with others related to the subjects mentioned above. As you have seen this past week, i think i have found a courage and a voice that i need to continue to use or i fear may go dormant again - this prop 8 situation woke me up and i’m now wanting to speak out on all kinds of issues related to what i believe is needed to have a compassionate, peaceful world.

i will always link to dads work, but i no longer want to be totally generic with the message i have on the site in fear of offending anyone that may be looking for dads work. I think that as long as i make it clear that his work is a part of the site but not necessarily 100% views that he would have — i think he would have been okay with that. if you disagree and want me to pull his talks down i can, but i really have no desire to do that unless you ask me to. if you do, i’ll respect that and pull them down without any hurt feelings.

I love you and am very excited about where my heart is taking me. xxoo -dine

November 6th, 2008 by dianna

Newsom was central to same-sex marriage saga (Erin Allday, Chronicle Staff Writer)

Thursday, November 6, 2008

A week before the election, Mayor Gavin Newsom was walking out of City Hall when an elderly man stopped him. He looked to be in his mid-80s, and he had an accent, German or Austrian.

He said in a quiet voice, “Mr. Mayor, thank you,” Newsom recalled. “Thank you for what you did for my daughter.”

The old man teared up and turned away, which was probably for the best, Newsom said. Otherwise both men would have been crying.

“Here’s this guy, 15-20 years ago, imagine his daughter coming out and telling him she’s gay. And now look at him,” Newsom said. “I have not a second of regret about what we’ve done for same-sex marriage.”

Rudi's mom and dad

Walt - Rudis dad

Newsom’s rash decision four years ago to allow same-sex marriages, a choice made less than three weeks into his first term, fueled what arguably is the next civil rights movement. The debate over gay and lesbian rights, long simmering in the background of the national political landscape, has become one of the most important social issues of a generation.

Newsom kicked it off with an act of civil disobedience two days before Valentine’s Day 2004 - the marriage of two women who had been together more than 50 years - and set off what would become a 29-day festival of same-sex weddings in City Hall.

A court injunction stopped those marriages, and the debate shifted to the California Supreme Court. When that court allowed the marriages in May this year, the parties started again - for 5 1/2 months, gays and lesbians had the legal right to marry.

It was, many couples have said with more than a little irony, a honeymoon period for gays and lesbians. But those months were tainted, they said, by the bitter fight over Proposition 8, the most expensive social-issue campaign in U.S. history.

On election day, California voters decided they could not support same-sex marriages, writing into the state Constitution that only a man and a woman may legally wed.

“I didn’t think I’d feel so emotional when we married,” said Michelle Kilmer, who wed her partner in a ceremony at their Pacific Grove home on Aug. 30. The couple’s 16-year-old son walked them down the aisle, and Kilmer’s father also attended. She hadn’t spoken to him in the 16 years since she came out to her family.

“I was shaking. I could hardly talk when we said our vows. I didn’t realize how much we were missing,” Kilmer said. “They can’t take away the experience of that day or the healing that happened in my family because of it. But I feel really devastated that other people are not going to be able to have that.”

Instead of the noisy celebrations of weddings that had reverberated through City Hall over the past few months, the building was silent Wednesday.

Genesis of an idea

Newsom has been blamed for a variety of shortcomings related to same-sex marriage, but few have accused him of using the topic as a calculated political maneuver. If anything, even his Democratic allies have argued, he should have put a bit more thought into it.

Newsom said the idea of marrying the couples came to him during President Bush’s State of the Union address on Jan. 20, 2004. Newsom attended the speech and was quietly groaning along with other Democrats when Bush reached a section about social policies and the Defense of Marriage Act.

“This is 2004, we’re in the middle of two wars, we’ve got global warming, we have the health care crisis, and this guy is talking about abstinence and steroid abuse and marriage? In the State of the Union?” Newsom said. “I mean, don’t get me wrong, sure, I’m for abstinence, steroids are wrong, I don’t like drugs. But I’m not sure I’d put it in my damn State of the Union. And then he ends this speech, the crescendo of the speech is Defense of Marriage.”

Newsom said he felt sick as he walked out with a long line of politicians, and then he heard people praising Bush’s speech and a few mention how pleased they were to hear the president “stand up on the gay issue.”

“I remember thinking I must be living in a parallel universe,” Newsom said.

He walked out into the January cold and decided to skip a party hosted by then-House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi. Instead, he made some phone calls. He asked his chief of staff, Steve Kawa, to look into what it would take to marry same-sex couples in San Francisco.

The answer was remarkably simple. The county clerk said technically it would require only changing a few lines on the form that couples filled out - instead of “bride” and “groom,” they would ask for “applicant one” and “applicant two.”

City Attorney Dennis Herrera also was drawn in right away. He said he embraced the idea, and he tasked his staff with two priorities: Make sure the city was following the letter of the law as closely as possible, and prepare a lawsuit to be filed the minute a court injunction stopped the weddings.

“We knew we were going to have to address the constitutionality issue,” Herrera said. “Essentially right when the court issued its decision, it was inviting us to file a lawsuit, and we were ready to move within an hour saying the marriage laws were unconstitutional.”

Newsom was not without opponents, even among his most trusted staff and mentors. His political advisers said it would be career suicide. His staff members said they needed more time.

Most troublesome, the country was heading into a major national election, with the presidency up for grabs in the midst of war and economic instability. The state’s most prominent Democrats begged Newsom not to move forward. When he refused to listen, he was eventually blamed for the party’s failing to win the presidency.

Till death

The first same-sex marriage ceremony in San Francisco was a small, teary-eyed event in a private office of the city’s assessor-recorder department. Del Martin and Phyllis Lyon, then 83 and 79 respectively, were two days short of their 51st anniversary when they married on Feb. 12, 2004.

Only about 20 people attended the ceremony, which was officiated by then-Assessor-Recorder Mabel Teng. The words “spouses for life” stood in for “husband and wife” - a change now universal in same-sex weddings.

Newsom, for all his strategizing to make the wedding happen, did not attend. He’d been advised to steer clear to avoid politicizing the event. Instead, he said, he paced his office, frustrated that it was taking so long for the wedding to take place.

Everyone in City Hall was worried, he said, that the court would issue an injunction before the marriage. The plan had been to marry Martin and Lyon before 9 a.m. - before the courts opened. But the process was taking longer than expected, and the couple didn’t exchange vows until 11:06 a.m.

“I was furious,” Newsom said. “I was upstairs because I didn’t want to create a political melee, and I kept calling down, like, ‘Guys, are you done yet?’ I kept thinking it wasn’t going to happen.”

That first day, everyone waited for the court injunction. The plan was that as soon as the court ordered the city to stop issuing marriage licenses, the city would obey.

No one expected the injunction to take 29 days.

That first day, 90 couples were married in City Hall. By the end of the long Presidents Day weekend on Feb. 17, more than 2,200 couples from around the state and country had been issued marriage licenses. At one point, the flood of callers knocked the City Hall phone system out of service.

Couples lined up around the block to get married. Some camped overnight. Cheers and applause regularly rang from the building, which stayed open extra hours to handle the wedding load. So many flowers were delivered that the extras were sent to local hospitals. One volunteer married 457 couples in less than a month.

Parties halted

The injunction finally came on March 11. By then, 4,000 same-sex couples had been issued marriage licenses. All of the marriages later were annulled by the state Supreme Court.

As promised, Herrera filed a lawsuit immediately after the injunction. His top deputy, Therese Stewart, would see the battle through to the end as the case’s lead attorney. She passionately argued to the court that denying gays and lesbians the right to marry - even if they were allowed civil unions and had all the legal trappings of marriage - was unconstitutional.

It was perhaps the greatest shock of the same-sex marriage battle when on May 15 when the Republican-dominated California Supreme Court declared marriage a constitutional right for gays and lesbians.

The 4-3 ruling stunned both opponents and supporters of same-sex marriage. By the eve of the court’s announced ruling, rumors were circling that the justices were going to rule against the city. Herrera had written a defeat speech.

The Supreme Court that issued the ruling was a 6-1 majority of Republican appointees, including Chief Justice Ronald George, who was appointed to the high court by Gov. Pete Wilson in 1991.

George had written opinions in several civil rights cases, including a 1997 ruling overturning a law requiring parental consent for abortions for minors. The California Supreme Court was the first in the country to overturn a ban on interracial marriages, and George largely borrowed from that historic 1948 decision.

George wrote in his opinion that, among other things, the voter-approved state law against same-sex marriages effectively suggested that “gay individuals and same-sex couples are in some respects ’second-class citizens.’ ”

The constitution makes clear, he wrote, that “the right to marry represents the right of an individual to establish a legally recognized family with the person of one’s choice, and, as such, is of fundamental significance both to society and to the individual.”

Cheers erupted from the steps of the state Supreme Court building when the ruling was revealed, and revelers impulsively crossed the plaza and filled City Hall. Newsom said at the time that he was so moved by the news that he was afraid he’d start crying in front of his staff, or worse, in front of the hundreds of people waiting to hear him speak.

The parties that had started in February 2004 began anew. The city restarted the ceremonies on the evening of June 16, starting with Martin and Lyon - by then together for 55 years. Martin was very sick and died just two months later.

Yet before the ruling was even announced, conservative groups were collecting signatures for a ballot initiative to ban such unions. It qualified as the eighth measure on Nov. 4 ballot.

‘Like it or not’

It was on the day of the Supreme Court ruling that Newsom gave his passionate speech on same-sex marriage and civil rights.

In that speech, he said: “As California goes, so goes the rest of the nation. It’s inevitable. This door’s wide open now. It’s going to happen, whether you like it or not.”

Those words would come back to haunt Newsom and the campaign in support of same-sex marriage. It became the battle cry of the opponents of same-sex marriage, featured in radio and TV advertisements to display not just Newsom’s perceived arrogance, but also the fear that supporters of gay and lesbian rights planned to trample over the beliefs of the rest of the state.

Newsom would take center stage again when he officiated at the wedding of a lesbian couple in City Hall, only to learn later that a group of schoolchildren - students of one of the women - had taken a day off to celebrate with their teacher. It was fresh material for the Yes on 8 campaign.

The battle over Prop. 8 quickly became vicious, on both sides. Campaigns pitted families and neighbors against one another. Fights broke out in some cities.

For the thousands of gay and lesbian couples in California who got married in the past five months, the joy and exhilaration of planning their weddings often was tainted by the bitter campaigns and the uncertainty of what would happen to their marriages after the election. On several occasions, City Hall weddings were interrupted by protesters, or couples found themselves walking through anti-same-sex-marriage rallies on the steps outside the building.

In many respects, Newsom has taken the blame all over again, this time for the loss of same-sex marriage. Political analysts say the success of Prop. 8 could, in fact, mean the end of his long-term career.

But the battle over same-sex marriage goes on.

“This country ultimately gets it right. That was my point in that speech,” Newsom said. “It was about the march of equality. It’s not always an easy fight. In fact, it’s never been easy. But whether the majority of people like it or not, we get it right.”

That provides little comfort to the couples who were married in the past 5 1/2 months.

By the end of the day Tuesday, more than 18,000 same-sex couples had been issued marriage licenses in California, according to estimates by the Williams Institute at UCLA School of Law. More than a quarter of those were in San Francisco. No one knows exactly how many gay and lesbian weddings took place because marriage licenses don’t include the gender of the spouses.

“What happens won’t take anything away from us personally,” said Robert Stahman of San Francisco, who married Jim Liefer, his partner of 15 years, on Monday.

“It will hurt from a discrimination standpoint,” Liefer said. “But today, getting married, will still be a great day, a great memory for us. That won’t change.”

E-mail Erin Allday at eallday@sfchronicle.com.

October 31st, 2008 by dianna

YouTube Preview Image

My friend sent this video to me about 2 people that couldn’t get married at another point in our great history. i hope to someday be in a similar video with my partner…

Think about it, and forward it on.

November 22nd, 2007 by dianna

I reread this note i wrote 6 years ago and thought it still relevant for today. So i dusted it off and am resurfacing it. -d

This time last year? (Written on Thanksgiving 2001)
How many of us ever dreamed that we would look back one short year and think, “those were the good times, times of innocents, prosperity, chaos, and ‘focus on what was important’ to us.”

Three generations who truly believing that our world would always be what we had experienced since birth: unlimited possibilities, wealth with no limits, gold mines of opportunity in every direction, focus on ourselves, our families, our success.

Favor was ours whether we believed it was because of our own drive, our Gods love, our family’s support. “Why?” didn’t matter, we had it, expected it, counted our blessings because it just “was.”

And then, as quickly as the seasons change, as when you think that summer will last forever even though you know it has to end, it does, and we are surprised. Surprised?! Surprised when a loved one dies. Embarrassed when a political race is watched by the world and our reputation as a nation is threatened yet again. In disbelief when our economy declines. Shocked when the gold mine has no more magic/fools gold to be found. Horrified when our nations soil, our nations people, are destroyed by those that have hated us passionately for so long because of all that we stand for, all that we have done. Amazed when a President whom many felt was disconnected from the people shows up, grows up, and becomes a leader. Humbled when we look to strangers for comfort and realize that they are not that different from ourselves.

We are a collage of people brought together by a series of devastating events and forced to re-evaluate who we are, what we stand for, what we believe, and what is important. The “us” that use to include a select few, now encompasses a nation. Our freedom is threatened, our families have been torn apart and yet we find Hope - still.

And so on this morning of Thanksgiving I sit quietly reflecting on the year. We, as a nation gather with our families, some of us with a new definition of what creates family. We are going to gather in a few hours with this family and we want to be Thankful. We are Thankful, through it all, we realized so much this year to be thankful for.

We are no longer a nation of seekers for what we may never obtain but of doers for what is important today.

We no longer expect that the world will be what it was but we are grateful for what it is today ??? not yesterday, not tomorrow, but today.

The fool’s gold dust has been cleared from our eyes and we now see reality, and it is OK.

The future may be uncertain, but we are no longer fooled into thinking that it was ever certain.

The definition of “our” and “us” has changed, there is a focus outside of our immediate selves.

The loss of the people will never be forgotten, it may never even be behind us, but we will learn to hold it dearly beside us, not to hold us back.

As I write I have such gratitude for all that has occurred, not because it was all good. God knows that it wasn’t. But because I feel I have been woken up from a trance like state and forced to truly see the world, not just my small part of it, and begin to participate in it without blinders or rose colored glasses. To learn to serve others, not just myself.

As many of you know, my father lived his life by the “Prayer of St. Francis” that is so simply stated but yet so complex to execute on. If I can learn to live a fraction of this prayer, that will be a miraculous gift given to me by my God, and yet I must always remember that gifts can only be given if we are willing to receive them. And so, my constant challenge is to always be willing to receive by constantly giving of myself.

And with this reflection, I hope to give to you my love, gratitude and prayers for all of the support you have given me, because without all of you I would not be exactly who I am today.

Many generations expectations of life have been redefined in this year, and this one small individual has seen it as a year of brokenness yes ??? but more importantly as a year of healing.

God bless you all.

The Prayer of St. Francis
A Prayer of Saint Francis of Assisi
Lord, make an instrument of your peace.
When there is hatred, let me sow love;
Where there is injury, pardon;
Where there is doubt, faith;
Where there is despair, hope;
Where there is darkness, light;
And where there is sadness, joy.
O Divine Master; Grant that I may not so much seek
to be consoled as to console;
To be understood as to understand;
To be loved as to love;
For it is in giving that we receive;
it is in pardoning that we are pardoned;
And it is in dying that we are born to Eternal Life.