Blog : Relationships
On Mormons, Marriage, Tea Cups and Kettles
ACLU staffer Joel P. Engardio attended the massive "No on 8" rally in New York City earlier this week. Here are his thoughts...
The lights of local TV cameras
seeking gay-on-the-street sound-bites illuminated the darker part of Broadway on
the
I was one of them, upset and
disillusioned that a right could be so easily eliminated for an entire group of
people that included me. Sure,
I joined up with the march in
progress at
“Two-four-six-eight, separate church
and state,” the crowd shouted.
I couldn’t agree more. Working for
the American Civil Liberties Union, I know this concept is what allows
But some of the protest signs were
especially ugly and demeaning to the Mormon faith. One sign made fun of the
protective, spiritual undergarments worn by Mormon men: “Keep your holy undies
out of our business!”
I chuckled. But it bothered me to
consider doing to the Mormons what they did to me – and they did pay for some
disgusting and deceitful TV ads in their campaign to eliminate my rights. As a
civil liberties advocate, I should follow Voltaire's notion of defending the
rights of those I disagree with.
News crews from the
What I was protesting was the
obliteration of that delicate tea-cup-and-kettle system I like to envision as
the church-state balance. I thought about divorce. Mormons detest it. Yet the
state allows it and some 50 percent of straight couples participate in it. And
still, Mormon families seemingly flourish in spite of it. Why the need to ban
gay unions if there isn’t a need to eliminate the right of divorced people to
marry? Why can’t gay couples get a marriage license at city hall and just not be
allowed to marry in a
As I marched past the
In the marketplace of ideas, the
best idea will win. So far in our nation’s history, despite long odds and
terrible set-backs, equality has been a winning idea. We don’t need to bash
Mormons to prove that gay couples deserve equal treatment by the state. What
Mormons believe is up to them and maybe they’ll change (they did finally allow
African-Americans to become full members in 1978) and maybe they won’t. There
will always be disparate kettles trying to share space on the American
stove.
What we can do is a better job of
crying foul the next time a group tries to upset the church-state balance. We
can also make our case with a more diverse audience. After all, there isn’t a
racial, cultural or religious tea party that doesn’t have gay attendees. Mormons
included.
