Allow me to go back to your first question.
>>What would be necessary to create an organization that does give a national voice to the issues of whatever alphabet soup you want to use to describe our diverse communities?<<
You mentioned that two prominent groups exist, the NGLTF and HRC. You mentioned that they are ineffective. You also gave some reasons why they may be so.
Let me speak just from a personal perspective, since “all politics are local,” meaning there should be some relevance to my life to make political involvement appealing.
The HRC and NGLTF?
I think, to my surprise, this just touched a raw nerve.
I am going to get on a soap box a little and please don’t misunderstand, mr.t-bear, this is not aimed at you. It’s that the questions you raised got me in touch with a little bit of resentment I just realized was there and simmering.
I live in a smallish town, not that far from a major metro center, but far enough that my life is encapsulated by my home, work, and friends in this small town.
I/we are surrounded by straight people.
Yes, we do have some men and women that are gay and lesbian, I think I know all six of them here. Everyone has their own lives, none are political about gay rights, though I know four are staunchly Democrat. Wow. That’s a landslide in the making. Geez.
According to census reports there are 10,000 same sex couples living in this State.
The HRC and NGLTF have no presence here. None. I never hear a thing about them.
I don’t live in a cocoon, I watch the news, I read news magazines, but the only place I hear about the HRC and NGLTF is here on DU GLBT.
The only time I learn more about NGLTF and HRC is when I go to their website as a point of curiosity because of some thread here.
They have no impact on my life day to day life what so ever. None at all.
I am involved in the local Democratic party, why hell, donations ($$$) and volunteerism is always welcome.
Guess what?
The word “gay” never comes up at any Democratic functions.
I live in a red state, gay marriage? WTF?
There is no gay marriage rights issue here, gay marriage it is BARELY talked about.
The Democratic leaders are mildly in favor of civil unions.
This State has a law banning same sex marriage.
There have been legislative debates about adding a Constitutional Amendment against same sex marriage and in looking over press clippings, I see no activism or quote from HRC or NGLTF. None. No help.
The HRC is according their web site, located in Wash. DC.
The NGLTF according their web site has branch offices in:
Washington, DC
New York, NY
Cambridge, MA
Los Angeles,CA
Miami, FL
Minneapolis, MN
So what’s my point other than perhaps feeling that I just got in touch with some anger?
Well, on one hand there are two organizations that claim to be national and for GLBTQ rights.
On the other hand, it is noted that for various reasons they are
not national leaders.
I have to agree.
I am not certain that we have to re-invent the wheel, or start all over again with more funding and creating yet another group, now that I think of it.
While many GLBTQ people do live in Miami, NY and Calif, and Minn. Many of us do not.
I whole heartedly support gay marriage rights and the repeal of Hate8 in Calif., and pro-gay marriage legislation in NY and while I support gay rights causes across the board, I have to say that not one gay organizations touches my life here locally.
The problem as I see it, is not that the NGLTF and HRC have too many issues to deal with and lack focus, allthough that may be true as well, from where I sit their chief problem is they have no national presence. They seem regional.
Although looking at their websites just now, I can see why you state they are all over the place with their prioritization.
BTW I note that both groups share the same “to-do” list of concerns almost verbatim.
So, if these groups claim to be on the national level, if they claim to represent my partner and I in dealing with work place, ageing, health rights and living in a committed relationship
without even civil unions on the horizon, much less gay marriage, then, I have to ask where are they in my State’s debate?
A quick inter net search shows that the
ACLU took on the fight to recognize out of state
civil unions! That was six years ago! It was about civil unions and it was by the ACLU.
Yes, I am in a long term relationship, yes I have concerns about health care decision making in the event either of us get sick, hospital visitation, power of attorney, inheritance rights.
Guess where I get help? I hire an attorney and pay out of pocket. There is no legislation giving us as a couple any rights, we are not recognized, and no one –NO ONE is out there helping us.
So, HRC and NGLTF are for me theoretical entities.
Gay marriage is theoretical for me/us.
Civil unions are theoretical for me/us.
I wonder how many people are out there like me and my partner, living in small towns, relatively isolated from other gays and lesbians and apparently off radar?
We make- do for ourselves. Work to pay the bills, do our best to survive and thrive, surrounded by a straight culture.
There are no rallies here. There are no protests here. There’s just cold weather, work and bills to pay.
This State only repealed sodomy laws in 1976 and even then, there were two attempts to re-introduce it, one as late as the mid-1980's following the Anita Bryant hate crusade.
So, what does this all mean?
Should I just STFU, am I marginal, the two of us don’t count, this state doesn’t count, my six gay friends don’t count? One the face of it, that seems to be the answer at the moment.
What might be helpful is for these organizations to actually have a national presence in fact and not just words, not just a presence in larger urban centers.
I don’t expect a branch office here anytime soon, but, when I sit through years of gay bashing while watching MSNBC and CNN and watch numerous interviews of members of rw theofascist hate groups talk about gays being immoral, how we are the cause of national moral decline and even more vitriolic gay bashing and not even one national gay spokesperson appears to counter the libel for years–then, their lack of presence actually affects me more than their failure to be present and pro-active on positive issues.
It might be helpful if they actually went out on some national shows and had a speakers bureau to educate the public about gay people, our lives, who we are, what we fight for and why rw stereotypes are so damaging to us as human beings.
Look at their press clippings:
http://www.thetaskforce.org/TF_in_news/08_1204/index.htmlThey give some interviews, a few quotes here and there, but no one seems to have a newspaper column, or a full feature article.
The HRC has some of it’s own publications on it’s web site. Who is going to look that up, except me for this thread, some grad students, some concerned gays and six of my friends (after today)?
http://www.hrc.org/publications.aspOn this site, the HRC seems to be good at throwing luncheons( column right side).
Here the HRC is fighting back against a full page ad in the NYT from the religious right, claiming gay mob action.
What did they do? They launched a forceful web site. Whoop de doo.
“Human Rights Campaign is urging people to take action online. By visiting the website, supporters can write a letter to the New York Times; send an email to the Beckett Fund, the organization that paid for the misleading New York Times advertisement; and share their personal story with NoMobVote.org and let them know how the passage of Prop 8 affected their life.”
http://www.hrc.org/11628.htmThey could have simply come on GLBT DU and gotten email letters pronto.
Oh yeah, and this, the ultimate in lame out reach, share your story with a hate group?
>>share their personal story with NoMobVote.org and let them know how the passage of Prop 8 affected their life.”<<
And this happy horse crap means nothing to my life:
http://www.hrc.org/pressroom.aspNews & Event Media
L Word Premiere Parties
This Thanksgiving
Volunteer with HRC during this Critical Election Year
Election Night Watch Parties
Marriage in CA
No on Prop 8 Action Weekend
America Ferrera, Tony Plana & Ana Ortiz Speak Out Against Proposition 8
The Human Rights Campaign’s Twelfth Annual National Dinner
HRC's Annual Holiday Ornament for 2008
Summary:
Consistent focused message.
A true national presence with camera friendly, articulate spokes people appearing on mainstream media shows to represent and defend our voice and message.
An occasional article published in some national magazine, not just one sentence interviews.
And figure out some way to speak to millions of GLBTQ’s living in small towns, rural areas, in a national voice that acknowledges we exist.
The two groups seems redundant and maybe should pool resources and merge?
Why do I even care? Because it makes me happy to be able to do some small thing, maybe contribute a link, a thought, a thread, donate some money, give some support to GLBTQ people who are feeling down, or verbally assaulted out in the real world, I do what I can in my own small way and it means a lot to be able to talk to other GLBTQ folks here, it’s an way to avoid isolation and it’s healthy.
I feel more supported here on this forum, in a real tangible way than any organization out there who claims to be working on my behalf, at this moment in time.
Peace-
bd12