Sunday, November 22, 2009

President Obama

Obama’s Selection of Evangelical Pastor Rick Warren for Inauguration Sparks Gay Outrage

The LGBT community is questioning Obama's commitment to gay rights

Posted December 18, 2008

The selection of megachurch pastor Rick Warren to deliver the invocation at Barack Obama's inauguration has fueled outrage and protests from the gay community, who take issue with Warren's statements of disapproval for homosexuality and his support of Proposition 8, the gay marriage ban that passed in California on Election Day.

Gay rights activists said the Warren announcement came at time when the movement is already apprehensive about how forcefully the Obama administration will embrace their issues.

"The Obama team has sent a very uplifting message that positive change is coming for LGBT [lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender] Americans, but we haven't seen it yet," says David Smith, vice president of the Human Rights Campaign, the nation's largest gay rights group "There has been no concrete evidence of inclusion. That's the environment in which this Warren announcement happened—it exacerbates the level of disappointment that exists."

Leaders in the gay rights movement said that they were impressed with the degree to which the Obama transition team was including issues of concerns to the LGBT community in drawing up a policy agenda, but that such outreach didn't make them more willing to accept the news of Warren's high-profile role at the inauguration.

The inauguration represents the dawn of his presidency, so the symbolism is unmistakable," says Smith. "To have a man who so vociferously opposes LGBT equality... it almost gives license that the Reverend's views are somehow tolerable or acceptable."

"The president-elect has set up a transition team that is clearly engaging our community about policies, but we can't ignore Warren," adds Darlene Nipper, executive director of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force. "But when people sit down and listen to an inauguration, they are looking to see themselves reflected."

Warren, author of the bestselling Purpose-Driven Life and pastor of the Saddleback Church in Orange County, Calif., has sought to distance himself from Christian right leaders who frame evangelical political concerns mostly around fighting abortion rights and gay rights. At the same time, Warren opposes gay marriage and gay civil unions and has said that he objects to the homosexual lifestyle.

Responding to questions about Warren at a press conference in Chicago today, Obama said that America needs to "come together," even when there's disagreement on social issues, according to the Associated Press. "That dialogue is part of what my campaign is all about," he said.

In an interview today, Obama spokeswoman Linda Douglass defended the Warren selection. "It would be a mistake to assume that there were a lot of political considerations made here," she says. "This was a decision that was based on President-elect Obama's commitment to finding common ground with people with conflicting and divergent news."

"The important thing here," Douglass continued, "is that the President-elect clearly disagrees with those views and is a strong proponent of gay and lesbian rights and has a long record of championing those rights... It's his views on LGBT issues that are the views that matter."

A handful of gay rights organizations have released letters and statements calling for Obama to rescind his invitation to Warren.

"Your invitation to Reverend Rick Warren to deliver the invocation at your inauguration is a genuine blow to LGBT Americans," read a letter from the Human Rights Campaign to the President-elect. "...[B ]y inviting Rick Warren to your inauguration, you have tarnished the view that gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender Americans have a place at your table."

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Reader Comments

too much infighting

I am sitting here and reading stuff that apalls every decent human being. While I do not condone what homosexuals do I do respect their right to keep it behind closed doors like I would any heterosexual people.This administration is doing what every other administeration has been doing for the last hundred years or so. We are bickering about things that quite frankly not as important as say like saving what is left of our freedoms instead of childish brawls about people bashing others because of their sexual preferences. They say its not a choice. Ok if it is not a choice show me the gene that causes homosexuality. They have mapped the entire human geonome several times. They have found genes that make you fat, tall short genes that predisposes you to cancers, heart diseases etc. But no gene that causes homosexuality. That in the scientific community is knowned as learned behavior or enviromental conditioning. So if you are gay so what? That is between you and God or whomever you wish to pray to. Life is precious all life, straight or gay, short or tall,older or younger. We can learn a lot from our elderly people. Have you ever sat in on a family gathering and listened to grandpa tall how he met grandma or vice versa? Times were different back then Our values were more based on family ties rather than the latest violent game that jr just gotta have. Picnics by the lake, camping trips finding our first snake ande terrorizingt your older cousin with it. Those were times when family was important. Not so much anymore except in some communities like amish or mennonites or a handful of others. Here is a thought. This weekend. Turn off the tv. Find a museurm or zoo or even a fishin pond and go fishing. have a picnic and see what you all are missing. Our family does that at lest once a month.

tolerance or lack of it

The lesbian and gay community have gotten their feelings hurt yet again because they feel slighted by the presidents choice as to whom to give the invocation. First, this is the Presidents moment in History not just the gay community. He has the right to choose whomever he feels would deliver a good message and whom he has known for many years. I believe everyone has the right to be represented as americans. This faction and childish behavior when someone does not get what they feel they are "entitled" to is something that I would expect to find in a kinderschool yard. Personally I am straight. I have a loving family and husband of 30 years as of a few days ago. I have friends from all walks of life both straight as well as gay from many different religions as well. No one likes having anothers lifestyle thrown in their face and shoved down their throats and their childrens throats too that goes for both gay and straight communities. The gay community even has issues with the bible I grew up with and have now made their own "gay bible". Now comeone folks if someone wants respect for what they believe in they should be respectful and tolerant of those who may not believe in the same issues. But that should not make us act like little children should it? Let the healing begin, take away the hate, anger and pettiness and work together like the adults we are supposed to be and make progress for equality for all. That sounds reasonable to me anyhow but I am probally a bit biased as are my friends too.

healthcare and questions in general.

Mr President,With all due respect to your office and the difficulties you are facing from both the GOP and even the democrats would it not be more orderly if instead we turned these town hall meetings into more productive less inciteful rioting as to the subject being discussed? While you probally will not win over everyone many of us are lost with all the media hype shouting and brawling that seems to be teh norm. There are many questions out there and lots of misinformation too. Could it be possible to print up economical books that explain the bill (s) at a reasonable cost to Americans. It would seem to me that we could possibley make some headway that way and the cost offset of the printing can be done in the prisons to print them and send them out to congressmen and women where we can pay and pick up a copy we can calmly read and then ask our questions in a more decourus way. You have experience in Law. Doctors have experience with patients and the insurance companies have experience in fleecing all of us our of as much money as they can. Maybe the can be a way for good suggestions to make their way to you for you to ponder over too. It's just a thought. My best to you and your family and I hope the girls are enjoying their puppy.

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