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Welcome to Call to Decision
Subject: Obama wants open homosexuals to be in the Military
Source:
CNSNews.com: The Cybercast News Service
http://www.cnsnews.com/
Michelle Obama Praises Husband's Commitment to Homosexuals
http://tinyurl.com/4dq32c
By Fred Lucas
CNSNews.com Staff Writer
July 01, 2008
(CNSNews.com) - The wife of Democratic presidential candidate Barack
Obama told a crowd of homosexual activists last week that her husband
wants to repeal the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) and reverse the rule
on homosexuals in the military. Michelle Obama also drew parallels with
homosexual advocacy groups and the civil rights movement, referring to
events "from Selma to Stonewall."
Speaking to the Democratic National Committee's Gay and Lesbian
Leadership Committee last Thursday in New York City, Michelle Obama said
her husband supports "a world where federal laws don't discriminate
against same-sex relationships, including equal treatment for any
relationship recognized under state law."
"That is why he supports robust civil unions," she said.
"That is why he has said the federal government should not stand in
the way of states that want to decide for themselves how best to pursue
equality for gay and lesbian couples -- whether that means a domestic
partnership, a civil union or a civil marriage."
The Illinois senator has spoken little about homosexual issues on the
campaign trail, but a position paper on his Web site http://tinyurl.com/5dhpx6
says that Obama wants to "fully repeal the Defense of Marriage Act
and enact legislation that would ensure 1,100-plus federal legal rights
and benefits currently provided on the basis of marital status are
extended to same-sex couples in civil unions and other legally
recognized unions."
The DOMA has two parts: one defines marriage as between a man and a
woman, and the second part says a homosexual marriage in one state does
not have to be recognized in another state.
Such a law could have added impetus since the California Supreme Court
ruled last month to legally recognize homosexual marriages. Meanwhile,
Massachusetts, Connecticut, Vermont, New Jersey, and New Hampshire have
enacted legal unions for homosexual couples either through legislation
or court order.
The absence of a federal law could mean that the more than 40 states
that have bans -- either constitutional or in statute -- on same-sex
marriage would be required to recognize a homosexual marriage license
from another state as a legally binding contract.
Sen. Obama's position paper was likely referencing the federal
definition provision that would extend Social Security and other
government benefits to same-sex couples, said Lynn Wardle, a law
professor at Brigham Young University. Nonetheless, this could
effectively nationalize same-sex marriage, Wardle said.
"If a judge in San Francisco says 'for Social Security purposes,
that's the law,' then a trial judge in San Francisco could affect the
whole country," Wardle told Cybercast News Service.
"A marriage is valid where it's performed and valid everywhere,
with one exception, if it violates public policy," she said.
"As a political move, this would inevitably mean gay marriage in
most states. It's a step in nationalizing gay marriage."
Republican presidential candidate John McCain voted for DOMA in 1996 as
a federal law. However, the Arizona senator voted with Obama in opposing
a federal constitutional amendment to define marriage as between a man
and a woman. McCain said his opposition was on grounds of federalism,
believing that states should decide on the matter.
In 2006, McCain supported a proposed constitutional amendment in his
home state of Arizona to define marriage as only for heterosexual
couples, but the amendment failed on the November ballot.
McCain's Web site http://tinyurl.com/2n2xxj
reads: "The family represents the foundation of Western
Civilization and civil society and John McCain believes the institution
of marriage is a union between one man and one woman. It is only this
definition that sufficiently recognizes the vital and unique role played
by mothers and fathers in the raising of children, and the role of the
family in shaping, stabilizing, and strengthening communities and our
nation."
Mrs. Obama began her New York speech praising the Lawrence v. Texas
ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court five years ago that struck down Texas's
anti-sodomy law, and said "same-sex couples would never again be
persecuted through the use of criminal law."
In comparing the homosexual rights movement with civil rights, Mrs.
Obama commented on how far things have come.
"We are all only here because of those who marched and bled and
died, from Selma to Stonewall," Mrs. Obama said in reference to
Selma, Ala., and the Stonewall Inn in New York City.
Selma, Ala., was the starting point in March 1965 for one of the most
famous civil rights marches of the movement. The Stonewall Inn, a bar in
Greenwich Village, was the site of what many consider the start of the
homosexual rights movement in June 1969, when gays and lesbians rioted
against police officers.
She also said her husband believes in "a world where together we
work to reverse discriminatory laws like DOMA and 'Don't Ask, Don't
Tell.'"
Mrs. Obama said her husband helped get protection for people qualified
as lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender in the Illinois Human Rights
Act when he was a state senator.
"In 2004, after hearing from gay friends and supporters about the
hurtful impact of DOMA, Barack went on record during his U.S. Senate
race and called for its complete repeal," she said. "And as a
U.S. senator, he voted to protect our Constitution from the stain of
discrimination by voting against the federal marriage amendment."
Mrs. Obama told the gathering her husband has taken this message even to
religious groups. In a previous interview, Barack Obama said he believed
that Jesus' Sermon on the Mount http://tinyurl.com/2m2z9z
justified same-sex unions.
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