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I'd Leave the Country, but My Wife Won't Let Me Bush Takes Aim at My American Family
TheVillageVoice ^ | March 3 - 9, 2004 | Laura Conaway

Posted on 03/04/2004 5:12:03 PM PST by fight_truth_decay

"I've fantasized about leaving this country since I was 12 years old, but never more desperately than last Tuesday, when the president announced that my gay family should be banned by the U.S. Constitution. Suddenly, expatriation stopped being about wool berets and red wine at lunch. My loved ones and I were standing at the wrong end of a government's gun—not literally, of course, but in a way that threatens our deepest understanding of our lives. Our hopes for a happy, loving, ordinary marriage had become a national threat. George Bush had called for an amendment against same-sex marriage.

"Can we just go to Canada now?" I asked my wife, knowing the answer. We argue remarkably little for people who have a toddler and spend every possible moment together. Except we do have this one running debate at the breakfast table, which starts with me saying we could get legally married, right now, north of the border. Sarah holds up the weather page and says, "Hey, that cold air out there? It came from Canada, and it got warmer on the way."

It's warm in Vancouver, I say.

And we could be freer there. But she's not going, for reasons beyond the mercury. She wants to live as an American—more specifically, as a New Yorker—regardless of whether this America wants her. She wants our son to grow up an American, even if it means he'll lack the protections of the kid next door. Being American matters to her, and that means it matters to me. Four years ago this fall, we stood before an Episcopal priest and were pronounced married for life, for better, for worse. "Those whom God has joined together," the priest warned, "let no one put asunder." I won't leave her, Mr. Bush, not even on account of you.

But, oh, the siren call of liberty. Blame my parents for making me rootless by moving too often. Blame me for believing any place with equal rights and a bookstore is good enough. I can accept exile, but I cannot accept less than fair. I want to be a full citizen, with this woman, today. I want to do whatever it takes, sacrifice whatever is necessary, go wherever I have to, for that to be so.

I want to be taxed equally. I want my Social Security benefits to go somewhere besides down the drain. I want the Fifth Amendment right not to testify against Sarah, and to protect our private correspondence from subpoena, the same as other spouses. Couples like us don't have that right. Surprised? Rosie O'Donnell and her wife were, when the lawyers came after them.

I want our politicians and religious leaders to stop going on television and suggesting that legalizing marriage for us would be like legalizing sex with dogs. My wife, in my arms? They are talking about my wife, in my arms. Do they know, do they care, how much that hurts? Where must we run to be safe from them?

I want my wife not to feel such pressure and fear that she curls up in bed at night and cries. On the night of Wednesday, February 25, a woman in Brooklyn lay crying because she can't understand why people would hate her so, why they'd have to denigrate a beautiful and private part of her life with the most heinous rhetoric. Think about that. My wife lay in tears because strangers are clamoring for the power to decide whether she belongs, whether the American promise should hold true for her—as if there were any question which way they'd vote.

What stands between us and them? A couple dozen senators, and some of those are on the fence. Where is our right to a meaningful marriage, to the honest pursuit of happiness? We want our justice and "domestic tranquility." Whose country is this, anymore? Someone tell me. I get the feeling it's no longer mine.

For me, one of parenting's most profound lessons is that I am supposed to take care of Sarah and the baby, collectively, as a unit. It's not like she's a helpless damsel and I'm a butch knight—if anyone's the tough guy around here, it's her. Rather, I believe all mothers need protecting so they can get on with the open-hearted business of mothering. What works for me is to have Sarah come first, and with Sarah comes the baby. If there are two seats on the life raft, I'm drowning. House fire, I'm first in for the kid. Not enough food, I'm hungry, not her and not him.

Now comes an enemy who outweighs me, outnumbers me, corners me at will. And you know how I can really tell I'm overmatched? I wish it away. I say to Sarah, they'll never get this marriage amendment out of the Senate. They may get it out of the House, but never the Senate. This blustering of mine is worth only so much. We each know the amendment would likely pass in the states—it would need approval from 38, and that many already have statutes against gay marriage. Would Sarah leave then? She says maybe.

I look for example to older African Americans, though many of them don't want us, either. Not wanting to offend, I silently think of the children marching into the fire hoses of Birmingham, the adults who sat at segregated lunch counters while mobs poured ketchup on their heads. Some mothers and fathers back then asked their kids to be first through the schoolhouse door, rocks and bullets and all. Others left for the relative tolerance up North in places like Chicago and Harlem, unwilling to make an existence of waiting. I know what's happening to us isn't the same as that, exactly, but it requires of me the same kind of courage. You just hope the breakthrough happens in your lifetime.

The privacy of this struggle may be the worst part, the continued aloneness of being. So many people don't get it. They say things to us like "Being married isn't all it's cracked up to be"—as if we weren't religiously married already, as if being blocked from the city clerk's door were great fun. They say, "Wouldn't civil unions be enough?" or, now that gay couples are marrying out West, "I'd hate for this marriage thing to win Bush the election." They say, "You really have to pay taxes like that?" and "Being domestic partners doesn't help you?" and "You should see the marriage penalty we pay." They say, "Oh, I wish it were different for you." They say, "Come to our wedding! We're getting married!"

Sometimes I think the greatest hindrance to our cause is the sheer force of the American legend. So strongly do people believe this country stands for freedom that they can't fathom it's ever otherwise. Sign a few contracts, the well-intentioned advise, and you'll get all the same rights as straight couples—that's an outrageous fiction, but not as outrageous as the notion that being almost equal under the law is good enough.

For now, we can't get even that far, with leaders like Bush smirking at this thing Sarah and I call marriage. Should he need proof of the moral weight of our vows, I'd ask him to consider this: If it weren't for the true marriage I'm in, and the needs of the wife I've pledged to love, I would flee this America to fulfill my own dream of equality. Instead, with no small sum of fear, I will stay with her and fight.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: California; US: Massachusetts; US: New York; US: Oregon
KEYWORDS: civilunion; goodridance; homosexualagenda; marriage; villagevoice
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To: fight_truth_decay
"I've fantasized about leaving this country since I was 12 years old

Try Haiti, yea twisted little freak.

101 posted on 03/04/2004 9:45:09 PM PST by Joe Hadenuf (I failed anger management class, they decided to give me a passing grade anyway)
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To: rikkir
Ive got frequent flier miles with Air France if that will give him/her/it the push needed to leave. Why do they always just talk about leaving? Do they really think that will change our minds?
102 posted on 03/04/2004 9:49:31 PM PST by daybreakcoming
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To: Eala
"One could wonder just who it was who joined them..."

Is this perverted priest now a Perverted Bishop?
103 posted on 03/04/2004 10:14:34 PM PST by Grampa Dave (Listen, Lunatic Rats! We will not forget what happened on 9/11! You can go to Hell!)
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To: Drango
you know...

thanks to the pornography industry...for some reason, more and more people are becoming somehow accepting of the idea of "lipstick lesbians". since when is someone's mental illness....total perversion....grounds for our entertainment? there is nothing funny...or sexy...about it.

right is right, wrong is wrong. 'nuff said.

104 posted on 03/04/2004 11:07:24 PM PST by kid_in_kc
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To: fight_truth_decay
"I've fantasized about leaving this country since I was 12 years old"

Please leave.
105 posted on 03/04/2004 11:16:17 PM PST by PattonReincarnated (Rebuild the Temple)
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To: NeonKnight
BWAHAHAHAHA! Yeah, I am sure Bush lost a vote there, too! Just like her 'wife' won't move to Canada because she loves America. She loves NEW YORK CITY, the Gomorrah of the U.S. I bet her 'wife' hasn't set foot outside Gore Country since she was old enough to clean carpets.
106 posted on 03/04/2004 11:32:25 PM PST by LibertarianInExile (<--Outsourced myself. The first $70K in income is IRS free!)
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To: squidly; remember; Perlstein
"I quit reading during the first sentence, where it stated "the president announced that my gay family should be banned by the U.S. Constitution". What a load of crap. They'll be living together the same way they have been."

Indeed. Of course, the more grievous logical flaw in her argument is blaming President Bush, who manages national issues, for a problem with her own state, as New York currently bans gay marriage.

...but that won't stop many Leftists from taking a cheap shot at Bush.

It's a pretty worn out tactic of the Left: whatever issue they are looking at today, their opponent isn't managing it correctly or is on the wrong side.

So pick a news topic and some Leftist somewhere is blaming Bush for it.

Over and over and over again...

107 posted on 03/04/2004 11:43:42 PM PST by Southack (Media bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: fight_truth_decay
Hey...Ms. Conaway...need some cash on your way out? I'll donate.
108 posted on 03/04/2004 11:46:49 PM PST by Fledermaus (Democrats! The party of total Anarchy!)
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To: little jeremiah; Nick Danger; section9; Lazamataz; Howlin; RJayneJ
"It is actually very, very sad. But since she and people like her want to force their mental illness and unhealthy and immoral life DOWN OUR THROATS, it's more than sad, it's war."

Whatever it is, it isn't "democratic."

You don't hear the Left calling for a national vote on gay marriage. As with Roe v Wade, they want their judges to force a massive cultural change upon the American public...instead of arguing persuasively and holding a democratic vote on such a change.

109 posted on 03/04/2004 11:47:48 PM PST by Southack (Media bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: little jeremiah
Bump


What We Can Do To Help Defeat the "Gay" Agenda


Homosexual Agenda: Categorical Index of Links (Version 1.1)


The Stamp of Normality

110 posted on 03/05/2004 5:42:36 AM PST by EdReform (Support Free Republic - All donations are greatly appreciated. Thank you for your support!)
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To: fight_truth_decay
I want our politicians and religious leaders to stop going on television and suggesting that legalizing marriage for us would be like legalizing sex with dogs.

Get the name of a politician who made this comparison and run him for president!

Marriage between same-sex perverts is the same as legalizing marriage between a human and a dog.

As a matter of fact I consider homosexuals to be lower than animals.

111 posted on 03/05/2004 6:16:44 AM PST by JesseHousman (Execute Mumia Abu-Jamal)
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To: JesseHousman
Animals don't violate the laws of their nature as beasts, unless tormented by humans.

Humans have free will to decide whether to violate the laws of nature or not.

When they decide to violate those laws, (as enunciated by reason, common sense, the developed conscience, and the holy scriptures of the world), they sink to a lower level than animals, who have no choice.
112 posted on 03/05/2004 2:20:47 PM PST by little jeremiah (...men of intemperate minds can not be free. Their passions forge their fetters.)
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To: fight_truth_decay
This is weird.

And we could be freer there.

I think this means there's government money they could get.

She wants our son to grow up an American, even if it means he'll lack the protections of the kid next door.

Is there a law in New York that says its OK for criminals to attack children brought up by homosexuals?

113 posted on 03/05/2004 2:27:25 PM PST by <1/1,000,000th%
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Comment #114 Removed by Moderator


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