|
Indiana Marriage Battle
Homosexual-Rights Advocates Stopped by Family Activists
BY Thomas Uebbing Register Correspondent
October 11-17, 2009 Issue |
Posted 10/2/09 at 2:05 PM
GOSHEN,
Ind. â When Union and Confederate armies clashed at Gettysburg, they were not
fighting over possession of the small Pennsylvania town. There were much bigger
objectives and stakes involved.
The
town of Goshen, Ind., with a population of around 32,000, recently became the
intense focus of struggle between homosexual rights and family activists. The
homosexual rights activists âwanted Goshen in their trophy case,â explained Patrick
Mangan, executive director of Citizens for Community Values of Indiana and its
NoSpecialRights.net Task Force.
What
made both sides dearly want to prevail in a contest over amending the cityâs
nondiscrimination code to include âsexual orientationâ and âgender identityâ?
âThis
is a battle for the Heartland,â Mangan said. âIf the homosexual activists can
win in conservative Goshen, they can win anywhere.â
The
billâs proponents listed 43 local companies, including major home centers,
department stores and grocery stores that already had in place sexual
orientation nondiscrimination policies. Why, then, the need for government
regulation of the issue in Goshen?
On
one side was GoshenCivilRights.com, led by Michelle Marquis and Eric Kanagy,
and with âsupport and counselâ from Indiana Equality, a homosexual-advocacy
organization based in Indianapolis. They garnered support from the local homosexual
community and other sympathetic individuals.
Among
their supporters were 18 pastors from the Mennonite, Brethren, Lutheran,
Presbyterian and United Church of Christ traditions who signed a letter in
favor of the bill.
On
the other side, arriving into the fray with just 24 hoursâ notice of the first
vote, were the American Family Association of Indiana, the Indiana Family
Institute, the Indiana Voice for the Family, Advance Indiana, and Citizens for Community
Values of Indiana.
Indiana
Equalityâs Human Rights Ordinance Project receives funding from the Tides
Foundationâs State Equality Fund, a philanthropic partnership that includes the
Tim Gill Foundation. The Tides Center is listed as a non-governmental organization
beneficiary of George Sorosâ philanthropic fund along with Planned Parenthood
and the American Civil Liberties Union.
Opponents
point to the Gill Foundation as the financial link to the shift of power in the
Iowa Legislature, which prevented passage of the stateâs marriage amendment.
This kept open the door for the stateâs Supreme Court to legalize homosexual
âmarriage,â which they did.
The
Gill Foundation also reportedly funded the Democrat takeover of the Colorado
Legislature, which passed a radical gender-identity bill.
Overflow Crowd
The
lead-up to an Aug. 18 hearing and
vote flew âunder the radarâ of pro-family groups. A few days prior, a flurry of
e-mails initiated by state Assemblyman Wes Culver, a Goshen businessman, drew a
quick response from pro-family leaders.
The
closest organization with âboots on the groundâ was Citizens for Community
Values, which expressed its opposition to the homosexual agenda, and stated
that homosexual rights are special rights that undermine constitutional freedom
of speech, assembly and religion.
An
overflow crowd packed the city hall that night with more than 200 citizens in
attendance.
Some
of the 29 people arguing in favor of the bill framed the issue as
discrimination. Some of the 16 speaking against cited the moral and religious
dimensions, enforceability issues and employersâ rights.
They also questioned whether there
was any actual discrimination going on. Supporters of the measure said Aug. 18
that they did not give any hard evidence of discrimination with names, dates
and facts because of fear of retaliation.
Kanagy, of GoshenCivilRights.com,
said 43 Goshen employers and six municipalities already ban discrimination on
the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity.
The council voted 4-3 in favor.
According to council rules, this margin was not sufficient for immediate
passage. A final hearing and vote was scheduled for Sept. 1.
This reprieve gave pro-family forces
time to build local community opposition to the ordinance.
On Sept. 1, 82 persons spoke against
the amendment and 60 in favor. The meeting started at 7 p.m. before an overflow
crowd of 500 plus at Goshen High School auditorium and ended at 1:30 a.m.
The Catholic Church offered no
formal diocesan or parochial opposition, but individual Catholics did. Robert
Roeder, a local member of the Knights of Columbus, as well as six Catholics
speaking at the behest of Citizens for Community Values spoke against the bill.
An Antiochian Orthodox priest
attended both hearings but chose not to address the council with his pro-family
views for pastoral concerns they might be misconstrued. Several Protestant
pastors spoke both for and against.
Changed His Mind
Citizens for Community Values
presented each council member with two three-ring notebooks, one detailing the
legal, moral, medical and economic harms caused by special-rights legislation
and the homosexual lifestyle, and the other documenting from news sources how
special rights undermine the freedoms of speech, assembly and religion.
The city has a Democratic mayor and
a council of four Republican representatives and three Democrats. The bill had
the bipartisan sponsorship of Republican Chic Lantz and Democrat Jeremy
Stutsman. Lantz explained that after the Aug. 18 meeting he did his own
research; when he discovered all the litigation, especially in Colorado, that
such laws have engendered, he changed his mind.
âPure and simple, when I signed on
strictly as an antidiscrimination point,â Lantz said, âI didnât know what was
going on around the country until I did the research in the last two weeks. I
thought, âDo I want this in Goshen?ââ Lantz changed his vote, and the measure
failed 4-3.
Added Lantz, âItâs for the
children.â
Thomas
Uebbing writes
from South Bend, Indiana.
Filed under
Advertisement
Advertisement
Make a Donation now!
Insightful. Informative. Uncompromisingly faithful. The National Catholic Register is more than a newspaper. Itâs a cause. Your support for the Register funds important journalism that helps to build a Culture of Life in our nation, and throughout the world. Help us promote the Churchâs New Evangelization by donating to the National Catholic Register right now.
Click here to donate
|