My take on what is happening among the silent majority in the latest issue of Q Notes (goqnotes.com).
After the vote on Amendment One was held and passed by the citizens
of North Carolina, Governor Beverly Perdue spoke out about what we, as a
state, looked like to the rest of the nation: “People around the
country are watching the state and are confused…North Carolina was a
progressive and a forward thinking state that stood up for civil
rights…we look like Mississippi” (May 11, 2012).
The comment
raised a reaction from both those who voted for and against the
Amendment. Those who voted for the Amendment, along with Mississippi
Gov. Phil Bryant, took great umbrage at the comment. Those who voted
against the Amendment wondered where Gov. Perdue was while some of us
were working on phone banks, going door to door and distributing
material against Amendment One. To this day Gov. Perdue has not come out
in support of marriage equality, having voted for the state Defense of
Marriage Act when she was a state legislator.
In light of the
passage of Amendment One — now part of North Carolina’s Constitution —
it is interesting to note one thing about the population of Mississippi
that surpasses that of North Carolina’s citizenry. Although Mississippi
ranks 42nd in the nation for the number of same-sex couples per
household, it leads the nation in the percentage of same-sex couples
raising children, a study by the Williams Institute (a gender
orientation and identity public-policy organization based at the
University of California, Los Angeles) reported. Nationally, 22 percent
of same-sex couples are raising children, but in Mississippi 33 percent
are raising children. Mississippi has a total of 6,286 same-sex couples”
(Jackson (MS) Free Press, Aug. 26, 2011). Mississippi!? That means
there are more same-sex couples with children who feel safe, if not
comfortable, living in Mississippi than the
once-progressive-but-always-conservative state of North Carolina. Maybe
it has to do with the cost of living, the “live and let live” or
regardless of your politics, or who you live with, “blood is thicker
than water” attitude of some Southerners. Perhaps it is the quieter
rural, backwater life some people have chosen to live, being honest and
smart about who knows about one’s relationship with a partner and child
or children.
This fact about Mississippi reminds me of something I
do not want to forget in light of North Carolina’s Amendment One’s
passage. While, for some same-sex couples and their children, there are
many advantages to living in the thriving metropolitan parts of North
Carolina, we live in a state of 100 counties, where there are many
same-sex couples and children who live in one of the 6900 small cities,
towns, villages and rural hamlets in N.C. Same-sex couples in
Robbinsville, Lincolnton and Warrenton, as well as those who live in
rural parts on a farm or in the mountains of this state also felt the
impact of the Amendment’s passage, but chose to be quiet about
expressing resentment, if not downright anger, about how the vote went
down.
A story: When I was interim senior pastor at First
Presbyterian Church, Henderson (an hour’s ride north of Raleigh in rural
Vance County), I was delighted to meet lesbian and gay couples raising
children side by side straight couples with children. They worked in the
surrounding county, paid taxes, joined swim-golf clubs and contributed
to the community life. Discovering that I was a Presbyterian pastor who
is gay, they even started to come to worship to check both the
congregation and me out. Granted, there was an unspoken, but firmly held
“don’t ask, don’t tell” etiquette that guides all conversations. But,
they were there, queer and happy.
Our sisters and brothers who are
lesbian and gay are in each and every county of Mississippi and North
Carolina, no matter how big or small, liberal or conservative, the
county may be. We who are LGBTQ are everywhere and our numbers are
growing. We are part of the rich, vibrant life of not only the large
cities, but the small farms, county public schools and the small
independent coffee shop with the only espresso machine in the county.
Along with our children, being smart and honest, we will continue to
educate, share our lives, our relationships and slowly, but decisively,
change the very fabric of the places where we live. : :
Link is here:
Pace!
B
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