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Olbermann: Gay marriage is a question of love
Everyone deserves the same chance at permanence and happiness
SPECIAL COMMENT
By Keith Olbermann
Anchor, 'Countdown'
updated 9:13 p.m. ET, Mon., Nov. 10, 2008
Finally tonight as promised, a Special Comment on the passage, last
week, of Proposition Eight in California, which rescinded the right of
same-sex couples to marry, and tilted the balance on this issue, from
coast to coast.
Some parameters, as preface. This isn't about yelling, and this isn't
about politics, and this isn't really just about Prop-8. And I don't
have a personal investment in this: I'm not gay, I had to strain to
think of one member of even my very extended family who is, I have no
personal stories of close friends or colleagues fighting the prejudice
that still pervades their lives.
And yet to me this vote is horrible. Horrible. Because this isn't about
yelling, and this isn't about politics. This is about the human heart,
and if that sounds corny, so be it.
If you voted for this Proposition or support those who did or the
sentiment they expressed, I have some questions, because, truly, I do
not understand. Why does this matter to you? What is it to you? In a
time of impermanence and fly-by-night relationships, these people over
here want the same chance at permanence and happiness that is your
option. They don't want to deny you yours. They don't want to take
anything away from you. They want what you want—a chance to be a little
less alone in the world.
Only now you are saying to them—no. You can't have it on these terms.
Maybe something similar. If they behave. If they don't cause too much
trouble. You'll even give them all the same legal rights—even as you're
taking away the legal right, which they already had. A world around
them, still anchored in love and marriage, and you are saying, no, you
can't marry. What if somebody passed a law that said you couldn't marry?
I keep hearing this term "re-defining" marriage. If this country hadn't
re-defined marriage, black people still couldn't marry white people.
Sixteen states had laws on the books which made that illegal in 1967.
1967.
The parents of the President-Elect of the United States couldn't have
married in nearly one third of the states of the country their son grew
up to lead. But it's worse than that. If this country had not
"re-defined" marriage, some black people still couldn't marry black
people. It is one of the most overlooked and cruelest parts of our sad
story of slavery. Marriages were not legally recognized, if the people
were slaves. Since slaves were property, they could not legally be
husband and wife, or mother and child. Their marriage vows were
different: not "Until Death, Do You Part," but "Until Death or Distance,
Do You Part." Marriages among slaves were not legally recognized.
You know, just like marriages today in California are not legally
recognized, if the people are gay.
And uncountable in our history are the number of men and women, forced
by society into marrying the opposite sex, in sham marriages, or
marriages of convenience, or just marriages of not knowing, centuries of
men and women who have lived their lives in shame and unhappiness, and
who have, through a lie to themselves or others, broken countless other
lives, of spouses and children, all because we said a man couldn't marry
another man, or a woman couldn't marry another woman. The sanctity of
marriage.
How many marriages like that have there been and how on earth do they
increase the "sanctity" of marriage rather than render the term,
meaningless?
What is this, to you? Nobody is asking you to embrace their expression
of love. But don't you, as human beings, have to embrace... that love?
The world is barren enough.
It is stacked against love, and against hope, and against those very few
and precious emotions that enable us to go forward. Your marriage only
stands a 50-50 chance of lasting, no matter how much you feel and how
hard you work.
And here are people overjoyed at the prospect of just that chance, and
that work, just for the hope of having that feeling. With so much hate
in the world, with so much meaningless division, and people pitted
against people for no good reason, this is what your religion tells you
to do? With your experience of life and this world and all its sadnesses,
this is what your conscience tells you to do?
With your knowledge that life, with endless vigor, seems to tilt the
playing field on which we all live, in favor of unhappiness and hate...
this is what your heart tells you to do? You want to sanctify marriage?
You want to honor your God and the universal love you believe he
represents? Then Spread happiness—this tiny, symbolic, semantical grain
of happiness—share it with all those who seek it. Quote me anything from
your religious leader or book of choice telling you to stand against
this. And then tell me how you can believe both that statement and
another statement, another one which reads only "do unto others as you
would have them do unto you."
You are asked now, by your country, and perhaps by your creator, to
stand on one side or another. You are asked now to stand, not on a
question of politics, not on a question of religion, not on a question
of gay or straight. You are asked now to stand, on a question of love.
All you need do is stand, and let the tiny ember of love meet its own
fate.
You don't have to help it, you don't have it applaud it, you don't have
to fight for it. Just don't put it out. Just don't extinguish it.
Because while it may at first look like that love is between two people
you don't know and you don't understand and maybe you don't even want to
know. It is, in fact, the ember of your love, for your fellow person
just because this is the only world we have. And the other guy counts,
too.
This is the second time in ten days I find myself concluding by turning
to, of all things, the closing plea for mercy by Clarence Darrow in a
murder trial.
But what he said, fits what is really at the heart of this:
"I was reading last night of the aspiration of the old Persian poet,
Omar-Khayyam," he told the judge. It appealed to me as the highest that
I can vision. I wish it was in my heart, and I wish it was in the hearts
of all: So I be written in the Book of Love; I do not care about that
Book above. Erase my name, or write it as you will, So I be written in
the Book of Love."
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