* around five thousand folks, if I had to take a stab at it. The Sun-Times calls it 2,000, but that sounds way too small.
A succession of speakers addressed the crowds, with a range of messages, ranging from hope and love to self-righteous fury. But the overriding themes of the day were hope, rationally focused anger, and continued peaceful but forceful activism. Prop 8 may be a California state law, but ultimately it affects all of us, in Illinois and beyond. It's a matter of civil rights, of separation of church and state, of the government unduly interfering in private lives, of discrimination... the list goes on and on.
A pathetically tiny group of counter-protesters gathered across the street, bearing such unconvincing slogans as "IT'S NOT NATURAL". The rally crowd pretty much had wit firmly on their side, however. Some choice samples:
- "When do I get to vote on your marriage?"
- "Focus on your own family."
- "Homophobia is so 1997"
- "Church and state... not such a good marriage!!!"
- "If God didn't make homosexuals, there wouldn't BE any!"
- "In 1967, 16 states banned interracial marriage"
- "Overcome H8 / Overturn 8"
- "My faith backs MARRIAGE EQUALITY"
- "Tax exemption - take it away"
- "Gay marriage doesn't scare me / but no healthcare does!"
- "Land of the free? It's unConstitutional to take away my rights!!! I pay taxes too!"
- "Our love does not affect your religion"
- "If a child needs a mother and a father, then OUTLAW DIVORCE"
- "What kind of family teaches hate and discrimination?"
- "No state shall deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the law"
Man, I kinda like that last one. They should make it a law or something!
After the last speaker finished, a short march followed, with the crowd trooping down Adams Street and up Michigan Avenue toward Millennium Park.
Traffic was briefly obstructed when part of the crowd decided to hang out in the middle of Michigan Avenue instead of marching onwards, which was about the only thing I really disagreed with. Pissing off some taxi drivers rarely helps anything.
4 comments:
Bah, I'm sorry I missed this. Seems that only the protests I decide not to go to wind up not sucking. It's pretty inspiring the number of straight people I know who went, actually.
Seems like a great march for a great cause.
I'm against the law, and as a California voter voted against it, but find no constitutional fault with it. It doesn't not discriminate, and defines marriage as the same for everyone. A gay dude can marry -- he just has to marry a woman. It is, purely defined, within the bounds of equal protection under the law. I would have hoped the Supreme Court would have refused to see the case rather than grab marriage defining power from the people or states, per the 10th amendment, but hopefully they will makes the right decision and determine that the 14th amendment has not been broken.
And if the masses decided that any straight man could marry, so long as they married another man, would that be equally acceptable to you? It'd be just as fair!
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