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Ed's 1996 Same-Sex Marriage Speech
Rep. Ed Fallon’s
Speech on Same-Sex Marriage
Ladies and
gentlemen of the House, I have anguished over
this bill, not because there is any doubt in my
mind as to how I should vote, but because I
believe strongly that what we are dealing with
here is the defining civil rights issue of this
decade. Historically, this issue may prove to
be the most significant matter we deal with
this year, and so I would respectfully ask the
body's indulgence and attention during this
debate.
Back in the 1950s,
many, many Americans were victimized by
relentless, fear-driven red-baiting. There was
a Bolshevik lurking in every bathroom, and you
never knew but your neighbor or even your uncle
might turn out to be a communist.
In the 1990s,
red-baiting is out. But pink-baiting is in.
Gay-bashing, generally thought of as a Friday
night frolic for inebriated thugs, has its
parallel expressions in voting booths, city
council halls, and legislative chambers across
this country. Today we are witnessing one of
those expressions in the form of this bill. By
singling out gay and lesbian marriages as a
union unacceptable in the eyes of the law, we
fuel the fires of ignorance, intolerance, and
hatred.
And if anyone here
thinks that the positions we embrace, the laws
we enact do not affect the mood of the public,
then you have a very low, and I believe, a very
inaccurate view of the powerful influence we
here in this body exert over the formation of
public opinion. The message we're sending today
is that it's OK to discriminate against people
of a different sexual orientation, even though
for the most part, that's the way they were
born and there's nothing they can do to change
it. And for those who would argue that
homosexuality is a choice, I ask you: do you
really believe that anyone in their right mind
would voluntarily choose to be in a class of
people who are constantly made fun of,
despised, beaten up and even killed,
discriminated against, fired from their jobs,
denied housing, and prevented from marrying?
For gay and
lesbian people, this array of abuse is par for
the course. If you believe that homosexuality
is a personal choice, then you have not tried
very hard to see this issue from a gay or
lesbian person's point of view.
Well, I suppose
this is as good a time as any for me to come
out of the closet. I can't help the way I was
born. It's just who I am. I've never announced
this to a group publicly, but I guess it's
about time. I am heterosexual. I am absolutely
certain in my entire being that I could never
be homosexual, no matter how hard I might try.
I've never been attracted to another man in my
life, and the idea of engaging in a homosexual
act is foreign and distasteful to me. But just
as I would hope that homosexual men and women
could accept me for who I am, I promise to try
to accept them for who they are. Why can't you
do the same? Why can't we all do the same?
Hatred grows out
of fear, and fear grows out of ignorance.
Though I've never hated homosexuals, I used to
fear them. When I was a kid growing up, the
worst name you could call someone was a gay
loser. And the stereotype that still pervades
the minds of many in this chamber -- that of
the highly aggressive, promiscuous gay man
seeking countless, anonymous relationships --
is the stereotype that I grew up with, and the
stereotype that contributes to volumes of
ignorance and volumes of fear.
Over time, I've
come to learn that this stereotype, like most
stereotypes, is based on hearsay, not fact. The
rogues who may fit the previous description are
the exception to the rule, just as there are
male heterosexual rogues who are aggressive,
promiscuous, and constantly hitting on and
harassing women.
In my evolving
experience with homosexuals, familiarity has
displaced ignorance and dispelled fear. I now
count as friends and constituents many same-sex
couples. Some have children. Most are in
long-term, stable relationships. All are very
decent, kind and normal people. I make no
effort to judge the integrity of what they do
in their bedroom, and to their credit, they've
never judged the integrity of what I do in
mine.
One lesbian couple
I count as friends have two children the same
age as my son and daughter. They attend the
same elementary school as my children. They
play together. They go to the same birthday
parties. They swap overnights. These two
children are healthy, bright, and courteous,
and their parents probably do a better job of
parenting than I do.
Though you may
have personal, religious reasons why this
arrangement seems distasteful to you, there is
absolutely no way you could rationally argue
that this is not a stable happy, healthy
family. In a pluralistic society that allegedly
values the separation of church and state, why
can we not simply live and let live? Accept the
reality that this couple's religious beliefs on
homosexuality are different than yours. Just
leave religion out of it, as our founding
fathers and mothers saw fit. If the fruit which
falls from the tree is good, the tree must also
be good.
Indeed, there are
many religious groups that openly and lovingly
celebrate unions between same-sex couples. For
example, Methodists, the United Church of
Christ, Congregationalists, Reform Jews, the
Metropolitan Community Church, Unitarian
Universalists and Quakers.
There is no
shortage of gay or lesbian couples that value
and revere marriage. In fact, just last fall I
attended the wedding of two women. Their son
was present. The wedding was held in a local
church. It was conducted by two ministers. And
there were 150 family members and friends of
the happy couple there to celebrate with them.
Yet, we're told by
the bill's supporters that we need legislation
to protect ourselves from this kind of
marriage? No, ladies and gentlemen, this is not
a marriage-protection bill. It is emphatically
an anti-marriage bill. This rhetoric used by
supporters of HF 2183 may be slick but it is
grossly inaccurate. What are you trying to
protect heterosexual marriages from? There
isn't a limited amount of love in Iowa. It
isn't a non-renewable resource. If Amy and
Barbara or Mike or Steve love each other, it
doesn't mean that John and Mary can't.
Marriage licenses
aren't distributed on a first-come,
first-served basis here in Iowa. Heterosexual
couples don't have to rush out and claim
marriage licenses now, before they are all
snatched up by gay and lesbian couples.
Heterosexual
unions are and will continue to be predominant,
regardless of what gay and lesbian couples do.
To suggest that homosexual couples in any way,
shape or form threaten to undermine the
stability of heterosexual unions is patently
absurd.
And I know, you'll
say: "What about the gay agenda?" Well, just as
there turned out to be no Bolsheviks in the
bathroom back in the 1950s, there is no
gay-agenda in the 1990s. There is, however, a
strong, well-funded anti-gay agenda, and we
have an example of its efforts here before us
today.
All that gay and
lesbian people are asking for is, if not
understanding, then at least tolerance. All
they are asking for is the same basic civil
equality that all Americans yearn for and
should be entitled to.
To those in this
body who know in their hearts and consciences
that this bill is wrong, yet are afraid to vote
against it, I ask you to consider the powerful
message this bill sends to the people of Iowa.
It sends the message that discrimination
against gays and lesbians is acceptable and
officially sanctioned. It sends the message
that it's OK to deny civil and equal rights to
some minority groups in our society. It sends
the message that the gift of marriage is good
for some yet forbidden to others. And for those
in my own party who plan to vote for this bill,
it sends the message that Democrats, who have
traditionally stood up for and protected
everyone's civil rights, aren't willing to do
so in the case of homosexuals.
If you are
weighing the political consequences of opposing
this bill and find they are too heavy, I'd like
you to think about the great moral changes that
have occurred in this country over the past 200
years. Ask yourself when you would have felt
safe to speak in favor of the separation of the
colonies from Great Britain? When would you
have taken a public stand for the abolition of
slavery? When would you have spoken in favor of
women's suffrage? In the 1960s, when would you
have joined Martin Luther King and others in
calling for equal rights for African Americans?
When would you have spoken out against
restrictive marriage laws banning inter-racial
marriages?
While the choice
before us today -- between a green button or a
red one -- is a difficult one to make, it is
nowhere near as difficult or dangerous as the
choices faced by the many freedom fighters who
came before us.
We're elected not
to follow but to lead. We're elected to cast
what might sometimes be a difficult,
challenging, and politically inexpedient vote.
We're elected to
represent our constituents when they're right,
and to vote our consciences regardless of
whether our constituents are right. And our
conscience should be telling us to stand up for
civil rights regardless of how unpopular it may
appear.
The Reverend Dr.
Martin Luther King Jr. once said, "A time comes
when silence is betrayal." Such a time is now.
With your no vote on this bill, you can help
break the silence and stand with those who have
no one to stand with them. Thank you.
before the Iowa House on
02/20/96
My remarks are
directed both toward those who sincerely
believe that this bill is good and just and to
those who know in their hearts and consciences
that this bill is wrong, but in fear of public
opinion and of how this issue will be used in
campaigns next fall, they are inclined to vote
in favor of its passage.
