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- From: kkelly%nyxfer%igc.apc.org@MIZZOU1.missouri.edu (NY Transfer News)
- Subject: NEWS:Oregon says NO on 9!
- Message-ID: <1992Nov6.211803.6460@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Organization: The NY Transfer News Service
- Resent-From: "Rich Winkel" <MATHRICH@MIZZOU1.missouri.edu>
- Date: Fri, 6 Nov 1992 21:18:03 GMT
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- Via The NY Transfer News Service * All the News that Doesn't Fit
-
- OREGONIANS SAY NO TO ANTI-GAY REFERENDUM
-
- By Lyn Neeley
-
- The election-day defeat of Oregon's anti-gay Measure 9 by 54% of
- the voters shows the right wing can be beaten back when lesbians
- and gay men rise up, joined by other progressives, workers and
- oppressed people in a unified struggle.
-
- Many leaders of the campaign against Measure 9 felt its defeat
- was a victory but expressed the need to step up the fight. A
- similar anti-gay referendum passed in Colorado, where lesbian and
- gay activists say they'll intensify the struggle.
-
- Scott Seibert, No on Nine steering committee member and
- chairperson of Oregonians United Together Political Action
- Committee, said at a victory party: "What we've seen is an
- attempt by fundamentalist groups to force this agenda on our
- citizens. But average Oregonians have bonded together to form one
- powerful grassroots response against government-enforced
- oppression."
-
- Sandy Shirly, a leader in Eugene's lesbian community, told
- Workers World, "The people of Oregon have affirmed that gay men
- and lesbians are human beings and deserve to be fully included in
- our society and families."
-
- But Peggy Norman, chairperson of No on Nine, pointed out:
- "Continued efforts are needed to protect homosexuals against
- discrimination. Across most of Oregon, gays and lesbians still
- can be fired from their jobs and denied housing solely because of
- their sexual orientation."
-
- NATIONAL BATTLEGROUND
-
- Measure 9 would have gone further. It would have amended the
- state constitution to define lesbians and gays as "abnormal,
- wrong, unnatural ... and perverse," and linked homosexuality to
- sadomasochism and child molestation.
-
- If passed the referendum would also have banned measures
- outlawing discrimination based on sexual orientation. All
- government agencies and public schools would have been required
- to discriminate against lesbians and gays.
-
- Placed on the ballot by the Oregon Citizens Alliance, Measure 9
- threw Oregon into the national spotlight as a battleground
- between neo-fascism and civil rights. OCA is supported by the
- ultra-right around the country. The group gets large
- contributions from religious fundamentalists like Pat Robertson,
- who donated $20,000, and from right-wing figures like William
- Bennet and Senators Phil Gramm, Orrin Hatch and John McCain.
-
- Since OCA went on the offensive a year ago, incidents of anti-gay
- violence have escalated. A racist, anti-gay climate emboldened
- neo-Nazi skinheads, who murdered a Black lesbian and white gay
- man living near Portland. An Asian man was murdered in Seattle.
-
- Measure 9 was defeated in the heavily populated urban areas of
- Portland and Eugene by margins of three to one and three to two
- respectively. This accounted for the victory, since Measure 9 won
- in the state's rural areas.
-
- That was where OCA focused its campaign of lies like "homosexuals
- have special rights, take all our jobs and recruit our children."
- OCA's anti-gay rhetoric played on the fears of impoverished,
- unemployed timber workers and farmers in rural white communities
- who are desperate to find an enemy to blame.
-
- Donna Redwing from Portland's Lesbian Community Project told
- Workers World: "Almost half the state voted yes on 9. It's a
- scary thought. We're glad it was defeated but we have to keep
- working.
-
- "We need a pro-action coalition to build a campaign with a
- lesbian and gay face. Part of our work has been outreach around
- the state to show them we have a human face and personality, that
- we are less scary than the OCA, and show them our work is on
- economic equality, rights for children and women, our work is
- helpful to the unemployed lumber worker."
-
- Suzanne Pharr of No on Nine said: "We have groups who have pulled
- together people of color, women and lesbians and gays--diverse
- groups of people to work against bigotry. This is not a single
- issue. The religious right is trying to dismantle all the gains
- that were won in civil rights movement."
-
- -30-
-
- (Copyright Workers World Service: Permission to reprint granted
- if source is cited. For more info contact Workers World, 46 W. 21
- St., New York, NY 10010; "workers" on PeaceNet; on Internet:
- "workers@mcimail.com".)
-
-
- NY Transfer News Service * All the News that Doesn't Fit
- Modem: 718-448-2358 * Internet: nytransfer@igc.apc.org
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