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Films about Queer History

 

Elizabeth Birch

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Elizabeth Birch addresses the Democratic National Convention

Names Index:
A
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| Authors Index | Scholars Index |

The Constitutional Underclass : Gays, Lesbians, and the Failure of Class-Based Equal ProtectionThe Constitutional Underclass : Gays, Lesbians, and the Failure of Class-Based Equal Protection by Evan Gerstmann

Gays and lesbians have long been the targets of legal discrimination (think of the 1986 Supreme Court Bowers ruling upholding antisodomy laws, Colorado's Amendment 2 banning gay rights legislation, the federal Defense of Marriage Act, and so on), and all efforts to pass legislation that would give them the same protections given to other minorities such as blacks and women have failed. For the time being, says Evan Gerstmann, gays and lesbians facing discrimination "can only win by appealing to judicial sympathy and intuitions about fairness rather than by invoking any coherent legal principle." But, he continues, the struggle for class-based gay and lesbian rights should not be considered an issue unto itself, but should be looked at within the entire field of "equal protection" jurisprudence. In that context, we learn that the courts have been reluctant to expand the boundaries of class-based protection to include any new group in more than two decades. Gerstmann's legal analysis is detailed and informative, and his conclusion--that it may be more profitable in the long run for activists to focus on rights involved rather than on their own identities--is provocative. --Ron Hogan

From the Author

This book is about gay and lesbian rights under the Constitution. How should courts respond when gays and lesbians seek such rights as: serving in the military; engaging in intimate sexual behavior without fear of arrest; or adopting children? I try not to be narrowly focused, but rather to put the gay rights debate into a larger context--how does the Supreme Court decide which groups do or do not deserve constitutional protection from discrimination? I also show how the gay rights debate is closely connected to the ongoing debate over affirmative action. I try very hard to write in a way that is of equal interest and accessability to experts and non-experts alike. I think any person can read and understand this book without special training. After all, the whole point of writing books is to inform the public.

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Transcript of Elizabeth Birch's Convention Speech

Elizabeth Birch made history Tuesday night when she took to the podium and addressed delegates to the 2000 Democratic National Convention. The audience was at first rather quiet, but warmed to her comments and rewarded Birch with as she spoke with frequent and progressively stronger rounds of applause.

Excerpt:

I am honored to speak here as a gay American. Tonight, we celebrate the American family. But we know that America’s family is not yet whole.

For the color of his skin, James Byrd Jr. was dragged behind a truck in Jasper, Texas, until his body was shattered on a drainage ditch.

Because of her faith, 14-year-old Kristi Beckel was gunned down as she worshipped in a Texas Baptist church.

Because Matthew Shepard was gay, he was driven into the countryside on a freezing Wyoming night, beaten and hung on a fence to die. His gentle voice still asks "why" -- as do the families who have paid for our national lesson with their children’s lives.

Tonight, we dedicate ourselves to healing the fractures – soothing the wounds – to making our American family truly whole.

 

Elizabeth Birch Testifies Against DOMA Before The House Judiciary Committee

Congressional Hearing
HR 3396
Elizabeth Birch, Esq.
Human Rights Campaign

Excerpt:

Good afternoon Mr. Chairman and members of the committee. My name is Elizabeth Birch and I am Executive Director of the Human Rights Campaign, the nation's largest lesbian and gay political organization. I would like to give special thanks to Evan Wolfson and Lambda Legal Defense & Education Fund for their hard work on this important issue over the past many months.

I appreciate the opportunity to offer testimony today on HR 3396, which has been inappropriately labeled the "Defense of Marriage Act." It is more appropriately labeled "The Federal Intrusion Act of 1996." The definition and administration of marriage has in all previous times in our history been left to the states. The proposed legislation is not only a bad idea, it is an unprecedented intrusion into state sovereignty and is unconstitutional. Although I plan to address the legal and constitutional considerations at issue with regard to this bill, I would like to take a moment to briefly present state of affairs with regard to gay citizens as we head toward the 21st Century in America.

Lesbian and gay Americans are your constituents, your sports heroes, your co-workers, your neighbors -- and in thousands and thousands of American homes, including many of yours, we are members of your own families. Gay Americans are found in every community, in all walks of life, at every income level and in all age groups. We are conservatives, liberals, Christians, Jews, Democrats, Republicans and independents -- and of every race...

 

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