LGBT WATERSHED MOMENTS
(written by Ed Oakley)
In horror, I watched the reality unfolding in
Orlando just as the news carried this event to all points around the
world. Tears came to my eyes as I
realized this was not just another news cycle; the event had become
personal. I saw Anderson Cooper lose his
composure and cry as he read the 49 victims’ names and what little was known
about each of them. The event became even
more personal to me when I heard Patty Sheehan speak about the LGBT community
in Orlando. Patty and I served as elected officials on committees at National League
of Cities some 10 years ago.
In an attempt to fill airtime, reporters hurried
to line up interviews with people having knowledge of the event, and they found
ways to connect bits and pieces of information I thought unusual. One reporter referred to the vigil held at
Stonewall Inn in New York City in 1969 and reminded the viewer that LGBT
historians refer to the riots that followed the vigil as “Stonewall,” the beginning
of the gay movement. The news anchor
made a very poignant comparison: “At the Stonewall riot, law enforcement
officers were dragging people out of the club to beat and arrest them for
simply being present and being gay. In
Orlando 47 years later, other law enforcement officers were dragging people out
of the club to save their lives.” The comparison was how far the gay movement
had come in less than half a century.
Prior to this event in Orlando, I had taped the
HBO series “The 1980s” and watched the segment on HIV and AIDS. That caused me to think back to Stonewall—I
was a junior in high school in 1969 and certainly not concerned with what was
unfolding in New York. My only thought was to graduate and go to college. I came out at the age of 22 as a college senior
in 1974. Five years had passed since
Stonewall, and I had no understanding of the magnitude of that event. Caught up in the Disco era, I made friends
easily, went to gay bars no longer hidden on back streets, and thought I was in
the mainstream. In 1980 a fear took hold
of the LGBT community—an unknown disease unlike any other in history was
devastating the community’s men and women.
In addition to having seen the HBO segment, I read a book and play
titled “And the Band Played On.” It hit me in the gut to realize that I’d lost
ALL of my friends to this disease.
In 1984 I moved to Dallas from Oklahoma City. The
purpose: to escape the pain of having seen my friends become sick and die. In the
new city, I worked and moved on with my life. One day in 1990 a
politician—friend of the LGBT community—was pushing a change in the Dallas
Zoning Code that was presented as a benign change. I begin to study this change. I came to realize that this was going to
require dance clubs to obtain special zoning to exist. I perceived this to be an attack on the gay clubs
that others were not aware of. I took up
the fight for the LGBT community against this ordinance. I met a man—Alan Ross—for whom the Texas
Freedom Parade is now named. He lived through the 1960 gay movement, the 1980s
AIDS crisis, and the LGBT movement in Dallas.
With his encouragement and help, I ran for Dallas City Council in
1993. Though unsuccessful in that
attempt, I ran again in 2001, was elected, and served until 2007, at which time
I ran for Mayor of Dallas, placing second in a field of 11. This made news around the world, the
possibility of an openly gay man becoming mayor of a large city in
America. I drew support from
Republicans, Democrats, LGBT, conservative businesspersons, ministers, the
Black community, the Latino community—a very diverse group in Dallas .
We passed, for that time, the most sweeping nondiscrimination ordinance
of any city, and it still stands today.
I give all this history because I think it lends
credibility to my prediction. Just like
milestones in our LGBT history—The Stonewall Riots, AIDS, nondiscrimination ordinances, LGBT in the military, gay marriage, executive orders, human rights campaigns, to name a few—Orlando will become the turning point in politics in
this country. This is a WATERSHED EVENT
that will change the course of history for what has become the hate mongering
by politicians. I believe this will
begin the movement to purge all elected offices across the country of antigay,
hate mongering bigots. When polls show
that 70% of the general public is okay with gay marriage and the elected
officials continue to use this as a rally point, the politicians don’t realize
the horse has already left the gate and it’s not going back.
As I watched the news concerning Orlando pouring
in from around the world, I witnessed grieving, compassion, help, concern, and condolences
from very unlikely places. I heard hate
speech from some of the likely places—ministers and politicians. I watched
interviews of people trying to backpedal on their past records of antigay
stance. The one interview that stands out most clearly in my mind is that of
the Attorney General of Florida. She previously had fought all the way to the
Supreme Court to uphold antigay laws in her state; now, in front of the news cameras,
she portrayed herself as a champion of the LGBT community. As people sat in
their living rooms, surely they looked at each other and said:
“Enough is
enough. You know our grandson is gay, our granddaughter is lesbian. Yes, I know my boss is gay. My secretary
married her partner. Well, I’ve always known my hairdresser is gay. The
organist is a lesbian living with her partner, the church secretary. My plumber
married his business partner, the city manager is gay . . . so is the police
chief.”
In homes all over America people are realizing
that what happened in Orlando could have happened to someone they know and care
about. This could have happened to their
own families. The antigay rhetoric needs to stop.
What our misguided political leaders are missing
is this—Take a look at the 103 people we know died or suffered injury at the
Pulse Night Club in Orlando. They
represent a microcosm of this generation—the future voters in this country. For
them, sexuality was, or is, not an issue.
They accepted, still accept, people for who they are, not members of
groups defined by archaic stereotypes. Just as what rose from Stonewall and
from the AIDS crisis, this horrific catastrophe will give rise to a
movement. It will begin with this
presidential election and all upcoming elections. With the help of technology
and electronic data, any politician’s derogatory, disparaging, and/or
homophobic remarks leave an electronic footprint, and that information will be
used against them. At some point in the
future, I believe people will no longer tolerate homophobic words and deeds.
Just as Stonewall began the movement, and AIDS
devastation forced politics on the LGBT community, and the 1990s refined the
political movement, and the 2000s energized the political movement, I believe
we’ll come to see the 2010s as a time during which our country witnesses a
movement of understanding and acceptance of the LGBT community.
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