By most accounts, the modern gay rights movement was initiated in the United States with a riot at New York City’s Stonewall Inn in 1969. But this history notwithstanding, the United States can no longer plausibly claim to be a pioneer in gay rights. Although the country has recently made progress in expanding access to gay marriage — the Supreme Court’s refusal to review a series of lower appellate court rulings that declared state bans on same-sex marriage to be unconstitutional increased the portion of the American public living in a jurisdiction that allows same-sex marriage from 45 percent to almost 60 percent — it pales in comparison with the strides made elsewhere in the world. Fifteen countries spread across Africa, Europe, Latin America, and Asia, including some countries that are not traditionally thought […]
Sunday, October 26th, 2014
Gay Pride Charade U.S. Progress On Gay Marriage Is More Modest Than It Appears
Author: Omar G. Encarnación, PhD
Source: Foreign Affairs
Publication Date: October 22, 2014
Link: Gay Pride Charade U.S. Progress On Gay Marriage Is More Modest Than It Appears
Source: Foreign Affairs
Publication Date: October 22, 2014
Link: Gay Pride Charade U.S. Progress On Gay Marriage Is More Modest Than It Appears
Stephan: It has been my view for many years that it is in a society's interest to encourage stable loving relationships whether heterosexual or LGBT. Study after study has shown that children raised by LGBT parents do as well, and are as well-adjusted as children in heterosexual families. Sometimes when the analysis becomes more granular it is shown they do better -- there is a lower rate of child abuse in LGBT families than in Fundamentalist religious families for instance. I have been proud of America that we have led the way but, as in so many things where we were early leaders we have now fallen behind. This essay may surprise you.