Author Topic: "Brokeback Bunny"  (Read 2158 times)

Offline ptannen

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"Brokeback Bunny"
« on: April 16, 2006, 11:55:20 pm »
From the San Francisco Chronicle -
http://bettermost.net/forum/index.php?action=post;board=10.0

"Critics have derided the effort as "Brokeback Bunny" -- a reference to the Oscar-winning film "Brokeback Mountain" about two gay cowboys"


Lesbian and gay families camp out for egg roll tickets
They plan to use White House event to increase visibility
Zachary Coile, Chronicle Washington Bureau

Friday, April 14, 2006
Washington -- This year's White House Easter Egg Roll will feature an egg hunt, the traditional egg roll, face painting, a bunny trail obstacle course, magic tricks and readings by well-known children's authors.

But the event on the South Lawn on Monday morning comes with something new: More than 100 gay and lesbian families from around the country plan to attend, part of a strategy to make themselves more visible as politicians debate new restrictions on same-sex adoptions and marriage.

"We really feel it's important for the American public to meet our children, to meet our families in every possible way," said Jennifer Chrisler, executive director of the Family Pride Coalition, an advocacy group that is helping to lead the effort. "There are millions of children being raised by gay and lesbian parents in every part of this country, and this is a good way for us to highlight those families."

Some conservative critics complain that gay and lesbian families are using the children's event for political purposes. But the White House is making no effort to stop the group from coming or from wearing rainbow-colored Hawaiian leis as a sign of gay pride.

"It's a great tradition and, like we say, all families are welcome to attend," said Peter Watkins, a spokesman for first lady Laura Bush.

Tickets to the event are offered on a first-come, first-served basis Saturday morning, so dozens of gay and lesbian couples plan to camp outside the White House visitor pavilion starting at 8 p.m. today. About 250 gay and lesbian families have expressed interest in coming, and more than 100 families, including several from the Bay Area, have confirmed they will attend, Chrisler said.

Critics have derided the effort as "Brokeback Bunny" -- a reference to the Oscar-winning film "Brokeback Mountain" about two gay cowboys -- but it could succeed in putting a spotlight on gay and lesbian families at an event that is heavily covered by the Washington press corps.

Mark Tooley, executive director of the United Methodist program at the Institute on Religion and Democracy, helped spark the controversy by writing a piece in January in the conservative Weekly Standard headlined: "A Gay Easter?" The story, picked up by the Associated Press and the Drudge Report, focused on efforts by the families to "crash" the White House event.

"Basically these groups are using a children's event to make a political statement," Tooley said in an interview Thursday. "They could use 1,000 other locations and 1,000 other days to advocate their point of view.

"It seems to me inappropriate to use a 130-year-old children's event that, by and large, has not been political despite being at the White House. It would be nice to maintain that tradition and make sure that future administrations would not be tempted or forced to make the egg roll an invitation-only event."

Gay and lesbian families said they have no plans to use the event to protest or embarrass the Bush administration.

"Our participation in the egg roll is certainly not a political demonstration or a political statement," said Chrisler, who is going with her partner, Cheryl Jacques, and their 4-year-old twin boys, Tim and Tom. "It's just taking our kids to the egg roll to help the American public see that our families are just like them."

The annual egg roll has a long tradition. President Abraham Lincoln is said to have hosted informal egg-rolling parties -- although the first official event was held in 1878, when President Rutherford B. Hayes let children roll eggs on the South Lawn after they were kicked off the Capitol grounds because Congress wanted to protect the grass.

The event has always been open to the public, although in 2003 the White House, citing wartime security concerns, restricted it to the families of military personnel.

The idea for gay and lesbian families to participate in the event came from Colleen Gillespie, a New York University professor, and her partner, Alisa Surkis, a computer programmer, who live with their 3-year-old daughter, Ella, in Brooklyn, N.Y., and attended last year's egg roll.

"At the time, there was a lot of negative press about lesbian and gay families, and my partner and I were feeling pretty beleaguered and attacked," Gillespie said, citing the debate over a constitutional ban on gay marriage.

For the couple, the tipping point was when Education Secretary Margaret Spellings urged PBS not to air an episode of the children's show "Postcards from Buster" that showed the cartoon bunny meeting a lesbian couple and their children in Vermont. In a letter, Spellings wrote that "many parents would not want their young children exposed to the lifestyles portrayed in this episode."

"That was terrifying for us. What kind of message does that send when our daughter goes to preschool? Is she supposed to pretend that she doesn't have two moms?" Gillespie said. "We thought the only thing we can do as a family is to go and participate in this big public family celebration. We thought it would make us feel better to be claiming our right to be there."

Rainy weather cut short last year's egg roll, but Gillespie said the best experience was standing in line in the cold waiting for tickets with other parents, including a mother who homeschooled her eight kids.

"In no time at all, we were sharing stories about our kids, sharing blankets," she said. "You can see people start to forget about you being two moms and just relate to you in a real way."

Despite the criticism from some quarters, the Christian Coalition, a leading conservative group, said it does not object to gay and lesbian families participating in the White House event.

"If it's an open event, it's an open event," said Michele Combs, a spokeswoman for the Christian Coalition. "If they are protesting, I think that's wrong. ... If they are just going with their kids, I don't see where there's a problem with that."

Families who were sightseeing outside the White House, enjoying sunny April weather Thursday, said they didn't understand the fuss about gays and lesbians participating in the egg roll.

"Why is that controversial?" asked Lois Kutchera, a preschool teacher on vacation from Fort Lauderdale, Fla., with her husband and two children. "It seems to me that these are families, and they are entitled to be there just like any other family."

E-mail Zachary Coile
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vkm91941

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Re: "Brokeback Bunny"
« Reply #1 on: April 17, 2006, 12:01:40 am »
Quote
Families who were sightseeing outside the White House, enjoying sunny April weather Thursday, said they didn't understand the fuss about gays and lesbians participating in the egg roll.

"Why is that controversial?" asked Lois Kutchera, a preschool teacher on vacation from Fort Lauderdale, Fla., with her husband and two children. "It seems to me that these are families, and they are entitled to be there just like any other family."

Amen!  Thanks for posting this article, gives me a little hope that maybe, slowly the times really are changing. :)
« Last Edit: April 17, 2006, 12:05:48 am by vkm91941 »

Offline littledarlin

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Re: "Brokeback Bunny"
« Reply #2 on: April 17, 2006, 12:04:14 am »
From another article

Quote
In 1953, Mamie Eisenhower asked why black children were looking through the gates at the white children rolling eggs inside, and the following year she insisted that African- Americans be included.

What these conservative assholes fail to realize is that gay people have children too whether they like it or not, and by gay parents going to this event and "politicizing" it is no worse than what they are doing to these poor kids by denying equal rights to their parents. 

Fucking hypocrites.
We can hug on November, caress and nice oak.