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Majority rule and minority rights

I quote from a U.S. State Department publication, Democracy in Brief:

All democracies are systems in which citizens freely make political decisions by majority rule. In the words of American essayist E.B. White: “Democracy is the recurrent suspicion that more than half the people are right more than half the time.”

But majority rule, by itself, is not automatically democratic. No one, for example, would call a system fair or just that permitted 51 percent of the population to oppress the remaining 49 percent in the name of the majority. In a democratic society, majority rule must be coupled with guarantees of individual human rights that, in turn, serve to protect the rights of minorities and dissenters — whether ethnic, religious, or simply the losers in political debate. The rights of minorities do not depend upon the good will of the majority and cannot be eliminated by majority vote. The rights of minorities are protected because democratic laws and institutions protect the rights of all citizens.

This publication is produced by the Bureau of International Information Programs. This is the story we tell the world. It’s apparently lost on those here at home who voted to eliminate gay couples’ rights — my right — to marry.

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The fight continues

As I’m sure you’ve heard by now, Proposition 8 was approved here in California, eliminating the right of same-sex couples to marry. And as you might expect, I am sad and angry, but ultimately resolved to continue fighting. If the newly filed lawsuits don’t overturn Prop 8, then for sure we will have a new initiative on the ballot in a couple of years to restore our equal rights.

There are some silver linings: state domestic partnership, while not equal to marriage, is intact; among various age groups, opposition to Prop 8 was highest among young voters; and on a personal level I am proud of my home county (San Mateo) for voting 62% against it.

Thom and I took part in a massive protest march in San Francisco last Friday (photo of us here courtesy of Julie). The march started at Civic Center and followed Market to Castro, ending at Dolores Park. What an amazing sight. This is the kind of passion and momentum we need to carry going forward.

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No on Prop 8

Thom and JeffThom has written a thoughtful post on Proposition 8. Go check it out.

Lest there be any confusion: same-sex marriage is currently legal in California. Prop 8 would amend the state constitution and take that civil right away from hundreds of thousands of Californians, including me. Let’s not write discrimination into our constitution.

If you live in California, I ask you to vote NO on Prop 8. Ask your friends and family to vote NO. And anyone can make a donation — big or small, every bit helps — to the No on Prop 8 campaign.

Thank you.

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Catversary

So it’s been a year exactly since we adopted our cats, Mojo and Tiki, from the Peninsula Humane Society. They’ve really become part of our family. Happy anniversary, kitties!

Tiki and Mojo

Cats at the window

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Larger than life

I couldn’t let a whole month go by without blogging at least once and without at least quickly mentioning that we had a great time on our Alaska cruise. At our port excursions we did some firsts for us, like ziplining through a forest canopy and riding a floatplane over glaciers!

Trip report is forthcoming (eventually), and I’ve started to upload some photos. I skipped ahead chronologically and just uploaded one from the middle of our trip, at the border between British Columbia and the Yukon, which we visited on a bus/train excursion from Skagway, Alaska:

Yukon: larger than life

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Set a course for adventure

Our Alaskan vacation, which has been months in the planning, is finally upon us! I still can’t believe it’s here. Tomorrow morning we fly to Vancouver, where we’ll spend the weekend, and then on Monday we board the Coral Princess for a seven-day cruise to Whittier, Alaska, with stops in Ketchikan, Juneau, and Skagway. And at the end, we’ll spend a couple of days in Anchorage before flying back to San Francisco.

This will be my first cruise and my first time to Alaska. As usual we’ve packed at the last minute, but we’re basically ready! We should have Internet access now and then during the trip, so hopefully I can write or at least update status as we go along.

Bon voyage!

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links

Links for 2008-8-8

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Bernadette Peters concert

On Friday night we had a great time seeing Bernadette Peters sing with the San Francisco Symphony. (If I remember correctly, the first time I saw her in person was a concert she gave, also with the SFS, back when I was in high school.) After a short opening of pieces performed by just the SFS, she appeared — all sparkly and charming — and entertained us with several songs (often with interesting arrangements), mostly Broadway and a lot of Sondheim of course:

Let Me Entertain You (Gypsy)
No One Is Alone (Into the Woods)
There Is Nothing Like a Dame (South Pacific)
Fever
Mister Snow (Carousel)
Some Enchanted Evening (South Pacific)
Shenandoah
When You Wish upon a Star (Disney’s Pinocchio)
Johanna (Sweeney Todd)
Not a Day Goes By (Merrily We Roll Along)
You Could Drive a Person Crazy (Company)
With So Little To Be Sure Of (Anyone Can Whistle) / Children Will Listen (Into the Woods)
Being Alive (Company)
Kramer’s Song (lullaby written by Peters for her book Broadway Barks)

Good times. What a classy dame she is.

By the way, if any of San Francisco’s musical theater queens weren’t at this concert, they might have been seeing another great dame who was in town that night: Mitzi Gaynor. With Bruce Vilanch. At the Castro Theatre.