Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Politics: Take Sides Gay-boys

Two things irk me (OK, many things irk me): voters who assert that there is no difference between the two parties and gay Republicans. The former because it is demonstrably untrue, the later because civil rights are the single most important difference between the two parties.

As to why the two parties are not different, I have some problems too. For instance, neither candidate is making global warming a priority, science is not sufficiently high in the platforms of either party, the new Affordable Healthcare Act does not go far enough, and the parties' views on tax policy are deceptively similar. Nevertheless, the list of why Obama is a great President is long and well-documented.

But I want to focus on why gay men should vote Democratic in this election.

First, we have to understand what the role of the President is in our federal government. The Constitution provides that:
The executive power shall be vested in a President of the United States of America. He shall hold his office during the term of four years * * *
Those powers include (formatting and edited added):

  • Being the Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy and of state Militia;
  • Requiring the Opinion, in writing, of the principal Officer in each of the executive Departments;
  • Granting Reprieves and Pardons;
  • Making Treaties;
  • Nominating and appointing Ambassadors, Judges of the supreme Court, and others;
  • Giving the State of the Union address — Recommending to their Consideration such Measures as he shall judge necessary and expedient;
  • Convening and Adjourning both Houses;
  • Receiving Ambassadors and other public Ministers;
  • Taking Care that the Laws be faithfully executed; and
  • Commissioning all the Officers of the United States.
Nowhere does the Constitution provide the power to the president that he apparently has if you give only a cursory reading to the news. The President's role in lawmaking is largely limited to the setting policy. The President cannot control oil prices, cannot enact laws (there are certain non-constitutional powers, provided for by Congress), cannot levy or repeal taxes...the list of what he cannot do is much longer than the list of what he can do. In so many ways, it seems that the office of the President is an impotent role.

Yet, it is clearly not.

What the president can do is set the tone for domestic policy and pull the strings of foreign policy. And how does that affect gay rights? President Obama has advanced the rights of gay people to the extent he can in so many ways:
These are the ones that readily come to mind. For a more complete list see: eQualityGiving.org.
Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it. -George Santayana
To some degree, its all rhetoric. To some degree, that is the President's job.

Your, Bear

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