Op ed in 2/7/13 edition of
Rainbow Times
Dear Rainbow
Times Editor,
Sometimes
change is elusive, and sometimes you can feel the momentum and know change is
around the corner. That was true for the civil rights movement, women’s movement
and currently the LGBT rights movement. Change is truly in the air, in the state
houses and on the street. This is where Veterans For Peace comes in, on
the street. We have a wonderful welcoming parade on the streets of South Boston
on Saint Patrick’s Day, the (Saint Patrick’s Peace Parade, the
Alternative People’s Parade for Peace, Equality, Jobs, Environmental
Stewardship, Social and Economic Justice). If you believe in peace and
equality you are welcome to march in our parade. We will form up at 2:00 pm on D
Street and West Broadway, South Boston. Together we proudly walk to an
overwhelmingly positive reception, one mile behind the first parade in our
welcoming and inclusive parade.
It is
shameful that it has taken twenty years (and counting) for the LGBT community to
be able to walk in the traditional parade in South Boston without harassment and
hostility. It is 2013, there is gay marriage in Massachusetts, don’t ask don’t
tell is history, gay and lesbian men and women now serve openly and honorably in
the armed forces.
Sadly the
AWVC, the group who initiated the law suite twenty years ago resulting in the
Hurley Decision, still clings to antiquated attitudes. Although the Supreme
Court ruling gave the AWVC the legal right to exclude anyone for any reason from
walking in their parade, that does not make it right. It is not the
legality, it is the morality of their discriminatory actions
towards Veterans For Peace, and members of the LGBT community that is the issue.
Where are
the politicians on Saint Patrick’s Day? They will be telling jokes at the
morning breakfast and probably walking or riding in the first parade, smiling,
shaking hands, politicking and soliciting votes. All the while knowing that the
parade they are walking or riding in is excluding veterans and the LGBT
community. It is great to participate in the pageantry and fun of a parade; it
is very difficult to stand up when you see an injustice marching by right in
front of your face. These same politicians will court the LGBT community for
votes and run ads in the LGBT publications expounding how they support gay
rights etc. Someone should let them know that civil rights do not begin and end
in the voting booth. Not until justice and equality have permeated our culture
do real civil rights take root.
Now is the
time for politicians of conscience to stand up and say enough is enough,
prejudice, bigotry and exclusion on the streets of South Boston has to end once
and for all. It is time for all of us, gay and straight alike to notify our
elected local, state and national representatives and tell them that it is time
to take a moral stand and not walk in that 1st parade. By walking in
the 1st parade they are giving full approval to blatant
discrimination against veterans who work for peace and LGBT community. If a
politician professes to support equal rights for the LGBT community and support
the right of veterans to express their desire for peace and want our vote, now
is the time for them to stand up against this on going, very visible
and embarrassing affront to veterans and the LGBT community.
Hope to see
you on Saint Patrick’s Day, Erin Go Bragh
Pat
Scanlon
Coordinator, Veterans For Peace, Chap 9, Smedley D.
Butler Brigade
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