(*Editor's
Note | Howard Dean, M.D. is seeking the Democratic nomination for President
of the United States. He served as the Governor of Vermont from 1991 to
2002. Dean is a physician who previously shared a medical practice with
his wife, Dr. Judith Steinberg. He received his B.A. from Yale University
in 1971 and his medical degree from Albert Einstein College of Medicine
in New York City in 1978. He served in the Vermont House from 1982 to 1986;
was elected lieutenant governor in 1986, and became governor in 1991. His
campaign website is www.DeanForAmerica.com.
- wrp)
Equal
Rights is the Responsibility of Every American
By Governor Howard Dean
t
r u t h o u t | Exclusive Editorial
http://www.truthout.org/docs_03/042803A.shtml
Sunday
27 April 2003
George
W. Bush ran for President on the promise that he would be ``a uniter, not
a divider.'' Nothing could be further from the truth. Earlier this week,
Senator Rick Santorum, the third highest ranking Republican in the Senate,
compared homosexuality to bigamy, polygamy, incest and adultery. On Friday,
President Bush praised Santorum as ``an inclusive man.'' With his praise,
this President has once again demonstrated his willingness to follow the
extremist Republican tradition of dividing our country for political gain.
The President knows that his defense of Santorum's inflammatory words deeply
offends millions of gay and lesbian Americans, their family and friends;
his praise also raises grave concerns about this Administration's commitment
to civil rights and civil liberties.
Senator
Santorum has called his repugnant remarks ``a legitimate public policy
discussion.'' Senator Santorum is wrong. Equating the private, consensual
activities of adults to the molestation of minors is not a policy discussion.
It is gay-bashing, and it is immoral.
Senator
Santorum asserted that the government has the right ``to limit individuals'
wants and passions.'' While the government has the right to protect citizens
from the harmful acts of others, as well as an obligation to promote the
general welfare of all people, I do not believe that it is the proper role
of government to step into the private bedrooms of consenting adults. The
continuous assault by right-wing radicals on the privacy of ordinary Americans
must stop.
Senator
Santorum must step down from his leadership post. His failure to recognize
that it is wrong to attack people because of which group they belong to
makes him unfit to hold a leadership position in the United States Senate.
The
issue at hand is about more than Senator Santorum's reprehensible statements,
however, and the issue is also about more than the dignity and respect
of gay and lesbian Americans.
The
issue is whether we, as Americans, will continue to allow ourselves to
be led down a path by this Administration to a country that is divided
against itself by race, income, gender, sexual orientation and religion.
Senator
Santorum's remarks do not exist in isolation. In January, President Bush
went on national television to discuss the Supreme Court's hearing of the
University of Michigan's affirmative action case. One of the most despicable
moments of this President's Administration occurred when, on national prime
time television, he used the word "quotas" repeatedly to describe the University
of Michigan's admissions policy.
President
Bush knows that the University of Michigan does not now have, and has never
had, quotas. His use of the race-loaded word "quota" is intended to incite
people's fears of losing their jobs, or their positions in America's leading
universities, to minorities. Such rhetoric, which is designed to appease
the extreme right-wing of the Republican Party and to appeal to Americans'
worst instincts, betrays the guiding principle that America is a nation
in which all people are created equal.
Achieving
this equality requires moral leadership. It sometimes requires standing
against your party's base. It is not moral leadership when the third highest
ranking Republican in the Senate intimates that the sexual abuse of minors
is no different than the consensual acts of adults, and the President's
spokesperson responds by praising that man for ``doing a good job as Senator.''
Three
years ago, I signed into law the civil unions bill, a law that guarantees
same-sex couples in Vermont the same legal rights as married couples. The
Vermont Supreme Court in December of 1999 held that gay and lesbian people
were not being provided with equal rights in our state. An hour and a half
after that court issued its decision, I told the press and the people of
Vermont that I would support a bill making our state the first in the country
to provide all Americans with equality under the law. At the time, approximately
35% of the people favored the bill, and 60% were opposed.
I
signed the civil unions bill because it was the right thing to do. Those
of us who came of age during the civil rights movement have long understood
that the strength of America lies in our commitment to equal rights under
the law for everyone. Civil unions provide equal inheritance rights, equal
hospital visitation rights, and equal insurance rights. Every legal right
that I have as a married person, anybody in Vermont can have, including
gays and lesbians. Today, Vermont is the only place in America where equal
rights under the law means equal rights under the law for every citizen,
not just for the people we like or the people we're comfortable with or
the people who look like us.
President
Bush's and Senator Santorum's remarks remind us that while laws may guarantee
equal rights, laws alone do not create equality. The Civil Rights Act of
1964 guarantees equal rights for minorities in this country, but the law
did not end racism and prejudice. The civil unions law guarantees equal
rights for same-sex couples in Vermont, but the law did not end discrimination
toward gays and lesbians.
Creating
equality for all requires the personal responsibility of everyone. As Americans,
we can no longer tolerate politics of division and still hope to achieve
the promise of equality envisioned by our Founding Fathers. The dream of
equal rights for all Americans will only be realized when all of us-whether
in the corridors of power or in the hallways of our schools and offices-come
together to create a community in which bigotry and hatred is cast out
from the forum of public discourse. I believe equal rights can be achieved,
but it will only be achieved when we have leaders in the highest offices
of the land who stop pandering to bigots in exchange for a handful of votes.