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[personal profile] pegkerr
I have been following, with increasing fascination, a story which is heating up in the news, which I first discovered in a local gay publication, Lavender, but I see it is being picked up by the mainstream media. The White House Egg Roll is an annual event which takes place at the White House, which began in 1878. The President, First Lady and the Easter Bunny join moms and dads who cheerfully watch as their kids struggle to push pastel-colored eggs across the White House lawn with a spoon.

This year, Family Pride Coalition, the largest organization representing GLBT families, has decided it's time for gay and lesbian moms and dads with their kids to take part in this annual event. FPC is joining with organizations such as Soulforce, PFLAG, Metropolitan Community Churches (MCC) and the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force to recruit families to take part in the event.

Aware of the problems that could arise if the religious right got word of the plan, FPC and its partners tried to keep word of their event known only within the GLBT community.

Unfortunately, hopes for subterfuge were dashed when the Institute for Religion and Democracy (IRD), a fundamentalist organization, caught wind of the event via a Soulforce e-mail alert.

On January 13, IRD sent out a press release which not surprisingly misconstrued the nature of the plan. Its headline read "Pro-homosexuality 'Soulforce' to Crash White House Easter Egg Roll." This touched off a firestorm of angry reaction on the religious right. Read the rest of the story here.

Here is the Weekly Standard's article. Mark Tooley of the IRD, writing for the Weekly Standard, claims that "Seemingly few (if any) Washingtonians have ever tried to exploit the annual White House Easter Egg Roll for political purposes." Here is a pretty typical conservative blog's reaction: ("In their latest attempt to appear mainstream, an activist gay group is planning on ruining the annual White House Easter Egg Roll by turning it into a political demonstration . . .How an activist gay group thinks that crashing an annual family event at the White House and turning it into a parade of human debris will make mainstream America accept them is beyond me.") I was intrigued by one of the comments on this blog and the reaction:
Nancy Says:

January 21st, 2006 at 4:11 pm
Maybe if you get really close, you can spit on their kids while they try and gather easter eggs. After all, if those kids are reckless enough to belong to people you don’t approve of, surely you can hate them too.

Nick Says:

January 23rd, 2006 at 10:28 am
Nancy,

I never said I hated anybody. What I do hate is that these people will be turning a traditional kids’ event into a political event. If gay people want to bring their kids to this event, fine, but there is absolutely no need to turn it into a political spectacle. That isn’t going to help anyone, least of all the kids.
(He calls gays and their children "human debris" but he doesn't hate anybody. Right.) It seems very clear to me that this is a powerful struggle by both sides, each attempting to claim for their own some very important national symbols (the White House, the President, the concept of "family," religion itself, since it is an Easter event) in order to frame the debate their way. If gays can succeed by their rights as Americans in claiming these important symbols as their own (and which conservatives have always assumed have belonged to them), then they have taken a very important step towards national acceptance. The conservatives know this, and so they are fighting angrily tooth and nail to keep gays out, as if gays are attempting to steal something that belongs to them. Their defense seems to be that having Gays and Lesbians at the event ("crashing it," when traditionally tickets are available to families first come, first served) would be "politicizing" it. The Weekly Standard article notes: "Although Soulforce insists this will not be a political protest, only a gathering for families, its supporters will arrive with special 'non-political' t-shirts to identify themselves as 'LGBT.'" What the Standard does not say is what, exactly these t-shirts would say: Not "LGBT" but "Love Makes a Family."

And as for Tooley's claim that the Egg Roll has never been used for political purposes, well, hmm. On conservative chat rooms, some critics of Family Pride suggested the White House could make the egg roll an invitation-only event, as it did in 2003 when attendance was limited to military families. (Of course, that could not be considered a "political purpose," could it?) Other critics said conservatives should mobilize to outnumber gay families at the egg roll.

See more coverage: NBC, and CNN. I will be watching this story. I wonder what the White House will do.
ext_107499: (Default)
From: [identity profile] kaustin.livejournal.com
In their latest attempt to appear mainstream, an activist gay group is planning on ruining the annual White House Easter Egg Roll by turning it into a political demonstration . . .How an activist gay group thinks that crashing an annual family event at the White House and turning it into a parade of human debris will make mainstream America accept them is beyond me.


or in English

In their latest attempt to show that they are mainstream, a group is planning on attending the annual White House Easter Egg Roll. Hopefully attending an annual family event at the White House will help mainstream America become more accepting of members of this group.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-02-10 07:58 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] aeditimi.livejournal.com
I've had the distinct dishonor of meeting Mark Tooley in person, when he came to "write" about (i.e., make stuff up about) a women's conference I helped put together at Boston University School of Theology. I try to be open-minded and nice as much as I can, but he's an individual who tests my abilities.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-02-10 10:47 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tassie-gal.livejournal.com
Ummm I just dont get it. People ---> egg roll = fun. Sexual preference of the parents shouldnt come into it. Sigh - wish people could just like each other. As ones green senator said during a recent debate at RU486 here - "Get your rosaries off my ovaries".

(no subject)

Date: 2006-02-11 02:22 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hedwig-snowy.livejournal.com
Why is it political when 1 gay person comes to an event, but when 2,000 fundamentalists meet in a Mega-church and the pastor declares that anyone who votes for a Democrat is going to hell it's a non-taxable, religious gathering?

Me gotsss to hatesss somebodysss! They need to get a life. Although, I guess bigotry pays well otherwise they would have closed shop a long time ago...

Segregated? Blame Thy Self!

Date: 2006-02-21 10:22 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
This was their statement.
More than 100 gay families have signed up to attend the White House’s annual Easter egg roll in April.

“It will help Americans see real gay, lesbian and transgender headed families,” said Jennifer Chrisler, executive director of Family Pride, one of the groups spearheading the event.

This is the first year Family Pride has organized gay families to participate in the event.

Chrisler said some “fringe groups” have attacked them. “The right always gets very concerned when LGBT parents show up with their children,” she said. “The more we are the same, the less potent the arguments are for discriminating against us.”

This is my statement.
My issue is this. I have attented the Egg Roll 3 years with my husband and two daughters. There may have been gay families attending during those years, I do not know. Do you know why I dont know? Because they attended just like everyone else. Dressed in fitting clothes and not drawing attention to them selves. They state that “The more we are the same, the less potent the arguments are for discriminating against us.”

But they will not be making themselves the same. They plan on coming in Logo T-Shirts and being part of a group. This contradicts the whole issue they are making as far as being the same.

They then state that“ It will help Americans see real gay, lesbian and transgender headed families,” said Jennifer Chrisler, executive director of Family Pride

I mean make up your mind, do you want to be segregated or not.

If you are going to go to the Egg Roll, then GO, just like everyone else, no one has ever kept that from happening. If you have a child in tow, then you can get in. I dont see this whole point of starting this campaign to go as a large group to make a point. The only point your making is that you are ignorant in thinking that an Egg Roll will make you feel better about yourself and your family.

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