... and there are times when I wish that I didn't live in Iowa.
My favorite excerpt from the legislation:
... genitalia, buttocks, or the nipple of the female breast
[homer simpson] ...ummmm, nipple of the female breast... [/homer simpson]
A blog dedicated to the pontification of my own peculiar libertarian ideas and the "Fisking" of the editorial stance of the Des Moines Register.
Talk Back:
... genitalia, buttocks, or the nipple of the female breast
Jason Mattera must be having the time of his very young life.
He's been interviewed by some of the biggest media organizations in the country, thanks to his unusual protest - a stunt, really - aimed at a famously controversial policy.
Mattera and his fellow College Republicans... have targeted affirmative action, although their weapon of choice suggests they don't really understand the policy they claim to loathe.
As Mattera explained in the Providence Journal, "I'm making a statement that scholarships should be given out based on merit and need."
Interestingly, Mattera, who has a Puerto Rican heritage, is himself a beneficiary of, shall we say, ethnically aware largess. He has a $5,000 scholarship from the Hispanic College Fund...
Mattera, who is living proof to the contrary, is apparently trying to impress social conservatives that he can out-demagogue them by bathing in his own bigotry, denouncing his own circumstances, while perpetrating - and perpetuating - a fraud about affirmative action.
He gives aid and comfort to those who might take his tan skin or Spanish surname as a flag of inferiority.
Or who might think he got into Roger Williams as a favor to some idea about diversity, and wouldn't give him the time of day had he not joined their denunciations and offered his validation. It was, in effect, an affirming thing to do, an affirmative action.
Someday, future generations of Americans will look back at the debate over gay marriage and wonder what all the fuss was about. History will put today's debates in perspective the way society now has perspective on past subjects of raging cultural warfare, such as whether women should be allowed to vote.
The main argument against letting women vote was that it would undermine the traditional family. Sound familiar?
In a democracy, with inherent principles of equality for all people, that equality eventually will be achieved. The courts and public opinion, however haltingly, are moving in that direction. Many lawmakers in Iowa and in Congress are not. They stand against broadening the concept of equality under the law.
They stand on the wrong side of history.