[Mb-civic] Taking the gay insults personally - Ellen Goodman - Boston Globe Op-Ed
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Fri Mar 24 04:04:39 PST 2006
Taking the gay insults personally
By Ellen Goodman | March 24, 2006 | The Boston Globe
IN MY business, it's only fair to acknowledge a bias. My bias is named
Ruthie.
Ruthie is the youngest cousin in a bumper crop of babies that have
extended our family over the last few years. When she was adopted, we
didn't pass out cigars, we passed out Baby Ruth bars. So maybe it's our
fault that she's now in the sugar-rush stage of toddlerhood, leaving her
parents joyously breathless and regularly transforming her grandmother's
house into Early Childproof Decor.
Did I mention that Ruthie has two daddies, something her toddler cousins
take for granted? Did I mention that Ruthie's birth mother chose this
couple to raise her, picking these two men from all the dossiers at the
adoption agency?
Ruthie is why I take it personally when the Vatican calls gay adoptions
''gravely immoral" or says that such adoptions ''mean doing violence to
these children." Ruthie is why I grimace when Russell Johnson, chairman
of the Ohio Restoration Project, says, ''experimenting on children
through gay adoption is a problem." Ruthie and her parents are not an
experiment. They are a family. Part of my family.
Once again, we are back to the subject of gay adoption. This month,
Catholic Charities in Boston was called on the Vatican carpet. For years
the agency had operated a kind of ''don't ask, don't tell" policy. Over
the course of two decades, Catholic social workers had placed 13
children with gay parents, saving most from the revolving door of foster
care.
But Roman Catholic law forbids gay adoption, and Massachusetts state law
forbids discrimination. Faced with a conflict, the bishops overrode the
board of Catholic Charities and ended its long and cherished role in
adoption.
Now this issue is rolling out across the country, all the way to San
Francisco. There, the new archbishop appears to be on a similar
collision course with Catholic Charities and secular laws.
In Massachusetts, Governor Mitt Romney, nodding madly to conservatives
in his bid for a presidential run, has filed a bill to grant a religious
exemption to discrimination laws. But if you give one church permission
to discriminate against gays, what's next? Permission to discriminate
against blacks or Jews who want to adopt? Isn't that where we came from?
It seems that many see gay adoption as another issue to rally the right
in the culture wars. There are now efforts underway in 16 states for
laws to ban gay adoptions. These would add to a crazy quilt of state
laws ranging from Florida, which bans gay adoptions but allows gay
foster parents, to Mississippi, which bans adoption by gay couples but
not gay singles, to Utah, which prohibits all unmarried couples from
adoption.
But let's put my Ruthie bias aside for the moment. Let's even put aside
the studies that support my bias: A comprehensive review of them coming
out next week from the Evan B. Donaldson Adoption Institute shows again
that children of gay parents do fine.
If some still insist that it is ''gravely immoral" to raise children in
gay households, what exactly do those wedge-drivers propose to do?
We have always had gay parents. Most had children the old-fashioned way,
hiding their sexuality as long as they could. Now they can also do it
the new-fashioned way with every reproductive aid from sperm bank to
surrogate.
A researcher analyzing the 2000 Census estimated 250,000 kids being
raised by same-sex couples. If gay parenting is harmful, do we take
children away from their biological gay parents? Do we make it unlawful
for gays to use fertility technologies? How? If there are states that
allow gay adoption, would we ban interstate travel for that? And what do
we say to a birth mother who picks a gay couple? No?
Today 60 percent of agencies accept applications and 40 percent
knowingly place children with gay parents. Social workers, whether at
religious, state, or private agencies, want only one thing: to find
safe, good homes in a country with 500,000 children adrift.
''The effect of all this opposition is not to prevent gay people from
becoming parents," says Adam Pertman of the Donaldson Adoption
Institute. ''All it can do is diminish the pool of mothers and fathers
for children who need homes."
We all talk about ''the best interest of the child." What makes up that
interest? On my list are attention, love, security, humor, and a
besotted family racing to keep one step ahead of a toddler. Of course, a
little bias on that child's behalf never hurts.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2006/03/24/taking_the_gay_insults_personally/
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