







|
Thu
Nov 12, 1998 - 12:50PM EST - HATE CRIME THREATENED FROM NYU COMPUTER -
UNIVERSITY UNWILLING TO FULLY INVESTIGATE
(Original Source: www.wiredstrategies.com)
ONLINE MESSAGE FROM NYU VIOLENTLY THREATENS GAYS, SHEPARD VIGILS
Latest in series of anti-gay threats spread via Internet
Washington, DC - Someone at New York University (NYU) posted a message to
a Matthew Shepard Web site yesterday threatening to "hurt any fag or
dyke" holding vigils, marches or demonstrations honoring the slain
University of Wyoming student. This incident is the latest in a series of
online anti-gay attacks following Shepard's death. Recent information
suggests NYU may not consider this threatened hate crime important enough
to investigate further.
The message was posted Saturday, October 31 at 3:56 PM PST, on a bulletin
board of the Matthew Shepard Online Resources Web site
- the board was created to assist in organizing vigils in Shepard's name.
Yesterday's message from Christ T. N. (i.e., "Christian") read
as follows:
"Posted by IP:128.122.253.144 Chris T. N. on October 31, 1998 at
15:56:06: This message is vigil related so please post it. I am WARNING
all homos that if you try to hold a vigil or march or demonstration in my
city you will be met with brutal ass-kicking force. I will personally hurt
any fag or dyke who comes to force their perverted views on us. After
tuesday's election and great wins for the great Republican party, we will
pass laws to outlaw homo "vigils" nationwide. Your time is up
fags!"
This post can still be viewed at http://www.wiredstrategies.com/wwwboard/messages/970.html.
The series of numbers at the top of the message (the IP address) trace it
to someone accessing the Internet from the Academic Computing Facility at
New York University. According to NYU's Web site http://www.nyu.edu,
access to the Web is made available to the students, faculty and eligible
staff of NYU. It is believed that the university can likely use their
computers to identify the specific author of the message.
This is the latest in a series of anti-gay hate messages posted to the
Shepard site. Two previous postings read:
"Posted by str8 on October 22, 1998 at 12:04:16:
This is sick perverted behavior! All fags and lesbians will be punished in
this country. If not by the great Republican Congress or by the Courts of
law, then surely God will punish them. In the meantime I will do my part
to punish with my fist and the heel of my boot!!"
Posted by someone on October 20:
"It's not too late to try and be STRAIGHT. Give up your homo
lifestyle or more fags will die and lesbians raped and impregnated and
forced to bear straight children. This is war against you homo
perverts!!"
The anti-gay hate on the Shepard site has not occurred in a vacuum. Just
yesterday, the Associated Press reported that two students at Holy Cross
college in Worcester, Massachusetts are facing disciplinary proceedings
for sending anti-gay email messages to all 2,200 students at the college.
In addition, a number of gay organizations made news a few weeks ago after
receiving threatening emails shortly after Shepard was found brutally
beaten.
"Anti-gay hate isn't just a small-town thing," said John
Aravosis, who runs the Matthew Shepard Online Resources Web site.
"Whether it's from drop-outs in Wyoming, or well-off kids at a
Catholic college or big city university, hate knows no class," he
added.
"These unfortunate incidents show that anti-gay prejudice is alive
and well in America, and more widespread than many would like to
admit," Aravosis said. "Let's hope that our political leaders
wake up to that fact before there's another Matthew Shepard."
According to NYU's statement of policy, each NYU Internet user promises
that "I understand that my access to NYU computing resources is for
the sole purpose of facilitating my work as a University student, staff
member or faculty member." In addition, the statement notes that:
"Any abuse or violation of the rules outlined here (or of other rules
and practices governing the use of computer networks to which NYU is
attached) will lead to account suspension and immediate review, with the
possibility of account revocation, further disciplinary action in
accordance with New York University rules and procedures, and referral to
local, state and federal law enforcement authorities." The entire
statement can be found at http://www.nyu.edu/acf/accounts/respon.html
As recent statements from NYU suggest that they do not consider such
violent threats against gay men and lesbians to merit a full
investigation, Aravosis is urging concerned citizens to call NYU president
Jay Oliva at 212-998-2345, and email the NYU Webmaster at webmaster@nyu.edu,
demanding that the university conduct an immediate and full investigation
of this threat, and deal swiftly and sharply with the individual involved.
VOTE TUESDAY, REMEMBER MATT
Why vote this coming Tuesday? Because those who would demonize and
dehumanize gay people are ratcheting up their extremist rhetoric and
actions to ensure that gay people never fully share in the American dream.
Consider the following:
* The House Republicans are bragging on their Web site at http://143.231.67.32/IssueFocus/TalkingPoints/TPMain/score.htm
that they killed the Hate Crimes Prevention Act.
* A lesbian college student was attacked in Minnesota, after attending a
vigil for Matthew Shepard, by two men, one masked and armed with a knife.
One of her attackers was 5-foot-9, 225 pounds; the other was 5-foot-7, 190
pounds. Before they fled on foot, one told the woman: "You're a smart
dyke. Don't say anything to anyone." The woman, about 5-foot-7, was
treated at St. Cloud Hospital for a bruised right eye and cuts to her face
and hands.
* Four men were brutally attacked last weekend in San Francisco by five
men who jumped out of a van yelling "fags" and
"honey."
* Two men were shot dead in Guerneville, California last weekend just
after one of them - who was gay - had repeatedly been harassed by a
stranger.
* On October 15, UPI reports that a bisexual Cincinnati man was found
beaten and strangled in his home.
* Days before Matthew was attacked, a court in Hawaii sentenced the
murderer of a gay man to a simple misdemeanor offense, with a maximum
sentence of one year.
* On October 20, someone posted this message on my Matthew Shepard
bulletin board: "It's not too late to try and be STRAIGHT. Give up
your homo lifestyle or more fags will die and lesbians raped and
impregnated and forced to bear straight children. This is war against you
homo perverts!!"
The Republicans in Congress say we aren't victims of hate, and need no
protection from people who want to kill the fags and rape the lesbians. If
you disagree, then do the following things to help ensure a good and
well-educated pro-gay vote on Tuesday:
1) Call the US Congress switchboard at 202/224-3121, ask for you Senators
and House Member, and ask their office if they did or did not support the
Hate Crimes Prevention Act. If you don't know your House Member, visit
this Web site to find out http://www.house.gov/writerep/
Now remember: the cowards didn't even let the bill come up for debate, let
alone a vote. So there's no record of who voted for or against the bill,
since no vote happened. Therefore you need to be very firm and demand to
know whether they support this bill or not - i.e., will they vote for it
in the next Congress or not.
2) Call the local campaign offices of anyone running for any position in
your state and ask if they support the federal Hate Crimes Prevention Act.
3) Vote next Tuesday - and if anyone from either Congress or a local
campaign office gives you anything other than an emphatic "YES - we
support the Hate Crimes Prevention Act!", vote against them on
Tuesday.
4) Call and email all your friends, and make sure they vote on Tuesday,
AND tell them what you've found out from your phone calls to Congress and
the local campaigns. Do another round of calls and emails Monday night to
make sure they vote on Tuesday.
5) If you're at a school, office, church, or other gathering place over
the next 5 days, use this as an opportunity to spread the word. Put up
flyers, talk to your friends, family and colleagues. Maybe give a speech.
6) Send letters-to-the-editor to your local paper immediately - either by
postal mail (look at your paper's editorial page for the address, and see
if you can fax it to them), or send it by email. You can find email
addresses for a lot of local papers at http://www.berkshire.net/~ifas/activist/.
(7) Call the campaign of someone running for the US House or Senate who
supported the Hate Crimes bill (just call 411 to get the number) and
volunteer to help their campaign over the next 5 days - they could use the
help, it's a lot of fun, and quite rewarding - and drag your friends with
you!
(8) Print out this message, or copy and paste it into an email message,
and distribute it widely via email, on message boards, to colleagues,
coworkers, fellow church-goers, family, students, etc.
Folks, a number of you have been asking what you can do to honor Matthew's
life. Probably the biggest thing you could do is to make sure you and
everyone you know votes on Tuesday, and make sure you vote with this
horrible crime in mind. Our elected officials are supposed to care about
our lives and those of our loved ones. Let's make sure they know that come
next Tuesday.
Sat Oct 24, 1998 - 2:20PM EDT - WYOMING OFFICIALS NOW
DOWNPLAY HATE-BIAS MOTIVE
WIRED STRATEGIES
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 24, 1998 - 2:00PM EDT
WYOMING CONSPIRACY DOWNPLAYING "HATE" LINK TO SHEPARD MURDER?
US Senator becomes fourth Wyoming official to weaken statement surrounding
anti-gay crime
Washington, DC - In an increasingly disturbing trend, US Senator Michael
Enzi (R-WY) is the fourth Wyoming official now backing down from an
earlier statement linking "hate and stereotyping" to Matthew
Shepard's savage murder.
According to documents received by Wired Strategies, in response to a
request that Senator Enzi support federal hate crimes legislation, the
Senator replied by email on October 15: "let us work together to
ensure that we avoid the kind of hate and stereotyping that gave rise to
this crime in the first place."
Yet on October 22, after another plea to the Senator to back such
legislation, the Senator replied: "let us work together to ensure
that we avoid the kind of hate and stereotyping that may have given rise
to this crime in the first place." The latter email changed the
statement "gave rise" to "may have given rise,"
clearly downplaying the linkage between hate and Shepard's murder. The
change prompted the author of the initial email request to ask: "Is
he downplaying the role of hate and homophobia?"
Enzi’s effort to diminish the hate bias link to Shepard's murder is in
marked contrast to the assessment offered by the victim's friends. Walter
Boulden, a close friend of Shepard who spoke at the DC vigil commemorating
the murder, told the Associated Press (AP) on October 9 that the crime was
clearly motivated by hate. ``There is no maybe,'' he told the Branding
Iron, the campus paper. In addition, Terry Summers, a friend of Shepard
who is the executive director of the Fort Collins-based gay support group
LAMBDA, told AP that same day: "It seems pretty obvious from the
court proceedings that he was beaten and robbed because he was gay."
Ominously, the Senator is not alone in his effort to back down from
earlier statements characterizing Shepard's murder as a hate crime. When
news of Shepard's murder first broke on October 9, Albany County Sheriff
Gary Puls initially characterized the attack as a ``hate crime,''
according to the Associated Press. When Puls was later asked if it was an
anti-gay attack, he replied: ``At the present time we are not confirming
that."
Then there’s Police commander Dave O'Malley, a 25year veteran of the
police force, who was initially quoted by AP on October 9 saying that
there had been a few hate crimes over the years, "but nothing
anywhere near this." That same day, O'Malley changed his tune away
from an anti-gay bias motive, and was reportedly telling the press that
robbery was the chief motive, and that Shepard was victimized only in part
because he was gay, even though O'Malley admitted to AP that Shepard's
accused murderers made anti-gay statements to their girlfriends right
after the murder.
In addition, Wyoming Governor Geringer was quoted by AP on October 9
saying: "hate crime legislation is needed." Yet three days later
on October 12, the governor released a statement now belittling hate
crimes legislation: "if hate is involved as a motive, it can make the
penalty more severe. That helps little, if the victim is dead." The
governor's statement went on to criticize the national attention the
Shepard case was receiving, almost implying hypocrisy on the part of
Shepard’s supporters: "I note with irony that the national press
didn't bat an eye when young Kristin Lamb was abducted from her
grandparent's front yard, raped, murdered and dumped in a landfill. That
action is just as repulsive as the loss of Matthew Shepard."
Then on October 13, the governor's spokesman told ABC News that with
regards to a hate crimes law "the governor says he's still not
convinced the state needs one." ABC then showed footage of the
governor actually chastising supporters of hate crimes legislation:
"we shouldn't be running off as a lynch mob might trying to look for
vigilante justice, because that would be just as wrong as the act we
deplore already." Quite a turn from the governor’s initial
unequivocal statement of support for the legislation.
"There may be a clandestine effort by Wyoming's officials to re-cast
Shepard's death as a simple robbery," said John Aravosis, an
Washington, DC-based online advocate who has been maintaining a Web site
of information on the Shepard case (http://www.wiredstrategies.com/shepard.html).
"Whether it's blatant homophobia, simple ignorance, or a cave to
pressure from religious fundamentalists, the fact remains that four key
Wyoming officials have now backed off earlier statements establishing a
clear link between anti-gay hate and Shepard's murder. It's suspicious to
say the least."
Also of concern, says Aravosis, is the fact that according to AP on
October 9, Albany County prosecutor Cal Rerucha refused to comment on the
beating, and then asked the judge to seal the records in the case.
According to the Rocky Mountain News on October 11, those records are now
sealed and a gag order has been imposed in the case – virtually
eliminating access to information surrounding the prosecution by the press
and public. "Were Wyoming's officials adopting a strategy of
downplaying the hate crime aspect of Shepard's gruesome murder, sealing
the court records would be a great way to hide that fact from the
public," said Aravosis, who is a lawyer.
Fri Oct 23, 1998 - 11:15AM EDT - 'ELEGY FOR MATT' - A
WIRED STRATEGIES ESSAY
Elegy for Matt
by John Aravosis
For ten days in October, the world came out. In a global electronic
epiphany, a light was turned on as millions tapped into an awareness, an
understanding, and an empathy of gayness that before October 9 most had
never known.
We held vigils, sent emails, shared our grief, and demanded change. Many
found a new drive to live - and others, a spirit-to-fight long forgotten.
From Zimbabwe to Australia, and from Portland Oregon to Portland Maine,
our love knew no borders, we cast aside our prejudices, and tended the
bedside of a dying young man.
"Thank you John, I am thousands of miles away
here in Zimbabwe. But I feel so deeply that I cannot put this in words!!
Of course us gays here are totally taboo, but one day we too shall win.
It is my fervent belief that God has a special place for us, and indeed
a special purpose. Thank you my friend, Brian." - email, October
18, 1998.
We came out to loved ones:
"I was afraid of what would happen to me if I
came out. But, this secret was tearing me up inside. I told my best
friend that I was gay. Thankfully, she accepted me for WHO I am not WHAT
I am. Yesterday, I told another friend. Matt Shepard's death must mean
something. Even though he died because of irresponsible hatred, I will
not let that deter me. I am gay. It is the way that God made me. He made
me this way for a purpose. What that purpose is, I do not know. But I
will not hide behind the shame and hatred that I have lived behind for
so long. Matt Shepard may have died, but his strength lives on in each
of us." - email, October 20, 1998.
We took a stand:
"This isn't just a gay thing anymore. This is
really about humanity and decency. Let every ounce of bigotry and hatred
be met with equal measure of determination to end it. We can do it. I've
taken the gloves off. I just fuckin' dare one idiot to cross my path at
this point. I'm not looking for a fight but I sure as hell won't
tolerate a fool." - email, October 20, 1998.
We demanded an accounting:
"I am certain that the homosexual population of
Mississippi, and their families and friends would like to know why you,
Senator Lott, consider the length of Duck Hunting Season [a last-minute
addition to the budget bill by Sen. Lott] more worthy of your efforts
than the safety of your voters. Or are you putting you gay/lesbian
constituents on the same level with ducks, open season on both?"-
email to Senate Republican Leader Trent Lott's office, October 21, 1998.
We rekindled our spirit:
"For 35 years I've been a happy gay guy living
with my lover in nice houses, but 35 years ago we - he and I - stood
outside the Stonewall and participated, not violently, very young then,
but, upheld our fellows feelings. It was a good feeling: one we can look
back on with pride. I will begin to pick up the banner again. We've
hidden, happy, and complacent. [The Shepard case has] revive[d] a spirit
I thought I didn't need anymore."- email, October 20, 1998.
And we vowed to fight back:
"I have always voted for the person not the party
- but now after what the Republicans are doing and have done I cannot
vote for even ONE of them. I will vote along straight Democratic party
lines!!!! Urge everyone to do the same and tell Lott and his ilk that
that is what we are doing!"- email, October 20, 1998.
Yet in spite of our renewal, and restraint, others
choose to hate. They make monsters of gay men and lesbians, while cloaking
their message in hope, in love, and in God.
Kill the gays:
" 'Lesbian love, sodomy are viewed by God as
being detestable and abominable. . . . Civil magistrates are to put
people to death who practice these things,' said Rich Agozino, host of
[Christian radio show] 'Crosstalk' on radio station KBRT-AM (740) in
Costa Mesa, urging callers to write to their state legislators asking
them to enact laws that would punish homosexuality according to biblical
law, meaning capital punishment, according to a transcript of the Aug.
29 show." - Los Angeles Times, September 5, 1997.
Rape the lesbians:
"It's not too late to try and be STRAIGHT. Give
up your homo lifestyle or more fags will die and lesbians raped and
impregnated and forced to bear straight children. This is war against
you homo perverts!!" - Posted on October 20, 1998 to the Matthew
Shepard Online Resources bulletin board http://www.wiredstrategies.com/wwwboard
Because we're dishonest:
" 'These people are intellectually dishonest in
just about everything they do or say,' the Congressional Quarterly
quoted Helms as saying when asked about the documentary. He added, 'They
start by pretending that it is just another form of love. It's
sickening.' " - Senator Jess Helms, Variety, June 30, 1998.
Because we're liars:
" 'Homosexuality is a decision, it's not a race,'
White said. 'People from all different ethnic backgrounds live in this
lifestyle. But people from all different ethnic backgrounds also are
liars and cheaters and malicious and back-stabbing.' " - Reggie
White, Associated Press, March 25, 1998.
Because we're pedophiles:
"There is a strong undercurrent of pedophilia in
the homosexual subculture. Homosexual activists want to promote the
flouting of traditional sexual prohibitions at the earliest possible
age....they want to encourage a promiscuous society - and the best place
to start is with a young and credulous captive audience in the public
schools." - Family Research Council, http://www.frc.org/insight/is93f1hs.html
Because we're sinners:
"It is [a sin]....You should try to show them a
way to deal with that problem, just like alcohol...or sex addiction...or
kleptomaniacs." - Senate Republican Leader Trent Lott, Associated
Press, June 15, 1998.
Because we should be arrested:
"Bob Jones University has a message for gay
alumni: Stay away or be arrested. The Christian fundamentalist school
threatened Thursday to arrest all gay graduates who return to campus.
Wayne Mouritzen, a retired minister and Bob Jones graduate, got a letter
banning him from campus because officials discovered he is gay. The
letter, signed by Bob Jones' dean of students, said: 'With grief we must
tell you that as long as you are living as a homosexual, you, of course,
would not be welcome on the campus and would be arrested for trespassing
if you did visit.' " - Associated Press, October 23, 1998.
Because we're going to hell:
"In 1 Corinthians 6:9-10, homosexuals are
included in a list of sinners, who, if unrepentant, will not inherit the
kingdom of God." - Family Research Council press release on the day
of Matthew's funeral, October 16, 1998.
Religious extremists vilify us. Call us diseased,
perverted, immoral, and abomination. They say on TV and radio that we
deserve to lose our jobs, our children, our families and our homes. They
prepare studies for Congress "proving" we are unfit teachers,
parents, ambassadors, and soldiers. They liken us to adulterers,
murderers, kleptomaniacs, and alcoholics. And they accuse us of being
anti-family, anti-Christian, anti-God, and anti-America.
This is not love. It is a blasphemy of Christianity that makes one yearn
less to be an ex-gay than an ex-Christian. It pollutes the word of God,
and wrongly tells America that people of faith are crazy, backward, and
bitter. And worst of all, it teaches our young that to love God one must
hate man.
Their hate killed Matt.
But "no," they protest, words don't kill people - people kill
people.
"Don't blame AA because a drunk was beat
up," said Heather Farish of the Family Research Council, responding
to charges that her organization's anti-gay rhetoric gives license to
anti-gay violence. Dallas Morning News, October 17, 1998.
But how do they explain the religiously-justified hatred
pervading our youth?
"I was talking to a group of high school students
that I teach about Matthew's death, and what I heard shocked me. Not
only did they think he deserved what he got, but they wanted to go and
defend his killers because it was a 'Holy Killing.'" - email,
October 16, 1998.
It is simply not possible to preach the inhumanity of
man, then blithely skulk away when principle meets practice. It is simply
not moral to give a child a gun, then feign ignorance when someone gets
hurt.
If words do not inspire actions, then why did they spend $500,000 on an ad
campaign to inspire gays to 'convert'? They know words have consequences,
and their words are nothing less than the subjugation and dehumanization
of gay and lesbian Americans. It is no wonder that decades of disdain
eventually led to violence.
"We knew there would be a Matthew Shepard, we
just didn't know who it would be." Wayne Besen of the Human Rights
Campaign, The [Bergen Co., N.J.] Record, October 21, 1998.
Last week a part of us died, but another was reborn. And
while we didn't win the hearts of Congress, we captured the soul of
America, and the world. Many of us are no longer afraid. No longer alone.
And no longer complacent in the face of evil. While angry, sad and
dispirited, we finally fought back for one of our own. And it felt good,
and just.
For me, October 9 will always be Matt Shepard day.
The day we cast aside our shame.
The day we declared our humanity.
The day we challenged their lies and their hate.
The day we defended our brothers and sisters, and ourselves, publicly and
proudly.
And the day we paused to honor an unknown friend, whose soul inspired a
revolution he will never see.
So let this be our call to arms. Our call to action. OUR call to reclaim
America.
If Matt could survive alone in the cold - bound, beaten and broken - then
we can find the strength to fight on in his name, and put a stop to this
nonsense once and for all.
Tue Oct 20,
1998 - 6:40PM EDT - HOUSE DOCUMENT SHOWS REPUBLICANS BRAGGING THEY
"STOPPED" HATE CRIMES BILL
WIRED STRATEGIES
For Immediate Release
Oct 20, 1998 - 6:25PM EDT
Contact: John Aravosis, 202/328-5707, john@wiredstrategies.com
HOUSE REPUBLICANS BRAG THEY KILLED HATE CRIMES BILL
Contradict Sen. Lott's claim that bill would die because of no time
Washington, DC - In a document just obtained by Wired Strategies, the
House Republican Conference (an arm of the US House of Representatives
Republican leadership) is taking credit for having "stopped" the
hate crimes bill. The House leadership document contradicts claims from
Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott's staff that the Hate Crimes Protection
Act would not pass because Congress had run out of time.
Millions of Americans, and citizens of the world, reacted in shock,
sadness and anger at the recent torture and death of 21-year-old college
freshman Matthew Shepard. Shepard was abducted, pistol-whipped, strung up
as though crucified, and then left to die for 18 hours on a cold Wyoming
road two weeks ago.
In a spontaneous show of anger and support, nearly 100 vigils have taken
place around the US and Canada to honor Shepard, highlight the menace of
hate crimes, and demand that Congress immediately pass hate crimes
legislation. Concerned individuals across the US and from as far as
Zimbabwe, Australia, and Russia sent emails to the United States Congress,
the Wyoming Governor, and Web sites devoted to Matthew Shepard's memory,
expressing their concern about the Shepard case, and the need to pass hate
crimes legislation. In addition, Americans nationwide, and in countries as
far as Hong Kong, telephoned US members of Congress over the last several
days to demand passage of the bill.
The House document attacks the hate crimes bill as being a part of
"the President's big-government agenda," and calls the death of
the legislation "a win for conservative priorities." Under a
section entitled "Reinventing Big-government -- Presidential
Priorities the Congress Stopped", the House leadership lists:
"'Hate crime' proposals that criminalize motive rather than punish
violent crime."
In a phone call this past Friday, Senator Lott's staff told a supporter
that the legislation would die because it was simply too late to bring it
up this year - the staffer gave no indication of the partisan strategy
that now seems to be the reason for the bill's death. The decision to kill
the legislation came on the heels of a new Time/CNN poll released last
Saturday finding that 75% of Americans think the problem of violence
against homosexuals is serious across the country.
"The House leadership has dishonored the memory of Matthew Shepard
for partisan political gain," said John Aravosis, an Internet
consultant who has been maintaining a Web site about the Shepard case. "It's incredible that House Republicans would brag about killing a
bill that protects the disabled, women and gay people from being
brutalized by hate," he added.
"Hate is not a family value, but it seems to be a conservative
one," continued Aravosis. "This wasn't a partisan issue, it was
about the savage murder of a kid that shocked millions of Americans, both
Republicans and Democrats," Aravosis added, "Is that all Matt's
death meant to Gingrich - a chance to slam the President? Is he that out
of touch?"
The House Republican Conference document can be found on the Internet at: http://143.231.67.32/IssueFocus/TalkingPoints/TPMain/score.htm.
Tue Oct 20, 1998 - 1:15PM EDT -
ENOUGH IS ENOUGH: CONGRESS STILL IN SESSION - ADDING PORK, IGNORING
MATTHEW
Folks, I have bad news - they lied to us.
According to even more press reports (see the most recent article below),
the House and Senate continue to add their own pork projects to the budget
bill, even though they told a large number of you who called in the last
few days that "it's too late" to add the hate crimes bill to the
budget. The bottom line folks, they're pulling a fast one on us - or in
laymen's terms, they lied to get you off their backs. In terms of timing,
the House will vote on the bill at 5:30PM EDT today (Tuesday), and the
Senate will vote tomorrow. In the Senate, the actual Senators will be
present for the vote (the House members probably won't returnt to DC).
Examples of special interest pork added to the budget bill at the last
minute (source: Associated Press):
_$250,000 to an Illinois firm to research caffeinated chewing gum.
_$750,000 for grasshopper research in Alaska.
_$1 million for ``peanut quality'' research in Georgia.
_$12.5 million more for the District of Columbia than it requested.
_$90 million to give six Blackhawk helicopters to the Colombian National
Police for anti-drug efforts.
_$11 million to help rebuild a 40-year-old terminal at the Wilkes-Barre-Scranton
International Airport, sought by Rep. Bud Shuster, R-Pa., chairman of the
Transportation and Infrastructure Committee.
There have easily been 100 vigils across the country to demand justice for
Matthew, and passage of the Hate Crimes Prevention Act (HCPA). And the one
last night in NYC was attended by 5,000, and then was brutally broken up
by the police on horseback (arresting nearly 100 people). We are sad, we
are angry, and we will not tolerate being played a fool. The congressional
leadership has calculated that this election is about motivating the
religious right to vote, and anything that protects the lives of the
"fags", the women, and the disabled won't fly with the
"family values" crowd, since they only value their own families.
So what can you do? At this point, time is running out. I won't lie to
you. But I think that in view of the fact that they've lied to us -
they've told us repeatedly that there just wasn't time to bring the hate
crimes bill up for a debate, and that the budget agreement was already
complete and nothing could be added to it - it's worth our taking a stand
and letting Congress know that we will not be taken for fools.
I recommend everyone call your two Senators office TODAY AND TOMORROW
(Tuesday and Wednesday) - call the Congressional switchboard at
202/224-3121 and ask who the Senators are from your state, then ask to be
connected to them. When the office answers, demand to talk to the Senator,
then if you can't, demand to talk to the "chief of staff/adminstrative
assistant" (their top aide), then next down the line is the
"legislative director." These are the folks who pull the
strings, don't let them give you some lowly staffer, we're beyond that
now.
We're also, I think, beyond being nice. Don't be completely rude or
obnoxious, because that never helps, but I also believe - having worked as
a lawyer in the Senate for 5 years - that the only thing that can help now
is a populist uprising of anger and disgust. They need to know that you
are quite upset, will not take "no" for an answer, and plan to
raise hell back home if they don't intervene and include HCPA in the
budget.
So:
1) Call your Senators, ask for the chief of staff, then the legislative
director, and raise hell - and let them know you know about the pork, and
the fact that they can help on this bill if they so choose.
2) Call 5-10 friends and get them to call as well. As few as 40-50 calls
into one office really does start to rattle them.
3) Your message: I'm mad as hell that Congress is misrepresenting what it
can do on the Hate Crimes Prevention Act (HCPA) while passing pork left
and right (caffeinated chewing gum!)- and I expect my Senator to either
include the hate crimes bill in the budget, or to vote against the budget
bill on Wednesday (for the Senate) until HCPA is included.
Quick note: there is already a hate crimes law on the books, but it
doesn't yet include sexual orientation, gender or disability - HCPA would
amend the law to include those categories. So, this isn't a
"new" law, it's simply a recognition that women and people with
disabilities, along with gays, deserve to be protected from hate-bashings.
Pretty radical concept.
Now read about the pork first-hand:
Friday October 16 11:17 PM EDT
Budget Vote Delayed Until Next Week
By DARLENE SUPERVILLE Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) _ A new tunnel in Boston, a tax break for oil products
importers, a longer duck-hunting season in Mississippi _ as usual, there's
plenty of legislative pork in the $500 billion budget deal reached by the
White House and congressional Republicans.
Congress votes on the colossal bill Tuesday, then goes home for two hasty
weeks of campaigning before the Nov. 3 elections, armed with bragging
rights about the bacon they're bringing to their districts. On Friday,
Congress passed a resolution keeping the government operating through
Tuesday.
House Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., said Friday the agreement was the best
``you could get when you have a conservative Republican Congress and a
liberal Democratic president.''
Mississippi duck hunters will get an extended season, thanks to Senate
Majority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss., who won a long-running dispute with
the Interior Department. Lott said he resorted to legislation after the
department reneged on an agreement to extend the season after the Senate
confirmed a new assistant secretary.
Questioned about the provision at a news conference Thursday, Lott
stressed that hunters won't get a single dollar _ just more ducks to kill.
``It allows them to have ducks to hunt,'' he replied.
``It's true. It does,'' added Gingrich.
``You've got to hunt where the ducks are. That's what this would do,''
continued Lott. ``No funding involved. Just an opportunity to hunt
ducks.''
But while Lott got more ducks, Gingrich was losing an effort to help
important constituents _ peanut farmers seeking to overturn a
Transportation Department order barring allergy-inducing peanuts from
domestic flights where a passenger has a medically documented peanut
allergy.
Standing in the way is Rep. Frank Wolf, R-Va., chairman of the House
Appropriations transportation subcommittee, who is sensitive to the issue:
He's allergic to crabs.
``This has reached the highest level of the food chain,'' said Rob Leebern,
chief of staff for Rep. Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., who was pushing with
Gingrich and other top GOP leaders to add to the catchall spending bill
legislation overturning the order.
Some loose ends and disagreements remained Friday over specifics of the
deal clinched Thursday, including a dispute over how to distribute $6
billion in emergency aid to farmers.
House and Senate negotiators and staff met all day to translate the
agreement into legislation that's likely to exceed 3,000 pages and stand
more than a foot tall. As the drafting proceeded, some lawmakers launched
11th-hour bids to get pet projects into the final bill.
Rep. Jack Kingston, R-Ga., said he was pushing to get limited access
through protected federal lands to a historic mansion on Cumberland
Island, Ga. In exchange, the government would spend $11.9 million to buy
more land for the affected federal preserve.
But most such projects were part of Thursday's agreement.
Massachusetts, currently digging an $11.6 billion tunnel under Boston,
will get $100 million for surface transportation projects _ thanks to
old-fashioned politics.
On learning the state would lose substantially under June's transportation
funding law, Sens. John Kerry and Edward Kennedy and Rep. Jim McGovern,
all Massachusetts Democrats, sought to make up the loss.
Kerry got Lott, Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D., and top Senate
Environment and Public Works Committee members to promise to find $100
million for the state.
A planned separate bill ran into trouble, so lawmakers aimed for the
end-of-year spending measure.
``Promises made are promises kept,'' Kerry said.
Companies that import petroleum products, turn them into new commodities
and export them also benefit. House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Bill
Archer, R-Texas, won changes that make it easier for these companies to
get refunds of U.S. import duties paid, estimated at $4 million a year.
Home health care agencies affected by Medicare changes also will share
$1.7 billion over five years under the bill, paid for in part by letting
winners of gambling jackpots collect their prizes in a lump sum instead of
over many years.
But it appeared that an effort by Rep. Porter Goss, R-Fla., to provide
$100,000 in grants to hemophiliacs who contracted AIDS from blood
transfusions in the 1980s was out of the bill. His southwest Florida
district was home to Ricky Ray, a hemophiliac teen-ager who died after a
transfusion. Many victims have died or are near death and have become poor
because of failing health and sizable medical bills.
``It was looking real good (Thursday) but it's not looking real good
today,'' Goss spokeswoman Jennifer Miller Wise said Friday. ``We're still
working at it.''
Among other ``special projects'' in the bill, according to congressional
sources:
_$250,000 to an Illinois firm to research caffeinated chewing gum.
_$750,000 for grasshopper research in Alaska.
_$1 million for ``peanut quality'' research in Georgia.
_$12.5 million more for the District of Columbia than it requested.
_$90 million to give six Blackhawk helicopters to the Colombian National
Police for anti-drug efforts.
_$11 million to help rebuild a 40-year-old terminal at the Wilkes-Barre-Scranton
International Airport, sought by Rep. Bud Shuster, R-Pa., chairman of the
Transportation and Infrastructure Committee.
Tue Oct 20, 1998 - 1AM EDT - CONGRESS
STILL ADDING PORK TO BUDGET BILL, BUT CAN'T ADD HATE CRIMES BECAUSE IT'S
"TOO LATE"?
John's Commentary: You'll note from this article that Congress is
STILL adding extraneous legislation to the Budget Bill, even at this late
hour - AND that the bill is now being loaded with pork. Remember when I
said that they weren't telling the truth by saying that it was "too
late" to add anything to the bill. It's only too late to add anything
that actually helps people, particularly innocent murder victims. But for
pork and special interests, there's always time. And they're not evening
voting on the pork, they're just jamming it in the bill. Read this story
just in:
Congress Likely To Pass Budget Bill
The Associated Press
By ALAN FRAM
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Lawmakers struggled to win last-minute changes in a
huge $500 billion spending measure or to find out precisely what was in it
as Congress prepared for its likely passage this week.
White House officials and congressional leaders agreed to the package last
Thursday after a week of bargaining. But lawmakers spent Monday resolving
lingering disputes over extending some tariffs and buttressing the
Medicare home health-care program, Many members of Congress and aides
professed ignorance about a measure that some officials said would number
about 4,000 pages.
``The first thing I want to do is find out everything that's in it,'' said
Rep. Michael Castle, R-Del.
Ironically, the mammoth bill includes provisions dealing with the
government's Paperwork Reduction Act.
Only a few copies of the bill were available Monday, and none were
provided for the public. But a person familiar with the legislation,
speaking on condition of anonymity, said the measure contained several
late additions, including:
Language by Sen. Alfonse D'Amato, R-N.Y., requiring health insurers to
cover breast reconstruction after mastectomies;
2 million to help start the Robert J. Dole Institute for Public Service
and Public Policy at the University of Kansas, honoring the former senator
and Republican presidential candidate; and 1.1 million for a nautical
exhibit at Chicago's Museum of Science.
There was little suspense about the ultimate outcome: The House was
expected to approve the measure Tuesday, and the Senate planned to ship it
to President Clinton for his signature on Wednesday. To allow time,
Congress planned to send Clinton a measure letting agencies stay open
through Wednesday, the fifth such stopgap bill since fiscal 1999 began
Oct. 1.
Even the likeliest pocket of opposition -- conservative House Republicans
-- was said to be split over a bill that gave that group victories such as
restrictions on Internet pornography, but defeats such as $20 billion in
so- called emergency spending to be paid for out of expected federal
surpluses.
``It's definitely a mixed bag,'' said Marty Dannenfelser, government
relations director for the conservative Family Research Council.
Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss., had hoped his chamber would
approve the measure by voice vote. That would make it unnecessary for
senators -- most of whom left Washington a week ago -- to return to the
Capitol, since its passage would mark the end of Congress' legislative
work for the year, except for a few smaller bills.
Lott also hoped to avoid a roll call vote that would reveal GOP splits,
including divisions within his own leadership team, said some Republican
aides who spoke on condition of anonymity.
But a roll call was planned after Sen. Rod Grams, R-Minn., and several
other senators requested one, calling it ``irresponsible legislating'' for
the bill to become law without a tally showing each lawmaker's vote.
The bill controls about one-third of the $1.7 trillion federal budget for
fiscal 1999. It covers 10 Cabinet-level departments, including Education
and Interior, plus many smaller agencies, foreign aid and the District of
Columbia's budget.
But the package is far more than just a spending bill. The must-pass
measure is loaded with projects for lawmakers' home districts, tax breaks
for some businesses and families, and changes in anti-drug laws and other
programs.
The White House and lawmakers on Monday resolved an 11th-hour hang-up over
a bipartisan plan to pump $1.7 billion into Medicare home health-care
providers, whose federal payments were cut by last year's budget-balancing
law.
To help raise the money, lawmakers planned to let more higher-income
couples convert existing Individual Retirement Accounts to Roth IRAs,
which would cause them to pay taxes now. But many Democrats objected,
arguing that would give some rich families a long-term tax break, so that
item was dropped Monday.
Instead, Congress would finance the home-health provision by letting more
lottery winners and gamblers receive their prizes in a lump sum, which
would raise cash for the Treasury.
Also causing delays were negotiations over import tariffs. House Ways and
Means Committee Chairman Bill Archer, R-Texas, was insisting on making it
easier for importers of some foreign petroleum products to collect a
federal refund for tariffs they pay.
But Senate Finance Committee Chairman William Roth, R-Del., and other
senators wanted the bill to address other tariff questions as well,
including the treatment of some imported chemicals.
The bill also contains provisions:
Implementing the 1997 Chemical Weapons Convention, which calls for the
destruction of chemical weapons stockpiles and the monitoring of companies
making potential components. The language would authorize inspections at
U.S. chemical companies.
Moving the Arms Control Disarmament Agency and the U.S. Information Agency
into the State Department next year.
Mon Oct 19, 1998 - 10:40PM EDT -
FEEDBACK: "I could help by coming out!"
Date: Mon, 19 Oct 1998 18:59:17 EDT
To: john@wiredstrategies.com
Subject: My way of helping
John,
Thank you for the wonderful web-page you have created. It has helped more
than you know. Allow me to explain. I live in [DELETED BY JOHN] where hate
is no stranger, yet I was desperate to find a way to do something in the
aftermath of Matt's death. I could think of nothing. Until it hit me while
reading your website...I could help by coming out!
Until every gay citizen is out of the closet, we will be considered a dark
and hidden society of perverts. Coming out helps to put a face with the
word "gay", and those who might think that homosexuals are
deviants could be educated otherwise by realizing that people they love
are also gay. By coming out to my family I could look them straight in the
eye and say "Am I the evil "thing" you associate with being
gay? No I am not...and Matthew Shepard could very well have been been me!
Is that what you would like to see?" So I decided THAT would be my
gift to Matthew, and as it turned out it was also my gift to myself.
I told my family on Saturday, and by Sunday morning everyone I told became
as outraged over the senseless beating and death as I was. I regret not
having done it sooner, but thanks to Matthew I can now live an open life
with no secrets in sight. I am now urging everyone I know to do the same.
John, as you said yourself...I will NOT be silent, I will NOT forget,
Matthew deserves NO LESS.
Mon Oct 19, 1998 - 4:30PM EDT -
FEEDBACK: "YOU DON'T NEED TO BE GAY TO BE THE VICTIM OF A HATE
CRIME."
This is an email I just received from a good friend in Boston. The
names have been changed to protect him and his friends - all straight -
from further violence.
From: "Mike"
To: "John Aravosis" john@wiredstrategies.com
John,
Looking at the site last night and over the last few days brought back
some terrible memories. You may recall my little gay-bash incident --
proving that you don't need to be gay to be the victim of a hate crime.
Have I ever told you the story?
Back in 1994 when I lived in South Boston -- you know, "Southie,"
setting for Good Will Hunting, etc. -- I was often told about the
intolerance of the people there. But of course, I decided to give the town
the benefit of the doubt.
I was a little shocked when I went to look at my apartment for the first
time -- the current resident was a single mom who smoked cigarettes
continually. When I first saw her she was wearing a t-shirt that read
"Eighty Years Without the Queers -- St. Patrick's Day Parade, South
Boston." It might have read ninety years, I don't remember the
number. But then I thought, "well, this is the woman that's moving
OUT, so I won't have to deal with her."
Boy, was I in for a rude awakening. The people in my building were very
nice -- all family people that when you spoke with them privately, they
all held beliefs that were contradictory to the perceived Southie status
quo. It made me feel good that the perception wasn't the reality all the
time.
Then one night I went to a bar with my room mate Peter (five foot six,
dark features, 125 lbs) and my old college friend Doug (pasty, skinny
white boy, five foot 10, 140lbs). I was wearing khakis, a blue denim
shirt, and a colorful vest, and I think saddle shoes. I guess I looked
kinda swooshy, huh? Peter was similarly dressed, and Doug, a prepster from
the high-rent suburb of Weston, looked like he was getting ready for mixed
doubles. Looking back now, in Southie, we looked so stereotypically gay it
was RIDICULOUS.
That night at the bar we just kinda kept to ourselves because we hadn't
seen Doug in a while and wanted to catch up. I even remember turning down
a girl who asked me back to her place (she was cute, but she smoked like a
fiend and there was this big Marine hitting on her all night). Strike two.
We left the bar early that night -- around midnight. When we got about
four blocks from our house, all hell broke loose.
Coming toward us were about ten young Southie natives. Without saying a
word, one of them threw a HAYMAKER of a punch -- an overhand right -- into
Peter's face. he was out cold on contact. A couple people grabbed Doug,
pulled him down, and started punching him in the face. They took some
swings at me, but only one landed flush -- in the back of my head. Within
a minute it was over, with all the punks walking off laughing. Neighbors
heard the noise outside and came down. One called an ambulance which came
in a few minutes. The cops were also called, but never arrived on the
scene -- they came to the hospital instead.
I picked up Peter off the ground and he kept asking me, "Mike, what
just happened? Why?" Doug was laying down in the street and
eventually came to and walked over to us.
We got to the hospital where Peter learned that his cheek and his eye
socket had been broken, and he had significant nerve damage in his cheek
and lip. His eyesight was the immediate concern, and he was kept in the
hospital for hours. He still has limited feeling in his lip, and it tends
to droop. His left cheek now sinks in slightly. Doug had several stitches
over his eye, and I got through with the least damage -- a nice bruise on
the back of my head, and perhaps a slight concussion. Of course, at 165
pounds, I was the biggest, and cowards like those punks hit the smallest
of us first.
I remember I had to call Peter's parents to let them know what happened at
3am. I remember Peter's mother waking from sleep, and I could tell that
she was prepared for the worst as soon as the phone rang and she heard my
voice. I started by saying, "Mary, the first thing you need to know
is your son is going to be all right." Somehow, I don't think that
helped very much. I then told her the details as best I could. Peter's
parents came immediately.
My parents were vacationing in -- of all places -- Provincetown. They
couldn't come that night.
The blood that dripped from Peter's face was still visible in the form of
a dark stain on the ground where he fell for literally months after the
attack. He stayed for a week at his folks' house in Winthrop and I
actually went to P-town for a weekend. I bought a hammock, figuring I
would be in it quite a bit, contemplating what had happened.
The folks in my building were shocked. We had lived in Southie long
enough, according to them, that most people knew who we were and that we
were "OK." The guy even called in a "shout-out" of
sorts to the local newspaper (you can leave an anonymous message and they
will print it in the paper) condemning the cowardly attack.
I remember being interviewed by a police officer in the hospital, who told
me that since it was so dark and we had a few beers, we would be unable to
make a positive ID on the attackers and that there would be nothing more
the police could do.
Ah, but this was Southie, I thought. Everyone knows everyone else. I
called a southie friend of my family's (his dad and brother were cops from
southie -- if anyone could help us, he could). The first thing he told me
was to drop it. Yeah, he heard about the attack, and he had a pretty good
idea who did it. But he told me that we shouldn't pursue it because there
would be "retribution."
You know, don't rock the boat. Boys will be boys. And what were we, three
outsiders, walking down THEIR street late at night, anyway?
A few days later, one of the people in our building had learned something.
The kids that attacked us thought we were gay. And one of the kids'
fathers was a cop. But since we didn't appear to be pursuing the issue,
and now they knew we weren't gay, we probably weren't going to be attacked
again. I heard basically the same info from a woman I worked with later
that week. She was a life-long southie resident.
Peter came back to the apartment and we began talking about moving out.
Then a few weeks later the hate march came.
You probably remember the whole St.Patrick's Day Parade issue in Southie.
In 1992 the Supreme Court ordered Wacko Hurley (yes, that 's what he's
really called) and the rest of the parade organizers to allow a gay &
lesbian Irish group to march in the parade. In 1993, I believe they
canceled the parade in order to prevent the g&l group from marching in
their town. In 1994, they were ready for the challenge.
1994's parade was not a St. Patrick's day parade -- but actually a protest
march opposing outsider interference -- namely, the gay & lesbian
Irish group. Having the g&l group march would be contradictory to the
entire purpose of the parade, and they were ready to cancel it. The Courts
agreed -- southie could have its little hate march without the gays.
Of course, the thing goes right by my FUCKING house. Civic leaders, local
veterans, and even Boston City Councillors wore black armbands in protest
of gay participation in their past parades and walked right by me, smiling
all the way. There were still some St.Patrick's Day things around, but the
folks knew they had to keep things somber and black if they wanted to
march at all.
God, I wanted a rainbow flag so bad that day. I was gonna put it in my
window. Funny thing was, nobody would have known what it was for.
So that did it. Peter and I moved out of a 4-bedroom apartment (we each
paid $400 per month) and into a HUGE house in the People's Republic of
Brookline with two other guys. Our rent almost doubled. Our commutes got
longer. The food in Brookline SUCKS. Our landlord was a basket case.
But at least we were away from the hatemongers.
Mon Oct 19, 1998 - 3:00PM EDT -
FEEDBACK: MATTHEW HAS TRULY CHANGED LIVES
Date: Mon, 19 Oct 1998 11:34:55 -0400 (EDT)
To: john@wiredstrategies.com
Subject: Making a difference
John,
I'm a 24 year-old male coping with being gay in a conservative southern
city. I am writing you because ever since hearing of the events in Wyoming
and the resultant death of Matthew Shepard, I have had this burning drive
to somehow make a difference. I came out to my mother this past Saturday,
and, to my amazement, it was fairly smooth. This is only the first step,
however; I am now determined to make a difference for the BETTER for the
gay community.
John's commentary: How many of us can only wish that our life has in
some way touched another.
Mon Oct 19, 1998 - 11:15AM EDT -
FEEDBACK: CHILDREN DEFEND "HOLY KILLING" OF SHEPARD
To: john@wiredstrategies.com
Subject: (no subject)
To whom this concerns:
Hello. With the recent death of Matthew Shepard, the ugly side of the
Christian church has shown its face. I am not writing this letter to
debate the moral implications of homosexuality, it is illreleavant. I just
want to write to tell you that people like Rev. Phelps do not represent
the Christian church, or at least my church. GOd loves everyone,
regardless. The religious extremists embarrass me as a Christian, and
sicken me.
I was talking to a group of high school students that I teach about
Matthew's death, and what I heard shocked me. Not only did they think he
deserved what he got, but they wanted to go and defend his killers because
it was a "Holy Killing". THis sickens me more. I feel for the
family of Matthew, and pray for them in their grief.
Sincerely,
[Name Withheld]
John of Wired Strategy's commentary: And militant fundamentalists tell
us that their anti-gay words, in the name of God, have no consequences.
Mon Oct 19, 1998 - 9:50AM EDT - FEEDBACK: THE CALLS ARE COMING IN!
To: "John Aravosis"
Subject: Re: Please call Congress one last time....
Date: Mon, 19 Oct 1998 18:58:31 +0800
John,
Add Hong Kong to that concerned list. I spent the weekend writing to every
member of the senate and demanding their support. I also called (from Hong
Kong) Senators from California (my home state), Colorado, Illinois,
Washington, Montana, Utah-all states that I have connections, and demanded
their support. Finally I wrote to Newt and Trent and demanded their
support. If I can do it from Hong Kong, I would hope others would do it
from their community.
Let's hope this passes today.
Mon Oct 19, 1998 - 6:30AM EDT - CALL
CONGRESS TODAY!
Congress is nearly finished
- in one day we'll know whether your representative will honor, or defile,
the memory of an innocent young man murdered like an animal. The country,
and the world, is watching. Will Congress do the right thing?
Today (Monday) is our last day to act. We flooded Newt Gingrich and Trent
Lott with calls on Friday, and now it's time to do it one more time.
Here's how you can help:
1) Call Gingrich and Lott on Monday - repeatedly - and tell them (strongly
but politely) that you will be voting in November, and you expect them to
pass the Hate Crimes Prevention Act (HR3081 and S1529) before they
adjourn;
* Lott's phone numbers:
DC -(202) 224-3135, and (202) 224-6253
MISSISSIPPI - Jackson (601) 965-4644; Greenwood (601) 453-5681; Gulfport
(228) 863-1988; Pascagoula (228) 762-5400; Oxford (601) 234-3774.
* Gingrich's phone numbers:
DC - (202) 225-0600, and (202) 225-4501
GEORGIA - (770) 565-6398
* If you know anyone in Mississippi (for Lott) or Georgia (for Gingrich),
call them now.
2) Call your US Senators and Representatives in Washington and at home -
US Congress switchboard (202) 224-3121 (ask for your representative) - and
tell them (strongly but politely) that you will be voting in November,
that you're mad as hell, that you expect them to tell Lott and Gingrich to
pass the bill before Congress adjourns.
* To find out who your Senators are, click
here.
* To find out who your House Member is, click
here.
3) Email and call all your friends, family, neighbors, and co-workers, and
ask them to do the same.
The bottom line: Congress can pass the hate crimes bill if they choose to.
I worked in the Senate as an attorney for 5 years, and if Lott and
Gingrich want, they can insert the Hate Crimes bill in the budget and have
it passed in a snap. Don't believe their lies about it being too late.
Don't believe their lies about having passed a do-nothing
"resolution," which simply states Congress' "concern"
about Matthew's death (big deal).
Is it possible that Congress is so out of touch with the people, so bent
on playing partisan politics and so hungry for scandal, that they are the
only ones not touched by Matthew's death? I don't mean to be so emotional,
but it sickens me that the entire world has shed tears over this kid's
death - I've received pained emotional emails from Africa, Australia,
Europe, and Russia - yet the only ones who don't give a damn are the
people who think we will re-elect them in two short weeks. If the
politicians in Washington can't act in the face of such a horrible,
untimely, and senseless death, I for one have no intention of sending them
back this November.
But we still have one more day. They have one more day.
Act now! Call your friends, call your family, call your co-workers, and
most important of all, call Congress - like your life depended on it.
Because, my friends, it does.
(Click
here to read about the nationwide explosion of vigils demanding
that Congress pass hate crimes laws. I've already tracked 71!)
Sun Oct 18, 1998 - 8:15PM EDT -
MOVING FEEDBACK FROM ZIMBABWE
From: Brian
To: "'John Aravosis'" john@wiredstrategies.com
Subject: Matthew.
Date: Sun, 18 Oct 1998 17:09:14 +0200
Thank you John,
I am thousands of miles away here in Zimbabwe. But I feel so deeply that I
cannot put this in words!!
Of course us gays here are totally taboo, but one day we too shall win.
It is my fervent belief that God has a special place for us, and indeed a
special purpose.
Thank you my friend,
Brian.
Sun Oct 18, 1998 - 6:45PM EDT -
BIOGRAPHY & POEM FROM MATT'S FUNERAL
The following feedback came to me from someone who went to Matthew's
funeral. It is the text from a commemorative leaflet given out to those
who attended the service, and includes Matt's biography and a poem written
about him by his cousin:
"Matthew Wayne Shepard, 21 of Laramie and Casper, Wyoming died early
Monday, October 12, 1998 at Poudre Valley Hospital, Ft. Collins, Colorado
of injuries sustained in an attack in Laramie. Memorial services will be
held at 1:30pm Friday, October 16, 1998 at St. Mark's Episcopal Church,
Casper. The Reverend Royce Brown will officiate.
Matthew was born December 1, 1976 in Casper, Wyoming. He is the older son
of Judy Peck Shepard and Dennis Shepard. While living in Casper, he
attended Crest Hill Grade School, Dean Morgan Junior High School and
completed his sophomore year at Natrona County High School. He was a
member and an acolyte in St. Mark's Episcopal Church. His last two years
of high school at the American School in Switzerland (TASIS) in Lugano,
Switzerland where he graduated in 1995. While at TASIS, he traveled
extensively throughout Europe.
He is survived by his parents, Dennis and Judy Shepard of Casper, Wyoming
and Dhahran, Saudi Arabia; one brother, Logan; his maternal grandparents,
Francis and Vera Peck, his paternal grandparents, Harry and Ruth Shepard;
and numerous aunts, uncles and cousins on both sides of his family.
In lieu of flowers, the family would appreciate donations to the Matthew
W. Shepard Memorial Fund, c/o First National Bank, Account #1926083, P.O.
Box 578, Ft. Collins, Colorado 80522."
It also contained the words to a poem written by Matthew's cousin:
"Matthew"
An angel with new wings
In a place a world away
Can once again begin to sing
God took him in his arms today
He blessed his soul with loving care
And took away his pain
His life story all would share
His memory on their hearts a stain
So young a heart destroyed
For a cause unforgotten
Another's mind deployed
The result of a tragedy rotten
The tragic hero that's hard to find
A martyr with great courage
God's lamb in rare design
Never to be discouraged
Our love for him forever strong
His image will never fade
We'll meet him again before long
Temporary goodbyes we now must bade
Matty, I love you with all my heart
I wish you only know how much
You'll be happier with this brand new start
The world's hearts you have now touched
Sun Oct 18, 1998 - 2:40PM EDT -
EX-GAYS ATTEND DC VIGIL FOR MATTHEW
Three participants at the DC vigil approached me at the end of the
event, holding a copy of the virulently anti-gay "Lambda
Report". The Lambda Report is a monthly "news magazine"
that writes about topics such as how gays were the real brains behind the
Holocaust (they really wrote about this). Well, the three vigil
participants were holding a copy of the Lambda Report and told me that
they had just received it from Peter LaBarbera, who is the editor, and
also the head of Americans for the Truth About Homosexuality. But they
told me there was more: LaBarbera was reportedly at the vigil in the
company of a supposed "ex-homosexual."
According to the witnesses, LaBarbera, accompanied by the young ex-gay,
was overheard saying to a reporter in attendance: "Can we talk to
you? We're from the other side of the issue and my friend here is a
reformed gay." Now, if this account is true - there were three
witnesses mind you, and they were holding a copy of LaBarbera's magazine -
it's not clear what "other side" he'd be referring to, since
10,000 people were assembled to honor the life of a young man savagely
slain in his prime. Not to mention, the idea of using Matt's vigil as an
opportunity to push the "ex-gay" agenda is quite shocking, but
perhaps not surprising. Was the idea that had Matt been an ex-gay we
wouldn't have needed the vigil?
They tell us again and again that theirs is a message of love....and
Brutus is an honorable man.
Sun Oct 18, 1998 - 12:03AM EDT -
EMAIL FEEDBACK REGARDING CONGRESS' DISPOSITION OF THE HATE CRIMES
PREVENTION ACT
Email I received:
Date: Sat, 17 Oct 1998 22:49:30 -0400
To: john@wiredstrategies.com
Subject: outcomes of the HCPA (Hate Crimes Prevention Act)
Would you be willing to post a web page or send me an email detailing
which representatives and senators voted which way?
If if goes down, I would like to know if people I have the power to elect
brought it down or not.
Thanks!
My response:
Thousands of you have joined my mailing list in only a few days, and over
400,000 have visited the Web site. If Congress kills HCPA, I promise
you'll be hearing from us.
Sat Oct 17, 1998 - 5:50PM EDT - 75%
OF AMERICANS THINK ANTI-GAY VIOLENCE IS A SERIOUS NATIONAL PROBLEM, NEW
POLL SAYS
According to a Time/CNN poll released today, most Americans believe
the attack that killed Matthew Shepard could happen in their communities.
The Time/CNN poll found that three-quarters of the 1,036 adults questioned
think the problem of violence against homosexuals is serious across the
country. According to the survey conducted by telephone on Tuesday and
Wednesday, 68 percent of those polled say a similar attack could happen in
their community. 82 percent believe the government should treat
homosexuals and heterosexuals as equals.
If the Republican leadership in Congress cared about the will of the
people, and the untimely death of an innocent young American, they'd pass
the Hate Crimes Prevention Act on Monday. They still have time to do it.
They certainly have the power to do it. But do they have the heart, the
soul, the will, or the courage to honor Matthew's memory?
The American people are watching, and looking for leadership. Stay tuned.
Sat Oct 17, 1998 - 4:40PM EDT -
IMPORTANT INFORMATION ABOUT VIGILS
"Pray for the dead and fight like hell for the living."
"Don't just mourn -- ORGANIZE"
- Mother Jones
This is John from Wired Strategies, this message is for everyone planning
a vigil to honor Matthew, particularly those vigils taking place this
weekend or Monday.
Perhaps the best way to pay tribute to Matthew is not just to remember him
-- but to take action to help prevent this type of senseless violence from
happening again by making a "call to action" part of your
ucpoming vigil.
Please call on Congress to pass the Hate Crimes Prevention Act (HR3081 and
S1529) before they adjourn on Tuesday evening. Here's how.
1). Have a speaker at the vigil let participants know that there is a
federal bill pending in Congress that would add sexual orientation (gender
and disability) to the federal anti-hate crime law that now defines a hate
crime as dealing only with race, religion, and national origin. Both
Democrats and Republicans support the Hate Crimes bill, butt the
Republican leadership (Speaker Newt Gingrich and Senator Trent Lott) is
refusing to move the bill.
2). Ask participants to do 3 things:
-- call Lott and Gingrich on Monday and tell them to pass the bill before
they adjourn;
* Lott's phone numbers: (202) 224-3135, and (202) 224-6253
* Gingrich's phone numbers: (202) 225-0600, and (202) 225-4501
-- call your US Senators and Representatives - or find them at home this
weekend, they should be back in their states - and tell them (strongly) to
tell Lott and Gingrich to pass the bill before they adjourn; and
-- ask friends, family, neighbors, co-workers, etc. to do the same.
3). Pass out leaflets calling for action step #2 (with appropriate phone
numbers) at the vigil, at church, at work, at school, and otherwise; you
can get already prepared electronic copies of those leaflets and posters
(that you'll need to have printed) at the HRC Web site http://www.hrc.org/shepard/action/index.html.
4). Call you local newspaper reporters who have been covering this story
and make sure they attend the vigil, and push them to report the
importance of Congress taking action on the hate crimes bill before they
adjourn.
5). If you can, try to have your vigil this weekend, so we can hopefully
get some press and influence Congress on Monday.
6). If you're not currently planning on having a vigil, why not consider
organizing one with a few friends?
CONCLUSION: We got a ton of phone calls into Lott's and Gingrich's offices
on Friday, and from the feedback we've received, the calls were definitely
blocking their phone lines, and they were none too pleased! But beware -
their offices are trying to trick people who are calling - telling them
that they already passed legislation to deal with Matthew's case, or
telling people that the hate crimes bill is already dead. Here's the
truth: what they passed already was a "resolution" that simply
said they felt bad that Matthew died - big deal. And as for the hate
crimes bill being dead - it's not dead, they haven't even allowed it to
come up for a vote yet, but with a snap of their fingers, Lott and
Gingrich could put the bill in the budget package and it would be a done
deal. I used to work in the Senate, it's really that easy, if they have
the will.
Our job, and I hope you agree, is to not let these guys get away with
brushing our concerns aside. Matthew is gone, and the leadership in
Congress would prefer that we go away as well. I for one have no intention
of walking away from this fight. The election is only 3 weeks away. The
entire country is outraged over Matthew's violent death. It's about time
Congress learned to focus on issues that actually matter to the people.
Because if they don't act now, perhaps we should make sure they won't be
there after November.
Give em hell, and thanks as always for everything you're doing to honor
Matthew's memory.
JOHN
PS If you're having a vigil, could you email me back at john@wiredstrategies.com
and let me know how big of an event this is expected to be, and whether
you think you can include the federal hate crimes issue in your event?
We'd like to inform the national media about these vigils. Thanks!
Sat Oct 17, 1998 - 12:45AM EDT - ON
DAY OF MATTHEW'S FUNERAL, FAMILY RESEARCH COUNCIL SAYS UNREPENTANT GAYS
WON'T GO TO HEAVEN
In yet another shocking example of poor timing, the religious right Family
Research Council issued a statement today, reportedly distancing itself
from fundamentalist protester Rev. Fred Phelps. The Family Research
Council now joins a near-avalanche of anti-gay groups who today are
rushing to disown the "pro-family" Phelps, just as his offensive
protest of Matthew's funeral hit prime time.
Just as the American Center for the Truth About Homosexuality used their
codemnation of Phelps as an opportunity to brand gays as immoral and akin
to adulters, the Family Research Council (FRC) went one step further. FRC
first admitted that: "we share Mr. Phelps' opposition to the
homosexual political agenda, his belief that homosexuality is a sin",
but that the organization differs with Phelps over "tactics."
Even more amazing, FRC took the occasion of Matthew's funeral to declare
that gay Americans, if they don't repent, will not go to Heaven:
"homosexuals...if unrepentant, will not inherit the kingdom of
God." It was unclear whether FRC was implying that Matthew Shepard,
since he was not an "ex-gay" before his murder, was therefore
not going to heaven. Along those same lines, Phelps' protesters held signs
saying "NO FAGS IN HEAVEN" and "MATT IN HELL".
The Family Research Council press release follows:
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Oct. 16, 1998
CONTACT: Kristin Hansen, (202) 393-2100
FOR RADIO: Chad Nykamp
FRC CALLS ON PHELPS' GROUP TO ABANDON PLANS TO PICKET MATTHEW SHEPARD'S
FUNERAL
Murder victim's family, friends deserve to be left alone, Knight says
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- The Rev. Fred Phelps, who brandishes signs such as
"God Hates Fags," apparently plans to picket the funeral of
murder victim Matthew Shepard. Family Research Council urges him not to do
so.
"The Shepard family deserves to be left alone in their time of
grief," said FRC's Director of Cultural Studies Robert H. Knight, who
notes that Mr. Shepard's father has asked, "Don't let this become a
circus. Don't use Matt as part of an agenda."
"Homosexual activists have ignored that father's plea and have
exploited Matthew's death as a rallying cry for political activism,"
Knight said. "They have outrageously and absurdly linked the murder
to a series of redemptive TV and newspaper ads about homosexuality
sponsored by FRC, Coral Ridge Ministries and other pro-family groups. They
are pressing for ill-advised federal 'hate crimes' laws, all the while
using hateful rhetoric against Christians. If self-identified Christians
harass and picket mourners at Mr. Shepard's funeral, then homosexual
activists in the media will use the imagery to smear all Christians.
"While we share Mr. Phelps' opposition to the homosexual political
agenda, his belief that homosexuality is a sin, and his call for
punishment of Mr. Shepard's killers, we do not endorse his tactics, and
have asked his group to stop letting themselves be used by the media to
crudely caricature Christians.
"The 'truth in love' media campaign reaches out to people struggling
with homosexuality and offers them hope for change and redemption. In 1
Corinthians 6:9-10, homosexuals are included in a list of sinners, who, if
unrepentant, will not inherit the kingdom of God. Verse 11 says, however,
'And that is what some of you were. ...' This means that homosexuals, like
other sinners, can be redeemed."
Personal testimonies from former homosexuals can be seen and heard on
FRC's video documentary: Hope & Healing: Stories of Coming Out of
Homosexuality. A companion booklet, also entitled Hope & Healing,
offers an authentic Christian approach of ministering to people struggling
with homosexuality.
FOR MORE INFORMATION OR INTERVIEWS, CONTACT THE FRC PRESS OFFICE.
To unsubscribe from this list, please call our order line at
1-800-225-4008. Family Research Council is located at 801 G Street, N.W.,
Washington, D.C. 20001. Phone: 202-393-2100. Fax: 202-393-2134.
Sat Oct 17, 1998 - 12:13AM EDT -
RELIGIOUS RIGHT TRIES TO DISTANCE SELF FROM ONE OF THEIR OWN
In a flurry of frantic press releases and television appearances,
reminiscent of the famous 'Wizard of Oz' scene where the exposed fraud
yells "ignore that man behind the curtain," religious right
groups attempted to distance themselves today from one of their own -
Baptist Minister Fred Phelps. Phelps and his parishioners protested
outside Shepard's funeral today, carrying signs saying "AIDS CURES
FAGS", "GOD HATES FAGS", "NO FAGS IN HEAVEN",
"FAG SIN" (showing two stick figures of men having intercourse)
- and worst of all, "MATT IN HELL". When Phelps' parishioners
were interviewd on ABC News they said: "he lived in shame, he died in
shame."
With Phelps at grave risk of giving intolerance a bad name, groups and
individuals that are now trying to disown the religious right spokesman
include the Family Research Council, the American Family Association,
Jerry Falwell, Southern Baptist Convention, and Americans for the Truth
About Homosexuality. The press release from the latter group, run by Peter
LaBarbera, who is also editor of the viciously anti-gay "The Lambda
Report", says that gays are "immoral" and compares them to
adulterers. An ill-timed, but perhaps not surprising, slur of gay people
on the day of Matthew's funeral. That release follows:
LaBarbera Condemns 'God Hates Fags' Pastor's Protest At Matthew
Shepard's Funeral Jesus Said to Adulteress 'Go and Sin No More' -- Not
'God Hates Whores'
WASHINGTON, Oct. 16 /PRNewswire/ -- Peter LaBarbera, President of
Americans for Truth, a group that opposes homosexual activism, condemned
the picket by "God Hates Fags" activist Rev. Fred Phelps at the
funeral of Matthew Shepard, a 21-year-old Wyoming student who was
homosexual and was brutally murdered last week.
Phelps is a Topeka preacher who tours the country protesting homosexual
events and funerals with signs containing messages such as GOD HATES FAGS,
AIDS CURES FAGS, NO TEARS FOR QUEERS, etc. He has announced plans to
picket Shepard's funeral in Carson, Wyoming today.
"Fred Phelps' pickets at funerals are ridiculous," LaBarbera
said. "To confront a grieving family with such an incendiary message
is offensive to both Christians and non-Christians alike. It certainly
does nothing to advance the gospel of Jesus Christ as Phelps
asserts."
Americans for Truth about Homosexuality has condemned the murder of
Shepard -- and efforts to exploit it by homosexual activists who are
attempting to link the crime to a recent profamily ad campaign that
highlighted the testimonies of former homosexuals. Americans for Truth was
one of 15 pro-family organizations to sponsor the ex-"gay" ads,
which appeared in The New York Times, Chicago Tribune, and other major
newspapers. (The ads did not appear in a Wyoming or Colorado newspaper.)
"Once again, Phelps and the media are drawing attention to his crude
and erroneous message that God 'hates' homosexuals," LaBarbera said.
"We try to emphasize the hopeful message that homosexuality is an
immoral behavior that -- like any sinful behavior -- can be overcome.
Jesus said to the adulteress, 'Go and sin no more,' not 'God Hates
Whores.'"
LaBarbera criticized the media for giving undue attention to Phelps, whose
message and tactics have been criticized by most pro-family groups that
oppose homosexuality. He added that ironically, "Phelps has been slow
to recognize former homosexuals and 'ex-gay' Christian ministries, which
have helped many men and women overcome homosexuality."
Americans for Truth publishes the bimonthly Lambda Report. For more
information, see Web site: www.americansfortruth.com. Phone: 703-491-7975.
Fri Oct 16, 1998 - 10:35PM EDT -
NIGHTLINE TONIGHT ABOUT MATTHEW SHEPARD! ABC is saying that tonight's
Nightline will be about: "Reflections from the people of Wyoming on
the day of Matthew Shepard's funeral. Correspondent Michel McQueen reports
on a community searching for answers in the brutal, beating death of his
gay college student."
Fri Oct 16, 1998 - 6:50PM EDT -
PLEASE TRY TO PLAN VIGILS THIS WEEKEND TO PRESSURE CONGRESS
WIRED STRATEGIES ALERT
Friday October 16, 1998 - 5:30PM EDT
HOLD VIGILS THIS WEEKEND - DEMAND CONGRESS PASS HATE CRIMES LEGISLATION
NOW
Invite the Media
As you know, the religious right has called on Senate Majority Leader
Trent Lott to kill the Hate Crimes Prevention Act. For that reason, we
have had a slew of folks calling Lott and House Speaker Newt Gingrich all
day today to demand passage of the bill. From reports we've had, those
offices are getting a LOT of calls, and are none too pleased about it.
Lott's office reportedly called one caller "you people," and
when the caller asked her name, she retorted: "what's YOUR
name?"
Congress is still in session through Monday, so we have one more work day
to get them to do the right thing. We are therefore urging EVERY TOWN to
try and hold a vigil THIS WEEKEND - or that there be a statewide vigil at
the office of your US Senators - to send a messge to Congress that
Matthew's death shall not be in vain, they must pass the federal hate
crimes law. In addition, we ask that you contact your local media and
invite them to cover the story. Such public pressure is the only way we
will convince Congress that hate is unacceptable.
Vigil Tips:
1) Plan your vigil for this Saturday or Sunday - as Monday is likely
Congress' last day, it's easier to influence Congress by having the vigils
now (though of course, later vigils are certainly encouraged nonetheless).
2) While candlelight vigils are of course beautiful, it's easier for local
press to attend if you have an earlier vigil, like early afternoon, or
late monrning.
3) We recommend holding the vigil outside the offices of your local
Members of Congress - or if there aren't local offices near, you can hold
it in a park, at a church, at a local college, really anywhere.
4) Invite 4 or 5 speakers representing different (but sympathetic)
perspectives: for example, a parent; a gay young person; a preacher; a
local politician; college kids; a local crisis counselor; anyone who has
been the victim of a hate crime or bashing.
5) Have each person prepare and read a 5 minute statement, starting with
who they are, and then telling why they think it's important that
Congress, and their local Members of Congress, pass a federal hate crimes
law.
6) Make multiple xeroxes of each statement to hand out to the press. 7)
Make posters that you can hold up. Be creative, but make sure they call
for Congress to pass the hate crimes law NOW!
8) Invite the media! Call your local newspapers, radio and TV stations,
and tell them you're holding a vigil for Matthew Shepard and federal hate
crimes legislation, and that you'd like them to cover it.
9) You can find some hate crimes data, and examples of anti-gay hate
crimes from the last year, on the Matthew Shepard Online Resources site
http://www.wiredstrategies.com/shepard.html. The data is in a number of
the statement posted on the site (you'll have to scroll down through a lot
to find them, but they're there.) The examples of hate crimes are in the
left hand margin of the home page.
10) Also posted on the site is a statement made by one of Matthew's best
friends at a vigil in DC the other day. It's a beautiful statement and
calls on Congress to pass the hate crimes bill - perhaps there are some
quotes you can use for the vigil, also perhaps make copies for the press.
11) Post your vigil on the Matthew Shepard Online Resources bulletin
board, found at http://www.wiredstrategies.com/wwwboard. This allows
others, including those of us in Washington, DC, and local and national
press, to find out about it.
12) Check the bulletin board and see if there are other vigils taking
place in your area. Consider joining forces, or at least mentioning each
other during your respective vigils - to show how much is happening in
your state or region.
13) Get more information on the federal law, and national hate crimes
data, at a page set up by the Human Rights Campaign:
http://www.hrc.org/feature1/shepard.html.
14) Find additional how-to resources on holding a vigil online at:
http://www.pcisys.net/~aellison/matthew/html/vigil_tips.html.
Thank you so much for everything you are doing. The incredible outpouring
of emotion and activism is a dramatic tribute to Matthew's spirt and love.
Fri Oct 16, 1998 - 12:45PM EDT -
MATT'S FATHER MAKES STATEMENT
Casper, Wyoming - 12:15PM EDT - MSNBC
Matt's family just held a brief press conference in Casper, Wyoming -
preceding his funeral which will be this afternoon. The statement was
carried live by MSNBC. What follows are some select quotes from the
broadcast.
"We say goodbe to a wonderful young man", said Matt's uncle,
introducing Matt's parents Dennis and Judy Shepard.
Matt's father and mother then approached the microphones. Matt's father,
Dennis, spoke, while his mother stood by his side, holding an umbrella,
clearly fighting back tears.
"We want to thank the citizens of the United States and the people of
the world..." As Mr. Shepard began, Mrs. Shepard began to cry.
"A person as caring and loving as our son Matt would be overwhelmed
by what this incident has done to the hearts and souls of people around
the world....We the family have no adquate way of expressing our gratitude
of the thousand of email comments, Web site messages, phone calls and
cards offering help, consolation, sympathy and support that we have
received....We are honored and touched beyond measure."
"We will never forget the love that the world has shared."
Matt's mother then began to sob, and the two parents walked away, arm in
arm, preparing for the imminent funeral of their 21 year old son.
Fri Oct 16 - 2:00AM EDT
- RELIGIOUS RIGHT TELLS SEN. LOTT: KILL THE HATE CRIMES BILL TODAY
Personal note from John of Wired Strategies:
A well-placed Senate source told me tonight that a certain well-known
"family values" group has told Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott
(R-MS) to kill the Hate Crimes Prevention Act before Congress finishes up
today (Friday). Today is Matthew's funeral. And while the Rev. Fred Phelps
is protesting at Matthew's grave, his henchman are doing their best to
keep hate alive in Washington. We HAVE to get as many calls - not emails
(it's too late for that) - as possible to Lott and Gingrich IMMEDIATELY!
Our goal? Close down their phones.
Let's do this one for Matthew, folks.
PS Don't let them tell you they're passing, or have passed, a
"resolution" on Matthew's death. These are do-nothing bills,
like declaring "National Butter Day," that Congress passes to
kiss up to special interests - we want a real law that protects our lives.
Now read the following official alert....
*********************
ONLINE DAY OF ACTION FOR MATTHEW
Friday October 16, 1998
*** NATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS Announce Day of
Emergency Action to Honor Matthew Shepard***
*** PHONE LOTT AND GINGRICH NOW!!! ***
WHO: The Human Rights Campaign, Wired Strategies, GLAAD, NGLTF and
PlanetOut are jointly sponsoring a national day of action to tell Congress
"Enough is Enough - Pass the Hate Crimes Law NOW!"
WHAT: We are mobilizing the Net to shut down the phones of House
Speaker Newt Gingrich and Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott until they
pass the HATE CRIMES PREVENTION ACT. Congress' last day for the year is
Friday October 16 - so we need to act now, and close them down all day
long.
WHEN: Friday October 16, naturally.
HOW'S IT WORK?: The action is easy.
1) Pick up the phone and call Sen. Lott and Rep. Gingrich now!
* Lott's phone numbers: (202) 224-3135, and (202) 224-6253
* Gingrich's phone numbers: (202) 225-0600, and (202) 225-4501
* TELL THEM: "Matthew Shepard's death in not just a tragedy,
it's unacceptable. Congress has been sitting on the Hate Crimes Prevention
Act for over a year. Pass it now before the Congressional session is
over!"
2) Send this email to as many friends as possible, urging them to act.
3) If you have a Web site, we would ask that you post an alert on your
home page all day Friday asking everyone visiting your site to call Sen.
Lott and Rep. Gingrich immediately.
A FINAL WORD: Matthew Shepard may be gone, but we refuse to let his
too short life and untimely death be in vain. Please join us now in
turning our sorrow and anger into positive action. If you need some
inspiration, take another look at the Virtual Vigil, linked off the top of
this page - read the quotes, see the pictures, feel the spirit, and act
like your life depends on it. It does.
Thu Oct 15 - 9:50PM EDT - "HOW
CAN THINGS LIKE THIS STILL HAPPEN?"
I've just received the following email from a 24-year-old in Portugal.
From: "Nunes"
To: john@wiredstrategies.com
Date: Fri, 16 Oct 1998 02:35:56 +0100
I'm a 24 year old Portuguese and I was quite shocked when I read in a
local newspaper about the death of young Matthew Sheppard. I live in a
country almost unknown for the most of the americans, where homosexuality
isn't accepted as it is in the U.S., however where things like this don't
happen. You're probably the most evolved country in the world so, how can
things like this still happen. Being gay is wonderful...why dont they let
as live in same way we let them ????
Why indeed, Nunes.
Thu Oct 15 - 9:00PM EDT - HRC
STATEMENT ON DC VIGIL
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Thursday, October 15, 1998
THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE GATHER IN WASHINGTON
D.C. TO MOURN THE DEATH OF MATTHEW SHEPARD
Law Makers Call for Congress to Pass the Hate Crimes Prevention Act
WASHINGTON -- Thousands of mourners gathered on the west steps of the U.S.
Capitol in Washington D.C. Wednesday night in remembrance of Wyoming hate
crime victim Matthew Shepard. The candlelight vigil, organized by HRC,
GLAAD, and NGLTF, helped focus the nation's attention on the pervasive
problem of anti-gay violence, according to the Human Rights Campaign.
"This hate crime did not happen in a vacuum. We all know there has
been a concerted, obsessive and well-resourced effort over the past few
months to present gay and lesbian Americans as defective, imperfect and in
need of conversion. We call on right wing groups to immediately stop the
ad campaign that is pumping lies into every community in this
country...they create a climate and environment of intolerance and give
license to those who seek to vent their rage or frustration on an entire
community," said HRC Executive Director Elizabeth Birch at the vigil.
Several members of Congress attended the vigil including Senator Ted
Kennedy, D-Mass., former Senator Alan Simpson, R-Wyo., and House Minority
Leader Dick Gephardt, D-Mo. The law makers expressed their sorrow over
Matthew's death and renewed calls for Congress to pass the Hate Crimes
Prevention Act (HCPA).
"Hate crimes legislation needs to be passed now," said Gephardt.
The minority Leader then led the crowd in a chant, "now, now,
now."
Actresses Anne Heche, Ellen DeGeneres, Kristen Johnston, Third Rock from
the Sun; Ellen's mom, Betty DeGeneres; actor Dan Butler, Frasier; and
national civil rights leaders, also attended the rally.
"I can't stop crying. I am so devastated by this, I'm begging
heterosexuals to see this as a wake-up call to please stem the hate. We
shouldn't be asked to change who we are," said DeGeneres at the
vigil.
Matthew Shepard, a gay University of Wyoming student, was savagely
attacked and left to die for up to 18 hours tied to a wooden fence outside
Laramie, 30 miles northwest of Cheyenne. He died Monday morning in a
hospital in Fort Collins Colorado.
When Shepard was initially found, last Thursday, he was unconscious and
his skull had been smashed with a blunt object. Two motorcyclists who
found his body said he looked "like a scarecrow" because of the
way he was positioned on the fence. Prior to this fatal attack, he had
recently been beaten twice and attributed those attacks to his openness
about his sexuality.
The Human Rights Campaign is the nation's largest national lesbian and gay
political organization, with members throughout the country, effectively
lobbies Congress, provides campaign support, and educates the public to
ensure that lesbian and gay Americans can be open, honest, and safe at
home, at work, and in the community.
Thu Oct 15 - 2:30AM EDT - FIRST-HAND
REPORT FROM THE DC VIGIL, OCTOBER 14
By John Aravosis of Wired Strategies:
It was a clear, cool fall evening in Washington, DC as the candlelight
vigil for Matthew Shepard began promptly at 7pm tonight (Oct. 14). The sun
had just set over the Washington Monument, and the crowds were large,
extending all the way up the steps of the Capitol and around the upper
balcony. There were men, women, young, old, black, white, Latino and
Asian. Many came with groups of friends, others with a lover or spouse.
Many had green glow sticks, and many others candles. As the evening
progresse d, there were politicians, movie stars, Matthew's best friends,
and gay rights advocates - all assembled for an evening of remembrance,
tears, and admittedly, anger.
Select quotes from various speakers:
Ellen Degeneres:
Ellen was great. She walked up to the podium and the crowd went wild. The
first thing she said was something to the effect of: "And they
thought I'd finally shut up." The crowd laughed, and then things
became deadly serious. "I am so pissed off," Elle n began.
"I can't stop crying." Her voice immediately broke, she looked
at the crowd, caught her breath and said in a now-strained, softer and
emotion-ladened voice: "This is what I was trying to stop - this is
why I did what I did." It was a moving mo ment that brought Ellen's
coming out experience into a new and suddenly much more serious light. I
still get chills writing this.
She talked about the preachers who claim
to speak for family values, but "when something like this happens,
where are they?", she said. "I don't see full-page ads saying
'stop the hate, stop the violence.'" She then took on those who use
the Bible to just anti-gay intolerance: "The Bible also was used to
justify slavery." And she closed by noting that "everyone has
the right to love." The crowd adored her.
Anne Heche:
Anne began by saying something like ""I am so proud to be Ellen
Degeneres' wife." The crowd laughed. Anne focused her speech on the
religious right and their conservative defenders in Congress. She talked
about conservative religious organizations that are "taught to
preach, bu t not to think." She told Republican Senate Leader Trent
Lott, Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, and religious right leader Jerry
Falwell that "we are all children of God." She criticized ex-gay
groups who claim to cure gay people and try to make gays more like them:
"I do not want to be like you....you are the abomination in the eyes
of my God....groups who are founded in hatred."
Joan Garry, Executive Director of GLAAD:
"Anyone who thinks that love needs to be cured has not experienced
enough of it in their own lives."
Kerri Lobel, Executive Director of the
National Gay and Lesbian Task Force:
Matthew's death "is about a society that devalues us." But his
death will "spark a renewal of our spirit and our commitment to work
for equality."
Elizabeth Birch, Executive Director of
the Human Rights Campaign:
"This crime did not happen in a vacuum." Right-wing groups
repeatedly say that gay men and lesbians are "defective, imperfect,
in need of conversion." She then challenged the Family Research
Council, Focus on the Family, and Christian Coalition to "imme
diately stop this ad campaign." She closed by saying: "Let
Matthew remind us that we have a long long way to go."
Dan Butler (Bulldog on Frasier):
"The glory of God is in everyone."
Kathy Najimi of Veronica's Closet sent a
letter read by Kristen Johnston of 3rd Rock from the Sun:
"Right wing conservative groups are perpetrating lies, fear, and
anger towards gays and lesbians....They turn their backs on hate inspired
murders."
Congressman John Lewis (D-GA):
The former civil rights leader who walked with Martin Luther King gave a
moving speech. "We must continue to stand up for what is right, what
is fair, and what is just." "Maybe we came over here in
different ships, but we're all in the same boat now." "Matthew
is one who gave his life as those who gave their lives in the early days
of the civil rights movement - his life must not be in vain."
Congresswoman Connie Morella (R-MD):
We must "take this tragedy and translate it into action."
Congressman Tom Campbell (R-CA):
"If others might live because he died, then truly he has not
died."
Congressman Mark Foley (R-FL):
Referring to Congress, and their inaction on the federal hate crimes bill:
"Why don't you all just shut up and pass the bill!" Noting
Matthew's fluency in several languages, and his desire to work in a
foreign embassy, he said of Matthew: "you are our be st ambassador
for humanity." Foley then took on the family values crowd. "Stop
trying to score political points" by attacking gay men and lesbians,
he told the conservative Christian groups. For those who say they speak
for family values, "gay men and women have families too!"
Presidential Adviser Virginia Apuzzo:
Apuzzo accused the religious right "pro-family" groups of
promoting "lies, myths and distortions about our lives," and
that their mistruths have "provided the rationale for violence and
death." She noted that the President introduced the federal hate cri
mes bill over one year ago, yet Congress has still not acted on it. With
regards to Congress' foot-dragging on the legislation, Apuzzo said:
"Whether or not they have the will - if they don't have the will to
pass it, we don't have the will to send them back!"
One of the most moving moments of the
evening was when Daniel, a 17 year old Latino boy took the podium. A year
earlier he had been severely beaten by several boys at school, who yelled
"Die you fucking faggot" as they kicked and punched him. Daniel'
s only thought at the time were: "I am going to die." Soon
thereafter, he tried to kill himself, reasoning that: "before they
kill me, I am going to kill myself." Thanks to the Sexual Minority
Youth Assistance League (SMYAL) in DC, Daniel now has a new lease on life.
An entertainer sang a beautiful version
of one of Matthew's favorite songs with a line that went: "The only
measure of your words and your deeds is the love that you leave behind
when you're gone."
Additional speakers included: Senator
Edward Kennedy (D-MA); DC Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton; House Democratic
Leader Dick Gephardt (D-MO); former Senator Alan Simpson (R-WY); two of
Matthew's best friends Alex and Walter; Rea Carey, Executive Direct or of
the National Youth Advocacy Coalition; Craig Bowman, Executive Director of
the Sexual Minority Youth Assistance League; and many others.
Thu Oct 15, 1998 - 4:17AM EDT -
REMARKS OF MATTHEW'S FRIEND AT DC VIGIL
REMARKS OF WALTER BOULDEN
MATTHEW SHEPARD VIGIL
OCTOBER 14, 1998
Wow! I don't know what it
looks like from down there, but this is very impressive from up here. I
stand before you, not as a representative of any organization, profession,
or group. I stand before you as a gay man, a parent, a neighbor, and a
third generation native son of Wyoming, the equality state. But more
importantly, Alex and I stand before you as friends of Matt Shepard. Alex
and I have been asked repeatedly to help people understand who Matt was.
I sat for over an hour, looking at this blank paper, afraid to put my pen
to it, a multitude of random images flashing through my mind, images and
memories of Matt.
It has taken several days for the shock to wear thin, and for the images
of Matt to fight their way past the horrible image of his broken and
battered body lying in that hospital bed. But Matt has made it back into
my consciousness, past the horror, the shock, and the exhaustion. His
smile dances before my eyes as I write.
All those who were graced with the gift of knowing Matt, know the smile I
am talking about. Matt never smiled with just his mouth. His whole face
and body would light up. His eyes would dance and his vibrancy and energy
just radiated from his whole being. It never mattered where we were, when
I would meet Matt, he would bounce up to me, throw his arms around me in a
hug only Matt could give, and immediately start into some conversation
that would quickly suck me in. And we were lost in whatever topic was on
his mind when we bumped into each other. His insight, humor, and concern,
all poured out, regardless of whether we were talking about world affairs,
a class, a friend, or clothes and fashion. Throughout the conversation,
Matt would pause, assume a very introspective posture, and take a draw
from his cigarette, always careful to blow the smoke away from anyone
sitting near. And I'd have to smile. It was at this moment that I'd see
all the care that Matt put into his appearance, the way his hair looked,
the way his clothes reflected his mood, the way he was sitting. I might
point that out, and we would laugh and talk about presentation and fashion
and wanting people to have a favorable first impression. Matt wanted
people to know him and like him at a level far deeper than the superficial
"small-talk" stage, but believed people judge each other with
first impressions. Matt would be appalled that we are standing here in our
everyday clothes instead of brand new suits.
When I say, Matt would bounce up to me, the image is crystal clear. Again,
anyone who knew Matt knows what his "bounce" was like. We would
talk and laugh about the way he walked. I'd remind him that he once told
me he used to practice the way he walked, we'd laugh. He told me that his
African American friend would tell him he walks "like a
brother." Again, we'd laugh. Matt was very proud of that compliment.
I'd tell him he was so skinny because he used up too much energy with his
"bounce."
But there are other images that also present themselves. Matt showing up
at my door, and asking "Am I bothering you?" His eyes were not
dancing, and he was not offering his energetic hug. His eyes had the look
of a little boy who has just seen a scary movie. He'd come in and ask if
he could "just hang." He'd have his backpack and school books
with him. He'd either sit and watch TV for a little while, or take his
books out and start doing homework. After a short time he'd start talking
about hearing someone call out "faggot," or hearing someone talk
about "queers." We'd talk about how this touched Matt at the
core of his heart, and that he needed to feel safe again. Then he'd just
hang around, regrouping, and trying to harden himself. Something that
never came easy for Matt, because he was not the type of person to
"be hard."
After some time, the Matt with the dancing eyes would start coming back
and he'd be off to class or to meet a friend for coffee.
Like Alex and myself, Matt was also a native son of Wyoming. A gentle,
vibrant, loving young man who loved Wyoming and had returned home to go to
school. Just a week before he was so savagely tortured and murdered, Matt
told me how happy he was to be back home, how comfortable he felt in
Laramie, and how safe he felt there compared to the big city. I was so
happy to hear that because I had encouraged Matt to come home.
Matt's sense of safety was betrayed by every legislator in Wyoming and
this nation who has opposed or voted against hate crime legislation over
the last years. These men and women represented the leadership of our
state and Nation, and sent a clear and tangible message to the people of
our state, and to the children of our nation that it is okay to "Hate
Gays and Lesbians." Through opposition to hate crime legislation
which clearly states we will not tolerate hate, our leadership has
sanctioned an atmosphere of ignorance, prejudice, oppression, and hatred.
Our children have been, and are still listening and watching. Alex and I
stand here before you because some of our children heard that message and
interpreted it to mean it is okay to savagely torture and murder one of
our gay children.
I will never be able to understand the thinking of a person who could do
something so horrific to another human being. But these two young men did
not in any way try to hide their crime. They did not dump Matt's battered
body in some ditch hoping the snow would hide it until next Spring. They
strung him up on a fence, displaying him like a trophy, announcing to the
community and world what they had done. This display was an attempt to
intimidate and subjugate Wyoming's gay community and send the message that
all gays and lesbians deserve such violence.
Those are the actions of people who think somebody, somewhere, is going to
applaud what they did. Those are the actions of people who believe they
are living in an environment that would protect them, and allow them to
get away with their actions. I hope they are shocked by the response of
the people of Laramie, Wyoming and this nation. But only time will tell
whether on not they were correct in their assessment of the environment in
Wyoming and the nation.
Alex and I are here because our lives have been shattered by the violent
murder of our dear gentle friend. But this is not just about Matt. This is
not just about Wyoming. All of us know about the daily physical attacks on
gays and lesbians throughout this nation. We also know about the minute by
minute verbal and emotional violence against gays and lesbians everywhere.
But this is not just about gay and lesbian issues. We are here because of
hatred and violence. The enemy is not heterosexuals, the enemy is
oppression. Oppression against all vulnerable groups and populations.
There are still some in our government attempting to rationalize their
stance of opposition to hate crime legislation. They do not seem to
understand that hate crimes are directed at a person because of that
person's membership in a particular group, and the hate crime serves to
intimidate and subjugate the entire group. We will never know, one way or
another, whether hate crime legislation would have prevented this savage
attack on our friend, Matt. We all know that laws in themselves do not
prevent crime. But laws do voice the "heart and will" of the
people.
I look around at the outpouring of love and compassion that has been
expressed by the people of Wyoming and the entire nation during this time
of horror and tragedy. These are images I have always had of the people of
this nation. Loving, friendly, compassionate, caring, and willing to come
to the aid of others. Have I been so blind, or naïve? Have I been so
wrong about the people of this nation?
We stand at a moment in time which will define who we are as individuals,
as states, and as a nation. It is time to look in the mirror and then look
in the eyes of our children and our neighbors and say this is who we are
and that is who we are not. No words are going to convince anyone of
anything. Words are cheap. We will define ourselves, and be judged by our
actions or by our lack of action.
I cannot stand on these steps to the Capitol and demand that our leaders
commit to the eradication of hatred and violence if I am not willing to do
the same. I am not talking about a commitment to just gay rights. I am
talking about a commitment to actively fight for the rights of all people.
As a white, middle classed, formally educated, temporarily abled man, I
must look at and recognize my position of privilege and use that position
to actively fight for the rights of all races, for the rights of those who
have been denied access to the economic opportunities of our nation, for
the rights of those who are denied access to a quality education, for the
rights of the disabled, for the rights of women, and for the rights of
every other human being. I must actively work to eradicate all forms of
oppression on a personal and public level. Only then can I demand that our
political leaders do the same.
Governor Geringer, President Clinton, and the leadership of Congress have
an opportunity to lead all of us into a new era. They can help us look in
the mirror, stand up straight and tall, and send a loud and clear message
to our children, our neighbors, and the world that we are not a people
filled with hate. Congress can pass Hate Crime legislation that clearly
states we do not sanction and we will not tolerate hate and that we
believe in, and stand for, equality. Anything less will be a confirmation
that we are the hateful, ignorant, and barbaric people the world must see
us as now. If we fail to act, we allow the actions of Russell Henderson
and Aaron McKinney to speak for us.
Alex and I are here because our dear and gentle friend, Matthew Shepard,
was brutally tortured and murdered. But we all know we are here for more
than that.
Matt once told me that someday he was going to be famous and that he was
going to make a difference in the area of human rights. When I look out at
all of you and reflect on what is going on in the building behind us, I
have to think he had no idea how true that statement would be.
Matt is never going to hop off my couch and bounce off to class or to meet
a friend, ever again. But I have to believe that his eyes are dancing as
he looks down and sees how he has touched the heart and soul of the people
of this nation.
But please remember, no matter what good may come from all of this, THE
PRICE WAS TOO HIGH.
The price was too high.
Please be safe.
Thank you.
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