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Carlos A. Ball

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What the End of Florida's Gay Adoption Ban Tells Us About Our Country Today

Posted: 10/27/10 12:15 PM ET

Gay rights advocates have expressed a lot of frustration lately -- much of it aimed at the Obama administration -- about the seemingly slow pace of reforms that seek to end discrimination against gay people. Indeed, watching the slow and painful death of the "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy over the last few weeks, when added to the inability of a Democratic administration and Congress in the last few months to repeal the Defense of Marriage Act and to enact the Employment Non-Discrimination Act, has tested the patience of gay rights supporters.

It is important, however, to step back from the day-to-day civil rights struggles on behalf of LGBT rights to consider how far the nation has come on these issues in a relatively short period of time. When Florida's Attorney General announced last week that he was not going to appeal the recent ruling by an appellate court striking down the state law banning gay adoption, he provided us with an opportune moment to reflect on where we are on LGBT rights in this country.

When the Florida law was enacted in 1977, more than forty states had statutes on the books making it a crime for gay people to have consensual sexual relationships in private, no state prohibited discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, and no jurisdiction in the country recognized same-sex relationships in any way. Today, the Supreme Court has ruled that it is unconstitutional to criminalize the intimate relationships of gay people, almost half of the states prohibit employment discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation (and quite a few on the basis of gender identity as well), and about a dozen states provide significant recognition to same-sex relationships, with several of those allowing gay marriages.

One of the most remarkable transformations in social policy that has taken place since Florida enacted its adoption ban relates to the very subject of that law: the ability of lesbians and gay men to be parents. When the statute was enacted, there had been fewer than ten reported cases of openly gay people adopting anywhere in the country. Although there were some lesbians and gay men who were parents at the time, almost all of them had had children through prior heterosexual marriages. And very few gay parents were willing to be open about their sexual orientation because of the real likelihood that it might cost them their children. In fact, three years before the Florida legislature enacted the gay adoption ban, a jury in Dallas had stripped a lesbian mother of the custody of her son because she was living with her female partner, a case that received considerable coverage by the national press.

In stark contrast, there are today hundreds of thousands of openly gay and lesbian parents raising children across the country. There are no legal prohibitions limiting the access of lesbians to assisted reproductive technology. The vast majority of states do not legally bar gay people, whether single or in relationships, from adopting. And while some states prohibit surrogacy, most do not, making the pursuit of parenthood with the help of a surrogate mother an increasingly viable option for the gay men who can afford it. There are, in other words, many roads to parenthood for LGBT people today, with few legal impediments along the way.

It is unlikely that any of the Florida legislators who voted for the gay adoption ban in 1977 could have ever imagined the transformation that has taken place in American society on gay rights issues. It is true that it should not have taken thirty-three years to get rid of a law, such as Florida's, that was enacted to send a message of disapproval of gay people. Indeed, it is astonishing that under that law, no group of individuals other than gay people--not murderers, not child abusers, not perpetrators of domestic violence--were categorically denied the opportunity to adopt children regardless of qualifications or circumstances. But this kind of law is increasingly becoming anachronistic in today's America.

So before we get back to the daily reports on the status of the moribund "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy, and before we return to the efforts to repeal DOMA and enact ENDA, let us take stock of the LGBT movement's remarkable achievements over the last three decades. Although there is undoubtedly still much work to be done, there are also may reasons to be proud of the ways in which the LGBT community, with the help of its straight allies, has helped to change the country in fundamental ways.

 
 
 
Gay rights advocates have expressed a lot of frustration lately -- much of it aimed at the Obama administration -- about the seemingly slow pace of reforms that seek to end discrimination against gay ...
Gay rights advocates have expressed a lot of frustration lately -- much of it aimed at the Obama administration -- about the seemingly slow pace of reforms that seek to end discrimination against gay ...
 
 
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01:55 AM on 11/18/2010
I really appreciate this little change of perspective. I've been living with my partner for three years now (I know, not that long, but I'm also only 22), we've been engaged for four years, and lately I've been despairing over the fact that we're not allowed to get married. I've been wishing I had been born a few years later so that I wouldn't have to go through all this agony of waiting and prejudice. But this article made me stop and think, and realize that we're pretty well off right now. Sure, we can't get married, but we openly live together, our co-workers know about us, I haven't had a slur thrown at me since high school, and I've never been on the receiving end of homophobic violence. So thanks for this article. I think it's exactly what I needed right now to make me count my blessings.
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01:29 PM on 10/28/2010
As a children's attorney in Dependency Court I know that one big reason to be proud of the ways in which the LGBT community, with the help of its straight allies, has helped to change the country in fundamental ways is that they have helped promote the rights of children also. It is cruel for a State to reject the right of a child to have a parent, a home and love and make them live a life bouncing from foster home to foster home all in the name of morals and values.
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jcarterla
There ain't no shame in my game!
03:32 AM on 10/28/2010
I was just hitting puberty when the AIDS crisis began. Not only was I discovering sexuality, I was discovering that I was not like the other boys. Add to that a disease that seemed to be targeting what I was discovering I was. It was a scary time. Luckily for me, there were generations of people older than I, fighting for our rights. Every year that goes by, we get stronger. This fight has been a long and hard one and is far from over. In the 40 some years I have been alive I have seen great progress. At the time, every little step seems like just that, small. But if you look at all those steps, you will see us steadily marching on. Every new generation has been more accepting of us and one day we will be truly equal. We may not win every battle, but we will win the war.
11:00 PM on 10/27/2010
"proud of the ways in which the LGBT community, with the help of its straight allies, has helped to change the country over the last three decades"

Oh, yeah, thanks to them, NOW we're doing GREAT.
tbrnotb
...that is the question!
03:25 AM on 10/28/2010
In 1969 a gay man would be arrested for just being in a gay bar. Gay people have been discriminated over jobs, where to live and basic social rights. We cannot visit our dying partners in the hospital because of we are not family. Oh and we lost tens of the thousands and probably more in the plague that devastated our community.

So look pal, WE have made accomplishments in our lives and are working towards the same rights as you have.

Ya gotta problem with that? Ya gotta problem with us? Bring it on.....we ready to take you all on.
I-US
Beware the monsters lurking in word swamps.
10:21 PM on 10/27/2010
So, Florida progressive; California not. Log Cabin Republicans looking to overturn DADT; the Obama administration not.
tbrnotb
...that is the question!
03:26 AM on 10/28/2010
I think he wants it to go to the Supreme Court to put and end to this follishness for once and for all.
04:30 PM on 10/27/2010
One step forward and two steps back doesn't make for progress.
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Jdaddy1951
08:42 PM on 10/27/2010
Sadly, fanned and faved.