Why Marriage Equality Isn't Enough

In the same way that sexism did not die after women secured the right to vote in 1920, and racism persisted after schools were desegregated in 1954, homophobia will not end once I gain the right to legally marry a partner of the same sex.
This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.

As March approaches and the Supreme Court of the United States of America prepares to hear monumental cases in the movement for LGBTQ equality, I have to make a confession: I don't think marriage equality is the ultimate answer. Before I'm ushered off the advocacy stage, lampooned as a heretic and told never to speak again, I want to make myself clear. Marriage equality should and must become a reality in this country. Women and men, regardless of orientation, should know that they live in a world where their marriage commitment is one that is recognized at both state and federal levels. Because of this, as a gay man, I will throw the full force of my energy toward this campaign. However, what troubles me about the growing passion for marriage equality in both queer and straight communities is that, if we are not careful, it has the potential to diminish the real issue at hand: the fact that LGBTQ women and men do not have moral equality with their straight counterparts in this country.

In the same way that sexism did not die after women secured the right to vote in 1920, and racism persisted after schools were desegregated in 1954, homophobia, which is the real problem I am interested in eradicating, will not end once I gain the right to legally marry a partner of the same sex. Like pulling up a weed from the flower, token victories, though undoubtedly important, can cloud our vision and prevent us from continuing to fight against the root of social systems that make such victories necessary in the first place.

In Zora Neale Hurston seminal novel Their Eyes Were Watching God, protagonist Janie is bound up in her grandmother's dream for her future. "She was borned in slavery time, when folks, dat is black folks, didn't sit down anytime dey felt lak it," Janie explains. "So sittin' on porches lak de white madam looked lak uh mighty fine thing tuh her. Dat's whut she wanted for me -- don't keer what it cost. Git up on uh high chair and sit dere." Like her grandmother hopes, Janie eventually makes it onto a porch of her own: As the wife of a mayor, a possessor of money, Janie lived a life that her grandmother thought was only possible for white women. Once she got there, however, she found herself profoundly dissatisfied. "De object was tuh git dere," she continues. "So I got up on de high stool lak she told me, but Ah done nearly languished tuh death up dere." What Hurston captures here is profound, not only for black Americans but for the LGBTQ community. Janie doesn't desire a freedom to be like the white woman, as if the white woman is somehow the paragon of success; she desires a freedom to be herself: a beautiful black agent in the world, a woman whose future may or may not look like the ones she has seen before.

Like Janie and her struggle against racism, I don't desire to sit upon the stool of marriage because it will make people choosing to live the homophobic lifestyle more comfortable with me. I do not want to be socially celebrated because I am able to fit myself into a historically heterosexual, morally acceptable category. I want to be afforded a place at the sociopolitical table because I, as a human being -- marital status and sexual orientation aside -- deserve that respect. I want LGBTQ people to be recognized as morally equal agents in this world, and not because we suddenly look straighter. Though marriage equality undoubtedly moves us closer to a world free of legalized homophobic discrimination, we must remember that it is exactly that: a step, not a solution. LGBTQ people deserve to be the authors of their unique futures, ones that may coincidentally look similar to the lives of their straight counterparts but that aren't required to do so in order to be legitimate.

Marriage equality must be one of our goals, but it cannot be our end.

Popular in the Community

Close

What's Hot