Newly elected state Sen. Chris Smith always gets a visit from his Aunt Bertha before major elections. She likes to look at his voter's guide to get the lowdown on the issues.

Smith, a former Democratic House leader who was elected to the Senate on the same ballot as Barack Obama, says his aunt is usually amenable to his ideas — just not when it comes to gay issues.

Before the November 4 election, Smith told her he was opposed to Amendment 2, the statewide initiative to make gay marriage and civil unions unconstitutional.

Aunt Bertha balked.

"She's very active in our church, and she got upset," recalls Smith, one of Broward's top black leaders. "She said, 'God's law says that Adam can't marry Steve.' And the more I talked with her about it, the more upset she got."

Aunt Bertha played into one of the great ironies of last week's historic election. She was one of numerous civil rights-minded black voters who cast their ballots for Obama at the same time that they chose to deny gays and lesbians the right to marry. The anti-gay marriage measure passed statewide and garnered a majority of votes in every county in Florida but Monroe, which includes gay-friendly Key West.

Even in the alleged liberal bastions of Palm Beach, Broward, and Miami-Dade counties,

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a majority voted for the measure. And the black vote weighed heavily in all of them.

It's one of the great paradoxes in American politics. The black community, the most oppressed group in U.S. history, has traditionally comprised the most unfriendly demographic toward gays, arguably the second-most-discriminated-against group.

In short, it's time for blacks in America to wake up. The black community has gotten a free pass on its rampant homophobia, beginning with the denial of the AIDS problem until it ravaged their neighborhood. Gay activists have almost given up on trying to influence black America, but last Tuesday's vote shows that another tactic is overdue.

Bluntly put, blacks must be exposed on their homophobic attitudes and challenged on them.

The numbers, though roughly drawn, are overwhelming. While about 96 percent of black voters favored Obama, 70 percent of them were opposed to gay marriage, according to both pre-election and exit polls.

Let's break down Broward County. With nearly 200,000 registered black voters in Broward and a turnout of about 70 percent of them, polls suggest that nearly three-quarters of them voted in favor of the gay marriage ban.

Focus groups organized by opponents to Amendment 2 figured out early on that a large majority of blacks opposed gay marriage but that they, like Aunt Bertha, only become hardened in their resolve when someone tries to persuade them otherwise.

For that reason, Florida Red and Blue, a Miami-based group that raised $3.7 million to fight Amendment 2, largely left the black community alone with its outreach efforts. Instead, opponents chose to focus on black college students and young women, who have been found to be the most receptive to the cause.

Oakland Park activist S.F. Mahee worked as the Broward organizer for Florida Red and Blue. She is also a black lesbian who has urged the African-American community to take a stake in gay issues. She knew gay rights advocates faced challenges in the black community.

"Speculation is that the momentous turnout that Sen. Obama provided may have actually hurt us in the end when it came to the religious African-Americans that turned out," Mahee says. "If you can make the connection about discrimination, then African-Americans are overwhelmingly with us. But if someone else focuses on homosexuality, then we lose African-Americans."

Veteran gay activist and West Palm Beach lawyer Rand Hoch puts it in stark terms. "Black people have consistently been less supportive of gay and lesbian rights than any segment of the population in Florida," he says.

Sen. Smith, who lives in Fort Lauderdale with his wife, Desorae, and two kids, agrees, and he provides three reasons. "Religion, religion, and religion," he says. "Even pastors who I know and love and have supported for years, we got into deep arguments about it, and they didn't want me to make that recommendation [on Amendment 2]. I couldn't convince them. Religion plays a heavy part in it. Last Sunday, there were signs surrounding each church saying, 'Vote Yes on Two.' I went to every church from Boynton Beach to Fort Lauderdale, and at every church were those signs."

It didn't help that South Florida is home to the Rev. O'Neal Dozier, one of America's most virulently antigay black ministers. Dozier leads the Worldwide Christian Center in Pompano Beach, and he famously said that gays make God "want to puke." Like so many black ministers, he rallied his congregation against Amendment 2.

Elgin Jones, columnist for the black-owned Broward Times, largely agrees with Dozier's views. He shares the "social conservatism" that's a hallmark of black politics.

"Most people think that black folk are these bleeding-heart liberals, but that's not the case," says Jones, who voted to make gay marriage unconstitutional last week. "They are socially conservative. You wouldn't know it by who they vote for, but they vote that way because of things that are important to them: civil rights, jobs, health care. Not social issues."

Jones, a dogged journalist who has dug up a lot of corruption in black politics, says it's offensive to most blacks when their plight is compared to that of gays.

"When homosexuals try to use the blessing of those who are black to help their cause, it has failed, and it will continue to fail," he says. "If they are seeking rights, I don't think they will be successful comparing homosexuality to race. I think most people see it as a slight or an insult."

Jones concedes that many gays and lesbians seem to be born that way. But he compares them to people who seem to have a propensity for crime. He compares it to a trait he has to seek harsh revenge when someone has wronged him. "I was born with that. I was born in a family that has done a lot of violent things. But I was taught that was wrong, so I don't act on it. I think people are sometimes born with an urge to steal or to rob or to be lazy, but that doesn't mean you act on it because you have urges."

Translation: Homosexuality, Jones claims, is a crime that should be snuffed out.

Hoch, who is white, says he has seen, through his gay activism, an urge in the black community to deny that homosexuality exists. Smith adds that it's largely hidden under the "machismo" running through the male culture.

"In ethnic communities, really all ethnic communities, African-American, Cuban-American, there's a lot of machismo," he says. "So whenever you talk about anything gay, it goes beyond religion. Culturally, it was hard to embrace AIDS because AIDS was the 'faggot disease.' Once AIDS became a black disease, the church woke up."

Smith says he will probably co-sponsor a long-floundering gay-rights bill to outlaw discrimination against homosexuals in employment and housing. He has hopes that the measure will get a modest amount of support among blacks.

The senator says he believes blacks might also support his bid to overturn the ban on gay adoption. "That's a battle I think we can win," he says. "You have gay people serving as foster parents, and you have hundreds of thousands of kids that need adopting. That's a battle we can win to treat everyone equal."

But Smith admits that he has been met with a stone wall in trying to raise awareness about gay issues in his district. He says that when he gives speeches in black churches, he often brings up the issue, but it's never popular.

"If you think gay marriage is against God's law, then adultery is against God's law too," the senator says. "Are you going to make it a crime to have an affair? You can't legislate all of God's law. When I mention that, I get some agreement, but that's only if I can get to that phase of the argument. Usually, I get shut down before I get there."

For Mahee, it's understandably more personal than that. She says that when she got up on the morning after the election, her first impulse was to flee the state. Then she realized that Arizona and California, one of the nation's more progressive states, had passed the same initiative on the same day.

"I am in absolute and complete awe," she says. "I am in awe that we can elect the first African-American president and that on the same day, we can write discrimination into the state Constitution. Our education is at the bottom of the heap. We have a state House that just had to apologize for its participation in slavery last session. We have a gay adoption ban. I am afraid Florida has become in this millennium what Mississippi was to the civil rights movement."

Smith, though, says the irony is that the black man who was elected to the White House is, like him, sympathetic to gay causes — though not gay marriage itself.

"In Barack's speech, he mentioned the people, and he said gay and straight," Smith remembers. "He's the new president of the United States, a black man, a religious black man. Hell, he sat in Rev. Wright's church, and he said gay and straight. That's something that gives me hope."

Click here to send a letter to the editor.

 
  • 01/24/2012 1:51:00 AM

    This is the issue, along with abortion and the Democratic Party's roots in slavery and racism that I'll use to pull black people from the clutches of the Democratic Party -- praise God! Yes Dems, with God's help -- I'm gonna take your Party down!!!!!!

  • Sal 10/26/2010 1:03:00 AM

    As a Florida resident who votes and is active politically. The voting rate of the Florida gay community which most are in S.Florida is a disgrace. I would be amazed if 50% voted . Yes most vote in presidential elections but not more than that. They are their enemies enablers and their own worse enemy by not getting out the vote.

  • cornel 05/25/2009 6:40:00 PM

    god dont like man fucking in the ass (fags)vote against fags is what causes HIV because of nasty dirty people like them taking it in the ass nasty nasty nasty

  • Jake 11/21/2008 2:51:00 AM

    Off the topic I take issue with this article�s writer in saying that �blacks are the most discriminated group in America.� That is an impossible statement to prove or even gauge. I would think a Native American could make a fair argument that enslavement is a better-than or equal-to fate than genocide. Ask a Muslim who has been wire-taped, harassed or illegally held by the FBI if he/she knows the sting of racial profiling. On topic I believe that this is a civil rights issue and should not be left up to voters. Issues like ending slavery, suffrage and desegregation NEVER had popular support of the majority of voters. The voting population was not prepared to change their paradigm. I reject the flawed argument of religion as a reason to vote against Gay marriage. First, we can agree that Gay marriage is not explicitly forbidden in the Ten Commandments. Murder and theft should be illegal. Should adultery? Maybe. Should a teenager who does not respect their parents be jailed? No. Should having another God ie. Allah, Shiva, Jah or Thor be illegal? Absolutely not. So gay marriage is a sin but not in the 10 cannon sins of Christianity. Within those 10 sins there is an emphasis placed on some and not others. So, we can agree that some sins weigh heaver than others. A compulsive gambler is not as much of a sinner as Hitler. If you disagree stop reading this, I am done writing to you. In all of the, Bible there are more references to eating pigs as a sin than laying with another man. The sin of Sodom was not homosexuality, it was hedonism. I would be interested further to know how many men against Gay marriage would have a threesome with 2 women. Isn�t that gay for 2 women to kiss? The problem is individual discomfort. People do not want to live in a world where 2 men kissing is alright. Those same people 40 years ago would not want to live in a world with a black president. Those same people would never want a Negro to use the same bathroom as them and so on and so on. The fact is Gay marriage hurts nobody. 2 consenting adults wanting to publicly commit to each other is there right. Their marriage invalidates the sanctity of marriage much the same way a national divorce rate over 50% does�..not at all. People vote against gay marriage do so out of fear. Be brave, look in the mirror and truly assess why you think gay marriage is wrong.

  • Jamie 11/20/2008 8:05:00 PM

    I actually voted "no" on the proposition to ban gay marriage here in Arizona because I personally feel its none of my business and affects me neither positively or negatively if gay ppl marry however, I agree with the comment by one the individuals interviewed: "When homosexuals try to use the blessing of those who are black to help their cause, it has failed, and it will continue to fail," he says. "If they are seeking rights, I don't think they will be successful comparing homosexuality to race" I think that it is a big mistake for gay ppl to compare their issues with that of all the struggles of blacks in america. The history is totally different and the multitude of struggles in my opinion are/were not equally shared. I feel that many activist groups whether they be gay rights activist or even orgs. like PETA make huge mistakes when they compare their fight with the struggles of blacks. Maybe to win the majority support of blacks they should leave race out of as well as what they perceive as our historically shared struggles behind and talk about the current issues both groups face because the way in which the gay rights community presents it, its: "gays against blacks" when neither group is monolithic; there are ppl of all races within the gay community and their are blacks of all different backgrounds and mindset within the black community.

  • straight and married 11/20/2008 3:47:00 AM

    If engaging in fabulous anal and oral sex is such an abomination, then I must be one F-ed up married woman! Maybe the state of Florida should annul MY marriage because I've offended the prudish sensibilities of the church ladies. Gay people deserve all the rights and protections that we straight married folks enjoy. There are legal remedies (like wills) that can address many of these discrepancies. But what about the guy who wants his Costa Rican boyfriend to be able to stay in the US? That is something that a "domestic partnership" does not encompass. We'll find a solution. There can't be that many hateful people in this country.

  • lance 11/18/2008 10:36:00 PM

    You might want to read the Philadelphia Weekly article this week on AIDS in the black community. You are free to have your own opinions. But of all the AIDS infections in the US right now, 49% of them are African-Americans. This is a scary scenario.Fear,hatred,discrimination,and being forced to live a lie isn't working.Just look at the statistics.

  • Thomas Mc 11/18/2008 5:45:00 PM

    I voted for Obama, and also against a Colorado proposition to eliminate affirmative action. I will NOT make that mistake again. It was supposed to be equality for all, not just for blacks!

  • Ken Westervelt 11/16/2008 6:36:00 PM

    At least Florida gays have the good sense to not send fake anthrax to Mormon churches. Certain groups on the West Coast made asses out of themselves recently acting like criminally sore losers. NEWSFLASH: threatening your political opponents alienates moderates like me who voted NO on Prop 2.

  • B. D. Burge 11/15/2008 12:27:00 PM

    Since when have gays not had the right to marry? They are allowed to marry just like everyone else. Just not women with women or men with men. Why do you think that adoption is so high among gay couples? Simply because they are unable to procreate, which should signal to them and everyone else that their "sex" is unnatural. They are incapable performing sex in the normal fashion, so therefore, it is ABnormal. Anyone with any sense at all can see and sense that gay love is against nature. What gay activists are trying to do is persuade people to adopt the attitude that gay love is not "sinful" or "unnatural" or the Biblical "abomination" that it obviously is. Why, it's just an alternative lifestyle! It's not sinful! Puh-LEEZE! The problem here is that gay love is so obviously, nauseatingly unnatural, and I'm supposed to pretend that there is nothing abnormal about it? You can try to justify it all you like, but that is simply throwing common sense out the window. And I refuse to become one of the lukewarm Laodiceans that God spews out of his mouth because of turning a blind eye to the stomach-churning sight of seeing two men walking down the street holding hands and French-kissing each other. I'm sorry, but gay activists are insisting on the impossible. Oh, and by the way, I'm white. And a woman.

  • YaddamonChonga 11/15/2008 2:55:00 AM

    To e finley... you are not alone. To the others, I see e finley making arguments based on reason, and opinion too, but at least he's not hurling insults. If you disagree say why in a civil way. I have no doubt that majority rule cannot be trusted on alot of issues, but as far as amendment 2 goes, I think the people made the right choice.

  • kjen @ www.fairlyprejudiced.bl 11/15/2008 12:24:00 AM

    On, good grief. I've been reading about this issue all over the blogosphere all week. #1) Oppression doesn't make automatically anyone more compassionate, sensitive or enlightened. Example: the racism within the oppressed GLBTQ community. As soon as the amendments were passed in certain states and Blacks were blamed for passing it, the n-word was all to willingly passed around. Way to offer understanding and acceptance from both communities. #2) see #1. #3) So this religious + Black = homophobic formula is way, way too simplistic. It's an opinion shared by many people across many demographics. #4) For sheer expediency, I think the reasoning that trying to reason with someone else's holy book is not working. Instead try to seperate the issue as one of civil marriage vs. religious marriage. The reasoning - church folks don't endorse infidelity, (on the surface anyone), but they don't believe adulterers should be stoned. So while they may never endorse same-sex marriages within their own churches, they may be more willing to allow government sanctioned ones.

  • Anita Simone 11/13/2008 11:34:00 PM

    Efinely: Look, asshat. You meant to say "voted YES on Amendment 2," and that's just the beginning of your long and boring list of idiocies. GS has the right idea. You're worried about your kids being taught a particular thing in school: fine. Send them to a private school. But don't presume to decide that your gut feelings about the origins and morality of gayness are so smart, so beyond dispute, that my 13-year-old gay son should feel alienated in school, and be taught by the careful and subtle omission of gays and gayness from his historical and literary curricula that people like him are somehow lesser than their straight classmates. The final line of your note is the most revealing -- the one in which you say you're just not ready for homosexuality to be un-taboo. My, yes, wouldn't that be just so inconvenient for you. Pardon me if I don't think my son should be barred from marrying someday just to save you some discomfort, and if I think you're a swine on two legs for feeling that he should. Fucktard. - Anita (straight, married, 45, oncologist)

  • gs 11/13/2008 4:24:00 PM

    wow efinely, you're highly educated? coulda fooled me! Just FYI, it's illegal for gays to adopt in the state of florida. and here's another piece of news: it's your job to educate your own kids and instill your values as best you can. there are a whole bunch of things that your kids may learn in this big bad world -- in school, by watching movies, playing video games, talking to friends -- including the fact that some people are gay. So you don't want them to supposedly "adopt a gay lifestyle" ? Well, pal, talk to them about it. But don't legislate your stupid morality onto me and my family, don't trample on the civil rights of many just because you have some vague, completely unsubstantiated fear that your kid may turn out gay. Sounds to me like you're just a closet case anyway -- otherwise, why worry my friend? Maybe your own sexuality is the real, hidden issue here.

  • EFinely 11/13/2008 4:19:00 AM

    Hi, I'm an independent swing voter who went for Obama this year. I am white, straight, highly educated, married, family-oriented, and have a few gay friends who are couples and whom I hang out with often, and work with a gay dude and a lesbian. I love my gay friends and co-workers, but I would never tell them to their face that I voted no on Amendment 2 in Florida to avoid the ineveitable fallout. "WHAT!! HOW COULD YOU!!" etc... Here's why. Some people are born gay; uber gay or bull dyke, or what have you; no ifs, ands, or buts about it. However,I know for a fact that there are many other people who are prone to be bi, curious, or straight with latent gay tendencies. If my children, or anyone else's children for that matter, fall into the latter category, I want them to be encouraged to be normal. I don't want normal itself to be redefined for them. If my children do happen to be gay, I want them to discover it for themselves. I don't want it to discover them. If gay marriage becomes legal, it will be taught in schools as a normal, legitimate institution. It will give those children and young adults, who may be on the fence with sexuality and who are still forming their viewpoints on the world, the impression that gay marriage is fine and dandy and that being gay is just an alternative to being straight, instead of a radical lifestyle decision. As far as having children go, it will be another step towards legitimizing the idea of gay couples having children. In my opinion, if you are in a loving gay relationship and want kids, you should adopt, not bring more humans into this world in a confusing pychodramatic relationship (if you'll allow me to sterotype here; admit it, most gay people are a little if not alot crazy). Gay people should have the same legal and tax rights that married couples do. I know that amendment 2 may hinder the development of civil unions, but that will be something we will work out in the future. I myself am conflicted with obstructing gay marriage while at the same time not wanting gay people's rights to be trampled. I guess I just don't want being gay to be mainstreamed, and am not ready to completely relinqusih the taboo status of gayness.

  • allysonrose 11/12/2008 4:45:00 PM

    okay what the hell??? i've been hearing this for a while now all this banter about how gays can't marry because of black people. bullshit! first of all you have to realize that there are black queers out there that did vote no on prop 8 and to blame an entire community of people sounds very ignorant. for one group of oppressed persons to shift the blame on another doesn't solve anything...

 

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