A whole lot of politicians in Washington spent the morning importuning the Almighty for the sake of secular state. It was part of the Family's National Prayer Breakfast, where President Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton turned up to denounce legislation in Uganda that would execute people for being gay. Lest we miss a simply divine opportunity to remind you that Uganda dreamed up its response to sexual minorities after visits from members of the Family, here is this link.
Whew. Let's roll forward just a bit, with this from President Obama's as-prepared remarks:
We may disagree about gay marriage, but surely we can agree that it is unconscionable to target gays and lesbians for who they are -- whether it's here in the United States or, as Hillary mentioned, more extremely in odious laws that are being proposed most recently in Uganda.
Wait, did you catch that? The president of the United States just said "gay marriage" -- like it was a thing. And he suggested, maybe, that this thing called "gay marriage" might be something "we disagree on." Obama has been on the record as opposing gay marriage since he got famous, though he seems to have supported it back when no one much knew who he was.
And what's he saying now, to an audience that leans toward being socially conservative and fundamentalist Christian? That crowd has opposed marriage equality, as has Obama. So what disagreement is Obama talking about?
Reverse Obama's formulation, and you get: We can all agree the Uganda kill-the-gays bill is wrong, even if we disagree about gay marriage.
That disagreement could be on Obama's move to repeal the Defense of Marriage Act -- which would grant full equality at the federal level to married gay couples in states like Massachusetts, and is thus inherently pro-equality. Or the disagreement could be about whether same-sex couples should be allowed to have civil unions. In which case, President Obama just substituted the words "gay marriage" for the civil unions he has been willing to favor since running for president.
It may be that Obama really does oppose gay civil marriage and support civil unions, in each case because of his Christian beliefs. Certainly, he has argued from that position in recent years. But heard another way, his remarks at the Prayer Breakfast suggest that he finds himself on one side of the question of marriage equality, and the social conservatives he's addressing on the other. If you're for marriage equality, that's worth something.




