Topic “marriage equality”

Students for marriage: 'Marriage equality is a youth issue'

Freedom to Marry, a national organization working to full marriage equality for LGBT couples, is rolling out their new Students for Marriage campaign.

freedomtomarry.jpgAndrew Blumenfeld, the groups Summer 2010 New Media intern, has put out the call for more youth involvement in the nationwide movement for marriage, but admits it's an issue on which many youth find difficulty in identifying.

He writes on Freedom to Marry's blog:

    As a student- in high school, in college- it may not always be easy to see why the freedom to marry is something to which we should devote a whole lot of time or thought. We’ve seen our friends, family members, and neighbors find and commit to that special someone later in life than most of our grandparents would have ever considered typical. So when it comes to marriage equality and “winning the freedom to marry,” it can be difficult- at least initially- for the younger amongst us to summon a whole lot of interest.

Blumenfeld says, "I think that’s a big mistake."

Blumenfeld is working with Freedom to Marry to launch their Students for Marriage initiative, a campaign, he writes, "to effectively inform and mobilize young Americans around a new goal in the marriage equality movement: never having to wait for justice."

The group is initially organizing the youth campaign on Facebook: www.facebook.com/StudentsForMarriage.

Blumenfeld explains why marriage is a youth issue:

    It’s not uncommon for marriage campaigns to utilize the images of elderly same-sex couples who have been together for decades to convince voters that these individuals deserve the right to marry one another. Jen and Megan have been together for 30 years now—shouldn’t they share in this wonderful thing we call marriage?

    Now, it’s easy to see why the marriage issue, after seeing a message like this one, might become very salient to a crowd engaged in their own years-long relationships. But if we as young people don’t see the direct plea to our demographic in that message, then we’ve just missed the whole point.

    Of course marriage equality ought to be what we can offer to Jen and Megan and every other committed couple holding their relationships together for years just waiting for their government to recognize them. But marriage equality truly is a youth issue. It is a fight for the freedom from ever having to appear in one of those campaigns, sitting next to the one you love and have devoted a life to, pleading with our communities to acknowledge it.

    It’s not often that the progress worth fighting for can be realistically expected in its entirety in any one lifetime or generation. As the young people of this generation, we are primed to see this issue come to a resolution in a timeframe that might mean we enter full adulthood with one less struggle, one less fragment of institutionalized intolerance that weighs on us as individuals and as a community.

    The opportunity to realize this potential- to create a society in which our children might never know what a world with marriage discrimination looks like- is real. And not unlike many issues of the past- where a rising generation expected a little better than what the previous generation was planning on leaving behind- this issue will require great effort on the part of the youth, of students.

Mixed Feelings on Marriage

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