Obama Deserves Credit for Rick Warren Pick
Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, called it "magnanimous." I must admit, I certainly didn't expect it. The gesture from president-elect Obama of tapping Evangelical pastor, Rick Warren, to deliver the inaugural prayer deserves recognition and congratulations from those, like myself, who have criticized his positions on abortion and other social issues.
Obama may have thought he was making the "safe" choice of a moderate Evangelical who had invited him to speak at his influential Southern California church in December 2006. But the wounds are still open over the recent passage of Proposition 8 in California, amending the definition of marriage in the state constitution to a union between a man and a woman.
Warren publicly supported Proposition 8 and took heat from "progressive" Evangelicals as a result. Now Obama is taking a tremendous amount of criticism from prominent and powerful members of his base. From the Human Rights Campaign, the leading edge of the gay lobby, to Hollywood political activists, the disappointment of Obama supporters is loud and clear.
Joe Solmonese, president of the Human Rights Campaign (HRC), said the invitation to Warren was as much of an insult to gays as inviting an anti-Semite would be to Jewish Americans. The invitation from the Obama campaign to a LBGT (lesbian, bi-sexual, gay, transgender) group to march in the inaugural parade for the first time does not "heal this wound." ("Hey, we're also bringing a gay marching band. You know how the gays love a parade," Solmonese said.)
The HRC president is clear about what it will take to make up for the insult; Obama needs "to put some meat on the bone" by appointing someone from the LBGT community to his administration. Evidently gay activists have been feeling left out of the appointments already announced. Other groups who supported Obama have their appointees, "Yet, we're the ones left waiting for some real evidence of inclusion."
In Hollywood, where opposition to Proposition 8 generated as much energy as the campaign, the Warren invitation was a "betrayal." One prominent Democrat consultant, Chad Griffin, cleverly turned his guns on Warren, asking him to step aside. "Rick Warren needs to realize that he is further dividing us at a time when the country needs to come together," he said.
He dismissed the invitation as an "innocent mistake of the transition team," evidently not taking the president-elect at his word that he deliberately chose Warren as a gesture to the social conservatives who did not support him. At his December 18 press conference, he affirmed his support for gay and lesbian equality, adding, "What I've also said is that it is important for America to come together, even though we may have disagreements on certain social issues."
In defending his choice of Warren, Obama went further than arguing for inclusion: He argued for civility. "We can disagree without being disagreeable, and then focus on those things that we hold in common as Americans."
Who can argue with that? Too bad it is only the political right that gets tagged by the media for bad manners. The president-elect may have to rap some liberal knuckles to convince them he really wants a better public tone from everyone.
Many have called Obama's choice of Warren "shrewd." That may be, or perhaps Obama means what he says. We will see. In the meantime, I congratulate the president-elect for inviting Warren and I admire his refusal to back down under pressure from the extreme wing of his political base.

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Obama should grow up and quit praying. Prayer is just talking to the wind or asking a non-existent friend to protect you.
Anyway, prayer has no place at the inauguration of our President. The last idiot who led us claimed he prayed to God for guidance and look where it got us!
...if it means I'm still praying to my Lord & Savior Jesus Christ! Prayer gives me power over the enemy every day, and I've lived with the triumphs from including prayer in my life. I am disappointed in those that resort to "name calling" in order to drive their opposing views of God and religion . This behavior smells of desperation. What is not to love about a Creator that gave his only Son for all of humankind to enjoy everlasting life? God bless you all and I hope you can someday enjoy the wonderful peace and hope prayer provides.
Forget the past Presidents who prayed for God for guidance and led this country to temporary prosperity. Let's call upon cognitive biases and arguments of completion and say that since the last President who happened to pray to God was an "idiot", all Presidents who pray to God are idiots.
Wishful thinking of any kind has no place in our government. Praying for guidance indeed! Anyone sufficiently deluded to even try such a thing is hardly likely to make good of any guidance they get. From ANY source.
Religious fundamentalists have maligned, denigrated, oppressed and incessantly defamed gay and lesbian people for centuries. They are largely responsible for creating homophobic societies adverse to same sex love and affection. Their dilemma in this crusade is that intelligent educated people value civility, productivity, creativity, diversity and the common good. And consequently, they are not so easily convinced by mere belief that LGBT individuals are, as Pope Benedict XVI puts it, as a great a danger to humanity as global warming is to our environment.
The religious right's vendetta against gays and lesbians is sure to fail because there is no logic, science or common sense behind it. It only demonstrates a fanatical stubborn belief based on 1000 year old antiquated religions who's archaic dogma has long since lost its relevance in the modern world.
As a society we would be more honest people, closer to the truth if we only allowed the very best among us to speak at such auspicious events as the inauguration of President Obama. The grace of the moment in which America finally elects their first Black leader is diminished by unconscious narrow-minded pundits such as Warren. And there are most assuredly many hopeful and proud gay Americans awaiting this moment that beckons us to a future when all of humanity is respected.
There's nothing extremist about wanting our new president to support ALL Americans, instead of endorsing a man who is very outspoken in his hate of certain Americans.
But Rick Warren is, himself, an American, is he not? How can you hope to support ALL Americans if you refuse to endorse a man based off of his belief systems?
Probably because he refuses to accept a significant portion of America as not human enough for the same rights as the rest of us.
THAT'S WHY.
...that he should just be refused certain jobs just because he holds certain beliefs that have nothing to do with said job? Rick Warren spoke, but he wasn't standing up there after he was done saying, "Oh, by the way, gays suck lolol." Why? Because that's not part of the job description.
We use the same song and dance, don't we? Discrimination against anybody based off of sexual orientation is a Title VII offense. Isn't discrimination against somebody based off of -anything irrelevant- a Title VII offense?
What she's telling you is people who, because of man-made religious beliefs of their own choosing, seek to deny/revoke other people the rights to which they are entitled via nature should not be given a public platform of recognition of any kind whether or not they are spewing their narrow-minded hatefulness at the time. People are allowed to have their religious beliefs. People are NOT allowed to use government to force those religious beliefs on others. Stop comparing oranges to apples in your attempt to justify discrimination based on religious beliefs.