UPDATE: Full WH press release is below the fold, with all recipients listed.
This is the country's highest civilian honor, and it is well-deserved. If only Harvey could be here to step up to the podium, receive the medal, and proceed to tell the administration and Congress to get off its *sses and do something concrete and lasting that will help all LGBT people in America achieve equality.. (Victory Fund):
The award will be accepted at a White House ceremony August 12 by Stuart Milk, the nephew of the late San Francisco Supervisor and civil rights activist.
“We are thrilled President Obama is honoring Harvey Milk with the Medal of Freedom. He’s an American hero and trailblazer whose election more than 30 years ago triggered a political awakening that inspires us still today. This recognition sends an important message about how critical political leadership will be in making all Americans equal in the eyes of the law,” said Chuck Wolfe, president and CEO of the Victory Fund.
Stuart Milk echoed Wolfe’s praise, saying, “The President's action today touches the core of our very human hearts and my uncle would be so proud of this high honor. His election was, for him, a beginning–a chance to make real change. That change is happening, but we still have so far to go. I hope this recognition inspires LGBT Americans everywhere to heed Harvey's call to run for office, to serve openly, to live proudly with authenticity and to demand the equality that we all deserve.”
American tennis great Billy Jean King, who is openly lesbian, and Sen. Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts, who has championed LGBT equality throughout his political career, also will receive the Presidential Medal of Honor at the August 12 ceremony. Kennedy was honored by the Victory Fund in 2004 with its Oates-Shrum Leadership Award in recognition of his tireless work on behalf of LGBT Americans.
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary_______________________________________________________________________________________
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 30, 2009
President Obama Names Medal of Freedom Recipients
16 Agents of Change to Receive Top Civilian Honor
WASHINGTON – President Obama today named 16 recipients of the 2009 Presidential Medal of Freedom. America’s highest civilian honor, the Medal of Freedom is awarded to individuals who make an especially meritorious contribution to the security or national interests of the United States, world peace, cultural or other significant public or private endeavors.
This year’s awardees were chosen for their work as agents of change. Among their many accomplishments in fields ranging from sports and art to science and medicine to politics and public policy, these men and women have changed the world for the better. They have blazed trails and broken down barriers. They have discovered new theories, launched new initiatives, and opened minds to new possibilities.
President Obama said, “These outstanding men and women represent an incredible diversity of backgrounds. Their tremendous accomplishments span fields from science to sports, from fine arts to foreign affairs. Yet they share one overarching trait: Each has been an agent of change. Each saw an imperfect world and set about improving it, often overcoming great obstacles along the way.
“Their relentless devotion to breaking down barriers and lifting up their fellow citizens sets a standard to which we all should strive. It is my great honor to award them the Medal of Freedom.”
President Obama will present the awards at a ceremony on Wednesday, August 12.
The following individuals will receive the 2009 Presidential Medal of Freedom:
Nancy Goodman Brinker
Nancy Goodman Brinker is the founder of Susan G. Komen for the Cure, the world’s leading breast cancer grass roots organization. Brinker established the organization in memory of her sister, who passed away from breast cancer in 1980. Through innovative events like Race for the Cure, the organization has given and invested over $1.3 billion for research, health services and education services since its founding in 1982 and developed a worldwide grassroots network of breast cancer survivors and activists who are working together to save lives, empower people, ensure quality care for all and energize science to find cures. Brinker has received several awards for her work, and has also served in government as U.S. Ambassador to Hungary (2001 – 2003), Chief of Protocol of the U.S. (2007 – 2009), and Chair of the President’s Cancer Panel (1990). In May, Nancy Goodman Brinker was named the first-ever World Health Organization's Goodwill Ambassador for Cancer Control.
Pedro José Greer, Jr.
Dr. Pedro Jose Greer is a physician and the Assistant Dean of Academic Affairs at the Florida International University School of Medicine, where he also serves as Chair of the Department of Humanities, Health and Society. Dr. Greer is the founder of Camillus Health Concern, an agency that provides medical care to over 10,000 homeless patients a year in the city of Miami. He is also the founder and medical director of the St. John Bosco Clinic which provides basic primary medical care to disadvantaged children and adults in the Little Havana community. He has been recognized by Presidents Clinton, Bush, Sr., and Carter for his work with Miami's poor . He is also the recipient of three Papal Medals as well as the prestigious MacArthur “genius grant”. He currently has a joint private practice with his father, Pedro Greer, Sr.
Stephen Hawking
Stephen Hawking is an internationally-recognized theoretical physicist, having overcome a severe physical disability due to motor neuron disease. He is the Lucasian Professor of Mathematics at Cambridge University, a post previously held by Isaac Newton in 1669. In addition to his pioneering academic research in mathematics and physics, Hawking has penned three popular science books, including the bestselling A Brief History of Time. Hawking, a British citizen, believes that non-academics should be able to access his work just as physicists are, and has also published a children’s science book with his daughter. His persistence and dedication has unlocked new pathways of discovery and inspired everyday citizens.
Jack Kemp
Jack Kemp, who passed away in May 2009, served as a U.S. Congressman (1971 – 1989), Secretary of Housing and Urban Development (1989 – 1993), and Republican Nominee for Vice President (1996). Prior to entering public service, Kemp was a professional football player (1957 – 1969) and led the Buffalo Bills to American Football League championships in 1964 and 1965. In Congress and as a Cabinet Secretary, Kemp was a self-described “bleeding heart conservative” who worked to encourage development in underserved urban communities. In the years leading up to his death, Kemp continued seeking new solutions, raising public attention about the challenge of poverty, and working across party lines to improve the lives of Americans and others around the world.
Sen. Edward Kennedy
Senator Edward M. Kennedy has served in the United States Senate for forty-six years, and has been one of the greatest lawmakers – and leaders – of our time. From reforming our public schools to strengthening civil rights laws and supporting working Americans, Senator Kennedy has dedicated his career to fighting for equal opportunity, fairness and justice for all Americans. He has worked tirelessly to ensure that every American has access to quality and affordable health care, and has succeeded in doing so for countless children, seniors, and Americans with disabilities. He has called health care reform the “cause of his life,” and has championed nearly every health care bill enacted by Congress over the course of the last five decades. Known as the “Lion of the Senate,” Senator Kennedy is widely respected on both sides of the aisle for his commitment to progress and his ability to legislate.
Billie Jean King
Billie Jean King was an acclaimed professional tennis player in the 1960s and 1970s, and has helped champion gender equality issues not only in sports, but in all areas of public life. King beat Bobby Riggs in the “Battle of the Sexes” tennis match, then the most viewed tennis match in history. King became one of the first openly lesbian major sports figures in America when she came out in 1981. Following her professional tennis career, King became the first woman commissioner in professional sports when she co-founded and led the World Team Tennis (WTT) League. The U.S. Tennis Association named the National Tennis Center, where the US Open is played, the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in 2006.
Rev. Joseph Lowery
Reverend Lowery has been a leader in the U.S. civil rights movement since the early 1950s. Rev. Lowery helped organize the Montgomery bus boycott after Rosa Parks was denied a seat, and later co-founded the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, a leading civil rights organization, with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Rev. Lowery led the march from Selma to Montgomery in 1965. Rev. Lowery is a minister in the United Methodist Church, and has continued to highlight important civil rights issues in the U.S. and worldwide, including apartheid in South Africa, since the 1960s.
Joe Medicine Crow – High Bird
Dr. Joseph Medicine Crow, the last living Plains Indian war chief, is the author of seminal works in Native American history and culture. He is the last person alive to have received direct oral testimony from a participant in the Battle of the Little Bighorn: his grandfather was a scout for General George Armstrong Custer. A veteran of World War II, Medicine Crow accomplished during the war all of the four tasks required to become a “war chief,” including stealing fifty Nazi SS horses from a German camp. Medicine Crow was the first member of his tribe to attend college, receiving his master’s degree in anthropology in 1939, and continues to lecture at universities and notable institutions like the United Nations. His contributions to the preservation of the culture and history of the First Americans are matched only by his importance as a role model to young Native Americans across the country.
Harvey Milk
Harvey Milk became the first openly gay elected official from a major city in the United States when he was elected to the San Francisco Board of Supervisors in 1977. Milk encouraged lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) citizens to live their lives openly and believed coming out was the only way they could change society and achieve social equality. Milk, alongside San Francisco Mayor George Moscone, was shot and killed in 1978 by Dan White, a former city supervisor. Milk is revered nationally and globally as a pioneer of the LGBT civil rights movement for his exceptional leadership and dedication to equal rights.
Sandra Day O’Connor
Justice O’Connor was the first woman ever to sit on the United States Supreme Court. Nominated by President Reagan in 1981, she served until her retirement in 2006. Prior to joining the Supreme Court, O’Connor served as a state trial and appellate judge in Arizona. She was also as a member of the Arizona state senate, where she became the first woman in the United States ever to lead a state senate as Senate Majority Leader. At a time when women rarely entered the legal profession, O’Connor graduated Stanford Law School third in her class, where she served on the Stanford Law Review and was elected to the Order of the Coif. Since retiring from the Supreme Court in 2006, O’Connor has served as Chancellor of the Colleg
e of William and Mary, on the Board of Trustees of the National Constitution Center, and participated in the Iraq Study Group in 2006, as well as giving numerous lectures on public service. She has received numerous awards for her outstanding achievements and public service.Sidney Poitier
Sidney Poitier is a groundbreaking actor, becoming the top black movie star in the 1950s and 1960s. Poitier is the first African American to be nominated and win a Best Actor Academy Award, receive an award at a top international film festival (Venice Film Festival), and be the top grossing movie star in the United States. Poitier insisted that the film crew on The Lost Man be at least 50 percent African American, and starred in the first mainstream movies portraying “acceptable” interracial marriages and interracial kissing. Poitier began his acting career without any training or experience by auditioning at the American Negro Theatre.
Chita Rivera
Chita Rivera is an accomplished and versatile actress, singer, and dancer, who has won Two Tony Awards and received seven more nominations while breaking barriers and inspiring a generation of women to follow in her footsteps. In 2002, she became the first Hispanic recipient of the coveted Kennedy Center Honor. Propelled to stardom by her electric performance as Anita in the original Broadway premiere of West Side Story, Rivera went on to star in additional landmark musicals such as Chicago, Bye Bye Birdie, and Jerry’s Girls. She recently starred in The Dancer’s Life, an autobiographical musical about her celebrated life in the theatre.
Mary Robinson
Mary Robinson was the first female President of Ireland (1990 – 1997) and a former United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (1997 – 2002), a post that required her to end her presidency four months early. Robinson served as a prominent member of the Irish Senate prior to her election as President. She continues to bring attention to international issues as Honorary President of Oxfam International, and Chairs the Board of Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunizations (GAVI Alliance). Since 2002 she has been President of Realizing Rights: The Ethical Globalization Initiative, based in New York, which is an organization she founded to make human rights the compass which charts a course for globalization that is fair, just and benefits all.
Janet Davison Rowley
Janet Davison Rowley, M.D., is the Blum Riese Distinguished Service Professor of Medicine, Molecular Genetics & Cell Biology and Human Genetics at The University of Chicago. She is an American human geneticist and the first scientist to identify a chromosomal translocation as the cause of leukemia and other cancers. Rowley is internationally renowned for her studies of chromosome abnormalities in human leukemia and lymphoma, which have led to dramatically improved survival rates for previously incurable cancers and the development of targeted therapies. In 1999 President Clinton awarded her the National Medal of Science–the nation's highest scientific honor.
Desmond Tutu
Desmond Tutu is an Anglican Archbishop emeritus who was a leading anti-apartheid activist in South Africa. Widely regarded as “South Africa's moral conscience,” he served as the General Secretary of the South African Council of Churches (SACC) from 1978 – 1985, where he led a formidable crusade in support of justice and racial reconciliation in South Africa. He received a Nobel Peace Prize for his work through SACC in 1984. Tutu was elected Archbishop of Cape Town in 1986, and the Chair of the South Africa Truth and Reconciliation Commission in 1995. He retired as Archbishop in 1996 and is currently Chair of the Elders.
Muhammad Yunus
Dr. Muhammad Yunus is a global leader in anti-poverty efforts, and has pioneered the use of “micro-loans” to provide credit to poor individuals without collateral. Dr. Yunus, an economist by training, founded the Grameen Bank in 1983 in his native Bangladesh to provide small, low-interest loans to the poor to help better their livelihood and communities. Despite its low interest rates and lending to poor individuals, Grameen Bank is sustainable and 98% percent of its loans are repaid – higher than other banking systems. It has spread its successful model throughout the world. Dr. Yunus received the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006 for his work.



42 Comments



Grr-rrr-rrrrr“Here’s another bone, good doggie….”
Other RecipientsInteresting mix:
Gestures. All we get is gestures.No one deserves this honor more than Harvey Milk. But he’s been dead for thirty years. And if he were alive today, Obama would be spitting on everything he tried to do.
Dear Mr. President:This is not an action. It is just more words.
Do you have a list of non-actions to use every time your administration moves to harm LGBT people?
If this is your “Fierce Advocacy”, then please do us a favor and advocate for someone else–like straight people.
Is POTUS neutralizing the Cleve Jones marchDavid Mixner, the D.C. gathering? I applaud this award of course, but suspicious of it coming out of the blue at this time and avoiding the contentious DADT, DOMA, ENDA issues.
Ditto
Where is the website about the March on Washington?
link to marchhttp://equalityacrossamerica.o…
march siteHere it is.
Opiate of the masses, anyone?Give a Presidential Freedom Award to Sylvia Rivera of the Stonewall Uprising and I’ll be more convinced.
Someone is trying to shore up california after hanging us all out on prop 8………
Perhaps Stuart Milk can bring Dan Choi as a guest.Gonna take more than a few photo-ops to get rid of the stain.
Mary Robinson is a hero to LGBT’s in IrelandShe pushed hard and overtly for decriminalisation and equality for LGBT’s.
Hers is the first name on the brief in the Lawrence case…
“sends an important message about how critical political leadership will be in making all Americans equal in the eyes of the law”What a perfect way to phrase that. Did you catch it Mr President? I don’t think it’s as complimentary as your Admin would like to read it.
This, when considered by itself, is a great thing.Harvey Milk is definitely deserving of this honor, as are many of the others on this list. I would not have included O’Connor simply for her vote in Bush v. Gore, the consequences of which will likely have damaged our nation (and world) for generations, but I digress…
On the other hand, it would be really nice if Obama could do more for our community than hand out what amounts to token gestures. Is it any wonder that so many GLBTs are growing more disillusioned and angry and have all but given up hope in seeing any leadership or “fierce advocacy” from him?
Ditto.
Milk deserves such a recognition, I have no problem with that. However….Has anyone bothered to tell Obama that Milk has been dead for 30 years? Or would that be construed as criticism of Our Lord and Savior?
I am really, really gnashing my teeth over this. Is there no GLBT advocate still alive who deserves the Medal of Freedom? No one in a position to actually use this award to further the cause of gay rights?
Couldn’t have said this better myself.
This may be a gestureBut it’s the right one – both for Milk and Billie Jean King. When I was criticizing the Obama administration (and they got another ticked off email this morning because of the Hastings bullsh*t), part of my criticism was that the administration was not using its bully pulpit to reinforce the understanding that we are fullly and completely equal citizens of this nation – and that includes symbolic gestures.
The Stonewall 40th anniversary cocktail party seems, IMHO, like the exact wrong type of symbolism – a hastily thrown together event meant to silence pesky critics. The honors for King and Milk, however, seem much more authentic to me, because no one can deny the good that either of them did, or their appropriateness for this award. I especially love that King is singled out a) for her professional success, b) for her work for women’s rights and c) for being an open lesbian (although we must admit she didn’t exactly come out willingly). Whereas Milk is being honored specifically for his work for the LGBT civil rights movement, King is being honored for a much broader path of change, which is totally fitting.
We still clearly need to ratchet up the pressure on the Congress and Obama to align the law with the reality of our rights, but we also need leaders who acknowledge our contributions to the greater society. These honors do that.
No, there isn’t.And posthumous = bad? Since when? As important as Milk was when he was here, he’s arguably become even more important in the decades since his murder.
On the other hand, I’m surprised that some of the other people on this list never received this award before and I’m glad they’re getting it while still alive.
Desmond Tutu is aliveand he has been a longtime advocate for LGBT rights.
I’m proud of each selection, and they are worthy of being honoredPERIOD
We don’t have to include other greivences on this story.
We all know the shortcomings, and lies, and disappointments, but we can air them seperate from these Medals.
There ABSOLUTELY is …
Frank Kameny…and not just because he’s still alive [posthumous awards are given all the time], but because he was publicly out and fighting for gay rights more than a decade before Milk was. In fact, Milk’s entrance into politics wasn’t initially about gay rights at all but because he was pissed about having to pay a $100 deposit toward the business tax on his camera store.
In 1965, while Frank Kameny was picketing the Pentagon, the U.S. Civil Service Commission, and the White House for gay rights, Milk was still disappointed that the man who’d been sworn in that year to live in the White House wasn’t Barry Goldwater!
Kameny was a public gay leader; the only meaning “gay activism” had then for Milk was sex.
Activist Craig Rodwell, who would go on to open the world’s first gay bookstore, said that when they were dating the 34-yr. old Milk was
When nonactivist Milk was going ballistic because he was being asked to do nothing more than other business owners were, Kameny was celebrating the fact that he, and a handful of others, had forced the American Psychiatric Association to declare that gays were not mentally ill-the first of the two greatest successes in the history of the fight for gay equality-the other being the decriminalization of sodomy, a battle Kameny had started ten years before.
Two years before nonactivist Milk had decided to fight city hall over something that had NOTHING to do with gay rights, Kameny became the first openly gay candidate for the U.S. Congress.
Kameny was criss-crossing the country inspiring thousands of grassroots gay activists before anyone outside of San Francisco had ever heard of Harvey Milk. He would be the mentor of many other gay activists including Barbara Gittings and Leonard Matlovich whom helped inspire to become the first person in history to out themselves to the military to fight their ban on gay servicemembers. Barack Obama was 13 at the time.
Kameny created the then-questionable-even-to-gays expression “Gay Is Good” and cofounded the National Gay & Lesbian Task Force, and DC’s Mattachine Society and Gay Activists Alliance-again before Milk was involved in gay activism at all.
The picket signs Kameny saved are in the Smithsonian; the Library of Congress has placed his papers in their collection of historical documents by Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln, and Martin Luther King, Jr.; the gay director of the Obama administration’s Office of Personnel Management recently publicly appologized to Kameny for his government firing for being gay over half a century ago, and gave him its Theodore Roosevelt Award, saying the old antigay employment policy
and the President himself has twice acknowledged him as a pioneer, on June 29th saying to assembled LGBTs:
But, well, you weren’t killed, didn’t have a recent movie made about you, and most gays are too lazy to know any better so you ain’t getting the award you deserve while I need to get them off my back.
I thought of Kameny, dear teacher Bedwellas well as Bayard Rustin, who crisscrosses labor rights, black civil rights, and gay civil rights movements.
Bullhockey!
It’s TRANSPARENT pandering because it’s not going to the person that, as detailed above, deserves it 100 times more than Milk despite his many accomplishments.
This is the equivalent of trying to be more popular by wearing designer jeans labeled Calvin er Harvey Milk.
AND it’s no more admirable nor less hypocritical than had Lincoln given an award to Frederick Douglas or Harriet Tubman for fighting slavery while still enforcing slavery.
As I said, Milk deserves this recognitionMy issue is that this will be presented by the White House as a “See how much I care about gay people? Now shut up and send the DNC your money like good little boys and girls.” It leaves a very bad taste in my mouth, and I would much rather have such an award go to someone who was still alive and still actively working for my human rights in this country.
Amen!
…though, as you know, Rustin came to gay activism, per se, late in life.
Still, oh St. Judy, how I wish he were still alive, and both he and Kameny were in their prime.
One could stand on one side of DC and the other on the other side, simultaneously trumpet some of their uncompromising eloquence, and the walls might finally come tumblin’ down.
I hope Dustin Lance Black is writing Stuart Milk’s acceptance speech…assuming they’re allowed to give one.
It doesn’t matter who it goes toThe important thing is that this is the first time, that I can recall, that anyone – not to mention two people – who are openly LGBT are being rewarded in this way, and BECAUSE, in part, of their sexual orientation. It is pure symbolism, but symbolism is very important in a fight like ours.
I agree, not every win has to be a story aboutwhat has yet to be won, but it does feel like that is the way it always goes.
I wanted to be happy about the NC Democratic Party passing the first pro-lgbt bills in our states history which were signed by our first female governor just at the end of last month with the Bullying Bill & Healthy Youth Act, but everyone was so down on democrats that it was hard to feel the joy. It was sort of like when Obama won & some other NC Dems that I was supporting won, I wanted to feel joy, but prop 8 took that away. But now even when we have gay rights victories, no matter how small, they are inevitably dwarfed by the story of how it is not enough.
But I do feel sometimes like every story I read on the Blend whether it is a story of a victory, or a loss, always reads like a loss because it turns into a story about what is left to be accomplished, which parts of the community didn’t get their fair shake, which groups we should have reached out to more, how we could have done things better, how bad the democrats/obama are, how bad the hrc is, how bad gay organizations are, how bad gay individuals are for being so disorganized… and its starting to become desensitizing. I mean there are certainly very many legitimate concerns mixed in, and a lot of stories can benefit from the “and where do we go from here angle”… but eventually if every story is an outrage if it is either good or bad then it gets harder to get riled up when it is really important to.
So for now, I’m just going to see this story as an inspiring civil rights leader getting his due recognition & be happy for it. =)
Nice gesture, but…I’d prefer my rights. Some how I think Milk would too.
Too much dangerthat the one so honoured might speak out chiding the administration
Sure, it doesn’t matter that it’s also going to…
…Jack Kemp who “was a vigorous gay rights opponent in Congress. He supported the firing of homosexual teachers, saying, “I think a school board should have the right to choose what type of example we have for our children in public schools.” Kemp fought legislation protecting the civil rights of people with HIV and supported a bill that would have required the mandatory reporting of those with the disease. He frequently characterized gay rights as “special rights” and was a co-founder of the right-wing think tank, the Heritage Foundation.” -joemygod
And there have been other “openly LGBT’ recipients such as Tennessee Williams and Aaron Copeland.
In any case, the fact remains those to Milk and King should be called the Massa Medal of Nonfreedom.
A good thing of coursebut if he thinks this will get us off his back, he will be sorely dissapointed.
Milk and King are being honored for their LGBT workAnd that is why I think it is an important step to embrace and celebrate. It does not whitewash all the Obama administration mistakes, it does not take the place of legislation and it will not be enough for me to donate to the DNC, DSCC or DCCC, but we should acknowledge progress where/when it occurs.
I’m wondering what, exactly, would satisfy you here? If Obama included neither Milk nor King, we would rightly be screaming about the exclusion of any LGBT heroes. Even if Kameny were included (or Barbara Gittings, or Del and Phyllis), we would still be in the same place regarding DOMA, DADT, ENDA, etc.
I have been as critical as anyone about the Obama administration, but the reality is we have them for the next 3+ years. This is a small, nearly miniscule, sign that maybe we haven’t lost all opportunity for progress.
IT’S MARKETING!!!!
King is NOT being honored for her “LGBT work” in the same way Milk is [and doesn't deserve to be...in the sports category Martina's more deserving].
REPEAT…the fact that they chose what some might call the “American Idol” version of a gay pioneer [who can't talk back] over the indisputable gay pioneer…who’s living in their own backyard, whom they have proven they already know about PROVES that they were more motivated by scoring gay brownie points than actually honoring Milk.
Yes, symbolism is important, but what goes into which symbols are chosen can’t be ignored.
Sorry to be crude, but if someone brings you roses because they want to get you into bed it doesn’t turn the roses into cabbages but…
Billie Jean v. MartinaOK, we might duke it out over that one. Although the King/Riggs match had an element of farce, Martina never did take down Billie Jean’s overall Wimbeledon record…Billie Jean had the better archrival barely (Margaret Court in her prime was awesome)
I was speaking soley of the different degrees
…in which each have been involved in gay activism. As I recall, while Martina fudged a little at the beginning she came full out much earlier than Billie, and while I respect generational differences, at a much younger age and without het-marrying. The reference to “sports” was only because it’s a category they like to include.
As far as WOMEN’s rights…yes, I give huge props to King.
And this “advocate” really means it.I remember reading remarks from Desmond Tutu to the effect that now that they’d eliminated legal apartheid, attacking institutional homophobia should be one of the next big legal struggles. The only objection I could come up with is that he hasn’t been given the Presidential Medal of Freedom already.
I knew what you meant, Michaeland i do think that’s why Billie Jean is getting the edge; it has more to do with woman’s rights (again, the Riggs/King tennis match was a cultural watershed) than gay right’s per se. And, if I remember correctly, Billie Jean King was outed unlike Martina.
It’s a nice gestureAnd it could be alot worse. What if he gave a medal to his friend Rick Warren ? I am surprised Magic Johnson didn’t get one for his work in AIDS. I agree Frank Kameny should have gotten one. He was honored at the Smithsonian and well thought of by those activists in the early years. My friend Jack Nicols shown in the photo of the early D.C. protest had the highest praise for Kameny.
Thanks…
Sometimes my point gets lost in my, what did you call them, “rhetorical flourishes.” LOL.
Obama… would never risk having an actual live gay activist to an awards ceremony because Kameny would definitely call Obama out on his cowardice and lack of leadership. Much safer to make a symbolic gesture and have a nice quiet dead gay person receive an award. That way, there’s no chance of anything of substance being said and adding to Obama’s tarnished image.
I’d like to see them both get an award. Kameny definitely deserves one.
I see it’s already been mentioned… that we have two other gay-rights activists here: Mary Robinson and Desmond Tutu. Let’s applaud them too.
Mary Robinson was the first young President of Ireland, and seemingly the first to see the role as more than ceremonial. It used to be a handy dumping-ground for semi-retired statesmen.
I think.
TRiG.