By Traci G. Lee on The Last Word

  • Occupy sees more energy, arrests with anniversary protest

     - 

    Hundreds of Occupy Wall Street protesters converged in lower Manhattan on September 17, 2012 to celebrate Occupy's one-year anniversary and continue protesting inequality and corporate greed. Nearly 150 protesters were arrested. (Video by Evan Puschak | msnbc.com)

    Hundreds of protesters gathered in parks around New York City early Monday morning to celebrate the one-year anniversary of Occupy Wall Street.

    Protesters, ranging from children to grandparents, met in four different "zones" surrounding the New York Stock Exchange to protest inequality and corporate greed. At Zuccotti Park, the original site of the Occupy camp, protesters met at 7 a.m. to discuss nonviolent action and resistance as many employees and executives began their work day.

    "There is nothing negative about this," Sergio Uzurian, 26 from Buffalo, N.Y., said about the gathering. "This is for the people."

    As the crowds gathered around lower Manhattan, groups of NYPD officers stationed themselves in front of banks and along the streets, and directed traffic and Wall St. employees around the protesters. Police set up barricades around Wall St. and the Stock Exchange, and only let people through who could show employee IDs. 

    Organizers handed out maps in the morning of the various meeting places, but despite the pre-planned actions for the day, the morning was chaotic. NYPD set up barricades to keep protesters from crossing certain streets, and people were often separated from their zone groups as they sought new ways to access Wall St. 

    Cops began arresting protesters just before 8 a.m. on Pine St., and arrests continued through the morning as protesters marched to Bowling Green park—the location of the iconic Charging Bull sculpture. The bull, which was under heavy police guard, has been off-limits to tourists since last year's Occupy protests.


    Traci Lee | msnbc.com

    Police officers block the Charging Bull sculpture at Bowling Green Park near Wall Street in New York City on September 17, 2012.

    Many of the protesters participating in the Monday demonstrations have been a part of Occupy movements—from New York to Philadelphia to Hartford—since last fall. Daniel Valdes, 27, has been with Occupy since last year, and he believes the one-year anniversary events will re-energize the fight and bring attention to the dissatisfaction Americans feel about the government and politics. 

    "The political system shut us out," Valdes said. "It's a circus at this point."

    Also among the protesters were new faces to Occupy. Nineteen-year-old Joseph Califano, an economics student at Sarah Lawrence College, arrived at Monday's Occupy protest (his first) with a sign that read, "Why develop empathy, when you could be making $350,000+ a year running a Ponzi scheme?"

    Traci Lee | msnbc.com

    Two Occupy protesters don Obama and Romney masks in New York City during the one-year anniversary protest on September 17, 2012.

    "I hope income inequality becomes a part of the national conversation," Califano said.

    By the afternoon, NYPD reported nearly 150 arrests. Along with an increased police presence, National Lawyers Guild representatives and a large number of journalists were also among those present throughout the protest.

    Events are planned through Monday night, when protesters plan to re-occupy Zuccotti Park. The protest wraps up a weekend of anniversary celebrations, but many protesters believe Occupy will continue to grow moving forward. 

    "We have to keep going," Veterans for Peace's Crystal Zevon said. "I feel like I've lived my life, but I don't know that my grandsons will be able to live theirs if things don't change fast."

    Continue reading this entryContinue reading this entry ...

  • LGBT, straight Mormons come out for New York pride march

     - 

    Straight, gay and lesbian Mormons came together on Sunday, June 24 to participate in the NYC Pride March to show their support for LGBT rights and marriage equality. (Video by Evan Puschak | msnbc.com)

    Straight, gay and lesbian Mormons marched together for the first time for marriage equality at New York City's annual gay pride parade on Sunday, June 24.

    Approximately 30 Mormons marched down Fifth Avenue to cheers and applause from the parade route crowd. They marched as part of the New York City chapter of Affirmation, an international organization of gay and lesbian Mormons who, along with Mormons for Marriage Equality and Mormons Building Bridges, helped organize and advocate for nationwide pride marches.

    Mormons who support marriage equality are perceived as a minority within the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, but Sunday's participants hope to change that statistic. Over a dozen marches are scheduled for 2012, and over half have already taken place—from Salt Lake City to Santiago, Chile.

    The LDS Church's view on gay marriage is in the spotlight now that Mitt Romney, an active member of LDS, is running as the GOP presidential candidate. He would be the first Mormon in the White House if elected.


     

    David Lumb

    Kate Allgood Cowley, a straight Mormon ally for the LGBT community, marched in the NYC Pride March on Sunday, June 24.

    In campaign speeches this year, Romney reaffirmed his opposition against same-sex marriage, though he also said he does not consider his views to have been a result of his Mormon faith. In an interview with Piers Morgan on CNN last year, Romney emphasized that he was not a spokesman for the LDS Church and that he kept his personal views separate from his politics.

    An evolution within the community

    Among the group of Mormons lining up to march in New York City was Kate Allgood Cowley, a soon-to-be mother whose due date is only days away. "Hopefully, I'm welcoming him into a more loving, accepting world," Cowley said as she and husband Jed took turns holding a sign that read, "We love you. Sorry we're late."

    The Affirmation marchers discussed faith and politics, and shared stories of their own personal journeys as they waited for the march to begin. Some talked about their experiences of being ostracized from their families and their decisions to leave their respective wards; others shared their gratitude over the surprising amount of support they received from their family and friends.

    Cowley shared her experience as a straight ally who witnessed the difficult coming out process for her gay Mormon friends. "My Mormon faith teaches me and encourages me to reach out and love other people regardless of their differences,” she said. “It teaches me to avoid judgement and leave that judgment up to God."

    As the group gathered for photos before the march, Cowley said she was worried there were still many Mormons afraid to voice their support of gay rights publicly. "I feel passionately about speaking up and making sure my voice is heard," she said.

    The LDS Church has historically opposed same-sex marriage, citing a law of chastity that prohibits sexual relations outside of a heterosexual marriage.

    The Church's involvement in supporting legislation that prohibits same-sex marriage has led to the formation of websites and groups like Mormons for Marriage and Mormons for Marriage Equality, which seeks to unite Mormons who support marriage equality. A recent Pew Research Center survey of Mormons found that nearly a quarter of polled Mormons disagreed with the LDS Church on same-sex marriage.

    Laura Compton, a California Mormon and one of the co-founders of Mormons for Marriage, said she knows that they are the minority in the LDS Church, but she believes those attitudes are changing as more anti-gay-marriage legislation is put in place.

    "We saw the pain [laws against same-sex marriage] caused for our gay and lesbian friends, and there were suicides and divisions within congregations," Compton said. "It felt really wrong to say we want to protect families while at the same time destroying our gay and lesbian friends."

    David Lumb

    Among the signs the group carried in the June 24 NYC Pride March were "Mormons for Marriage Equality" and "Charity never faileth."

     

    Mormon students at Brigham Young University have filmed their own "It Gets Better" videos to reach out to young gay and lesbian Mormons who may be bullied in their communities and scared to come out to their families.

    "I know plenty of people who disagree with the Church, but it's incredibly difficult to get anyone to show their support for their position because they're afraid of being alienated from family and friends and they're afraid of being disciplined," said Peter Danzig, an ex-Mormon currently living in Utah.

    Danzig resigned from the Church in 2008 after writing a letter to The Salt Lake Tribune in 2006, voicing his concern over Brigham's firing of an adjunct professor who argued in the newspaper that the LDS Church was wrong to oppose same-sex marriage.

    Danzig said he was called into meetings to investigate his position, and he was suspended from playing in the LDS Orchestra. After almost two years of talking with Church leaders, he and his wife chose to resign from the Church. "The hardest thing was watching how distraught my family members were because I was being disciplined," Danzig recalled. "When someone decides to take a stand, it's very difficult to comfort a sobbing mother that feels like they're losing you forever because you have a difference of opinion."

    But Danzig is hopeful. "There's been a big shift recently. I think things are slowly changing."

    David Lumb

    Straight, gay and lesbian Mormons marched together in the NYC Pride March on Sunday, June 24.

    Americans' attitudes on gay marriage have shifted as a whole, too. A 2012 Pew Research Center poll showsthat support for same-sex marriage has risen since 2004. 

    This past May, President Obama announced his position on marriage equality had "evolved," and he now fully supported legalizing same-sex marriage.

    Randall Thacker has witnessed a change in his own faith community. Thacker came out over 10 years ago and felt like he didn’t have a place anymore in the LDS Church. "I stopped attending about eight to nine years ago" he said.

    He tried attending other religious services, but decided to rejoin the Mormon community last fall. "I went back to church and told the bishop, ‘Look, I’m coming here authentically as me, and I’m gay and in a relationship, and I want to be spiritually nourished. I don’t want to be excommunicated."

    The bishop welcomed him back into the community with no judgement, and Thacker said that the rest of the leaders he spoke with did the same. Thacker is currently the senior vice president of Affirmation. He traveled from Washington, D.C., for the New York march.

    Romney brings Mormonism into the spotlight

    Given the spotlight Mitt Romney's campaign has drawn to the religion, Danzig speculates that the Church is hesitant to attract negative attention by disciplining Mormons who choose to publicly support marriage equality.

    "The LDS Church doesn't want that image of telling people what to do," Danzig said. "It's opened a remarkable window for the minority to speak out and say, 'Hey, we're here.'"

    There has been no official response from the LDS Church in response to Mormons marching for marriage equality, and attempts to reach officials for a statement were unsuccessful.

    As the November election nears, individuals like Danzig and groups such as Mormons for Marriage Equality and Affirmation hope to see more Mormons come forward in support of the LGBT community.

    "It's a shame that [Romney] has pandered to the most conservative factions of the Republican Party," Compton said. "I'm sure he knows gay people, I'm sure he knows lesbians, and I'm sure he knows people who are affected by what he's going to say. But he's a politician, and he's doing what he needs to do to get votes. He doesn't have my vote."

    Getting involved in the fight

    The Church's activism has caused more Mormons in support of marriage equality to come out of the shadows.

    In 2000, The LDS Church played a pivotal role in the fight against marriage equality by campaigning for Proposition 22, a law that restricted same-sex marriage in the state. The LDS Church donated money and volunteer effort to the campaign, which California citizens voted to enact.  Although Prop 22 was ultimately struck down by the California Supreme Court in May 2008, the LDS Church's involvement in it left an impact on Mormons that oppose it and continue to oppose follow-up measures, such as Proposition 8, which also bans same-sex marriage.

    "We found out Mormon Church leaders were going to be involved with campaigns to pass Prop 8, and a number of us online had seen what happened in 2000 with Prop 22," Compton said as she described the formation of Mormons for Marriage.

    "We want marriage equality, we want full and equal rights—not separate rights—and we want to have a space where people who are not straight feel as comfortable as people who are straight," she continued.

    Straight, gay and lesbian Mormons who all supported marriage equality found one another through blogs and social networking sites. The online community grew as more states passed laws defining marriage as being between one man and one woman.

    'I am proof that hearts can change'

    David Lumb

    Mormons marching for LGBT rights and marriage equality posed for a photo before beginning the NYC Pride March on Sunday, June 24.

    Politics hung in the air during the gay pride parade march Sunday as politicians such as New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who signed the state's gay marriage law into effect last year, participated. A pro-Obama 2012 group also marched in the parade, along with various other political groups.

    Cowley, Thacker and the rest of the enthusiastic Mormons marched proudly with signs in the air as confetti burst from the float in front of them, and announcers along the route introduced them as "the only group of Mormons Mitt Romney would not be proud of."

    After nearly two hours of marching, the group made their way to the end of the parade route in Greenwich Village to more applause and hugs from supporters along Christopher Street. 

    "This crowd is great," Cowley said with a smile as her husband waved to the crowd with his dark red tie. "I'm so happy." She and others expressed their hope that the Mormon participation in pride marches around the country would continue for many years.

    Thacker cited his return to the LDS Church as being the start of a new era of acceptance. Thacker is in a committed relationship with a non-Mormon, a type of union referred to in the LDS Church as a "Part-member family."

    "I've had friends who've said, 'Well, then you're not Mormon anymore if you're gay,' which is really sad," he said, but then someone told him he was part of a Part-member family.

    "That actually was really cool. They actually validated my relationship," Thacker said. "I'm a Mormon, my partner's not, but we're there."

    For more photos from the NYC Pride March, see David Lumb's photos at Animal New York.

    Continue reading this entryContinue reading this entry ...

About The Last Word

The Last Word with Lawrence O'Donnell airs at 10pm ET, Monday through Thursday on MSNBC. The show channels O'Donnell's extensive background in politics and entertainment.

Recent tweets
3538,4
Contact The Show
Last Word Mobile

Sign up for SMS alerts on your phone. Text "LAST" to 622639 and you'll start getting messages from the show.

To stop the text messages, text STOP to 622639 to quit, or HELP for more info (must be in all caps). Message and data rates may apply. Check with your respective carrier for more details.

We're also on GetGlue. Download the app for your phone and start checking in to earn badges and major props from us.