I know it sounds silly - and futile - to hold a rally to protest an initiative in another state, especially after that amendment has already passed.
I'm not the only one who thinks so:
So why did I drag myself out of bed and downtown for Portland's Prop 8 protest after just 5 hours of sleep Saturday morning?
Prop 8 passed, yes. The people of California have spoken. But the way I see it, the denial of civil rights to gay Americans isn't something that should be up for a vote. It should be an assumption, a truth we hold to be self-evident, if you will, that all of us are created equal, and that the right to marry the one you love - with all the privileges that marriage currently allows, and for the same cost - falls under those unalienable ones of which our founding fathers wrote: life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
I'm not alone in that feeling, either:
"We want our kids to learn they can grow up in a place where everyone is equal," said Chan, 34. "Marriage is for everyone."*
And it was for that reason that I was energized at the protest, and proud to be standing there with my friends and folks from my community, gay and straight, coming together to say that while this particular battle was lost, the fight against closed-minded bigotry continues.



