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    <title type="text">Marie Cunningham</title>
    <subtitle type="text">News21 RSS Feed</subtitle>
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    <updated>2009-06-23T05:14:02Z</updated>
    <rights>Copyright (c) 2009, Marie Cunningham</rights>
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    <id>tag:news21.uscannenberg.org,2009:06:16</id>


    <entry>
      <title>Prop 8&#8217;s New Battleground</title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://news21.uscannenberg.org/index.php/site/prop_8s_new_battleground/" />
      <id>tag:news21.uscannenberg.org,2009:index.php/4.44</id>
      <published>2009-06-16T03:13:33Z</published>
      <updated>2009-06-16T17:04:35Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>Marie Cunningham</name>
            <email>mariefc@gmail.com</email>
                  </author>

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        <p>The fight against Proposition 8 is moving from California’s big cities to its rural towns where the overwhelming majority of voters supported the contested measure.</p>

<p>“A lot of the focus was on the bigger cities, which really didn&#8217;t need the help,” said Brooke Burk, a founder of the Visalia Equality Team.&nbsp; “These rural communities need the help.&#8221;</p>

<p>Visalia is the largest city is Tulare County, where 75.37 percent of voters cast their ballots for Prop 8, which changed the California Constitution and made it illegal for same-sex couples to marry.&nbsp; The California Supreme Court upheld the legality of all same-sex marriages performed before Prop 8 passed. </p>

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    <entry>
      <title>The LGBT Community and Prop 8 in Bible Belt SoCal</title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://news21.uscannenberg.org/index.php/site/the_lgbt_community_and_prop_8_in_bible_belt_socal/" />
      <id>tag:news21.uscannenberg.org,2009:index.php/4.24</id>
      <published>2009-06-08T06:00:01Z</published>
      <updated>2009-06-23T05:14:02Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>Marie Cunningham</name>
            <email>mariefc@gmail.com</email>
                  </author>

      <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <p><img src="http://news21.uscannenberg.org/images/uploads/Picture_3.png" style="border: 0;" alt="image" width="300" height="220" /><br />
The city of Visalia is marked as &#8220;A&#8221; on the map (credit: Google Maps)</p>

<p><br />
Marica Martin is a 46-year-old mother of two.&nbsp; Her daughter and grandchild live down the street from the home she shares with her partner of nine years, Theresa.&nbsp; Living in and working for the city of Visalia, CA, Martin reviews residential, commercial and advertising permits.&nbsp; “People look at me and have no clue,” she says of her sexual orientation.&nbsp; </p>

<p>Visalia is the county seat and largest city in Tulare County, population 429,000.&nbsp; Located about 150 miles north of Los Angeles County, Tulare has the highest annual agricultural revenues in the United States.&nbsp; It is also the county that tallied the highest percentage of pro Proposition 8 ballots in California, with 75.37 percent of its voters favoring the controversial measure.</p>

<p>“I think we thought we were in California and we’d be okay,” Martin said of the popular notion that California is a liberal-leaning, blue state.&nbsp; “I think the gay community didn’t realize what we were up against.”&nbsp;   </p>

<p>Martin says anti-Prop 8 supporters were too slow in the battle, while those in support of the measure were more prepared and better organized.&nbsp; </p>

<p>“One thing that was disappointing about the gay community is we did not get our signs until very late in the game,” she said.&nbsp; “People were going to church, as they do here – that’s the big social event, church every Sunday and once or twice during the week – and they were given signs.&nbsp; We were having to buy them, and try to gather them, and do whatever we could to disperse them.”&nbsp; Incidentally, some stole Martin’s sign off her lawn on Halloween night.</p>

<p>In the San Francisco Bay area where she grew up, being homosexual was a “non-issue,” according to Martin.&nbsp; She also spent a few years living in Long Beach, which she describes as a “gay Mecca.”&nbsp;  But Visalia?</p>

<p>“This is the Bible Belt of California,” she said. “It’s a very warm and safe place, but as a gay person, once people find that out, many of them, especially the older ones, older than me, almost find it offensive or something.”</p>

<p>Yet hope remains for the gay community when the Prop 8 vote is inevitably confronted again in the near future.&nbsp; Though the county has gone Republican in every presidential election since 1968, Tulare LGBT’s are finding strength in numbers with websites like www.queervisalia.com. </p>

<p>“With the invention of the computer you start meting more gay people online, and you build your own little network community and life moves ahead,” Martin said.</p>

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