Remembering Moscone & Milk; And a Call To Action
As an Apple Computer fan I’m looking forward to news from next weeks MacWorld Expo at San Francisco’s Moscone Center. But each time I hear “Moscone Center” I think of Harvey Milk.
Twenty seven years ago on November 27, 1978 San Francisco Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor (like our aldermen) Harvey Milk were assassinated in SF City Hall by former Supervisor Dan White.
Milk had a couple of unsuccessful bids for the San Francisco Board of Supervisors but in 1977 he was finally elected. He became the first openly gay person elected to any such office — ever. At the time it was thought it was better to work within the system by electing a straight but friendly candidate to bring about change. Milk was determined to win and break down doors.
Supervisor Dan White was upset over the anti-discrimination legislation enacted in SF so he resigned his seat. A week later he returned to seek revenge. If you’ve heard of the phrase “twinkie defense” this is where it came from. White was sentenced to less than eight years in prison which sparked the White Night Riot. After serving only a portion of his sentence White committed suicide.
For more information see:
Time Magazine 100 Heros & Icons
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
What is the point you ask? Tomorrow marks the one year anniversary of the day I filed to run for the St. Louis Board of Aldermen. I didn’t win on my first try (story). As I fight to make St. Louis a more urban place to live and to break down decades of self-serving ward politics I draw strength from men like Harvey Milk. I’m constantly told things won’t change here — we’re too conservative, we’re too this and too that.
BS!
We can change if we want to.
We can have a legislative body that actually governs the entire city and not just their selective 1/28th of the city while ignoring the remaining 27/28th. If they only want to take responsibility for their 1/28th then pay them 1/28 the salary.
Life is too short. We must make the best of the time we’ve got.
If you live in an even number ward — 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, or 28 — now is the time to get involved for the Spring 2007 election. Bookmark your alderman’s page and check each week to see what new legislation they are sponsoring or co-sponsoring. Ask them how they voted on controversial issues in other wards. Review their campaign finance reports to see who is giving them money and how often. Join your local ward committee (Democrat, Republican, or Green) and challenge any assumptions of propping up the status quo simply for the sake of business as usual or that is the way it is supposed to be. For those of you in odd numbered wards you should get involved as well in pretty much the same fashion. Not sure of your ward? Click here to find out.
Those already elected and those running the Democratic machine have no interest in real change or if they do they’ve been unwilling to prove it by there actions. We will have to take it by force at the grass roots level. If Harvey Milk can get elected in 1977 we can certainly change our board of aldermen thirty years later.
– Steve