It warms my heart to see nation after nation recognize the rights of
a minority that for so many years have been sidelined and marginalized.
Europe—hosting some of the most liberal countries—was the first cab
off the rank, the Netherlands being the first to recognize equal rights
for all back in 2001.
(Can we all pause for a moment to reflect on that momentarily. 2001.
Does anyone else think it’s rubbish that 14 years later this is still an
issue?!)
From there, in a series of dominoes, others came forward:
Belgium, Spain, Canada, South Africa,
Norway, Sweden, Portugal, Iceland, Argentina, Denmark, Brazil, France,
Uruguay, New Zealand, England/Wales, Scotland, Luxembourg, Finland,
Ireland and of course, most recently, The United States.
Twenty-one countries all up.
Twenty-one countries in total recognizing that all who are in love should have the right to get married, regardless of gender.
It may have taken longer than I would have liked but this is still an incredible shift!
There
is one country however, still notably missing from the list that. This
is a well-known Western country that continues to sit on the proverbial
fence.
Australia.
Chances are this comes as a surprise to you.
I
recently heard a radio interview asking Americans whether they thought
gay marriage was legal in Australia. Every person who was asked said
yes.
Internationally, Australia is seen to be a modern culture. Much more accepting, and dare I say liberal, than The United States.
Nearly
75 per cent of Australians support legislation changes legalizing
same-sex marriage. This is a higher percentage in terms of support for
legislation change than in any other country that has already legalized
gay marriage. Clearly, it’s not the Australian people who are standing
in the way of Australia maintaining its ‘modern’ label.
The
current political environment in Australia is currently of a much more
conservative nature, and herein lies the source of the holdup.
Our
Prime Minister, Tony Abbott, is publicly against gay marriage. This is
despite having an openly gay sister who is a forceful driver of
Australia legalizing marriage equality. I’m ashamed to Abbott’s recent
comments indicate a preference for keeping to an agenda of growing the
economy and building jobs for Australians, highlighting that this is
what he and his party were voted in for.
The media, however, have entirely other ideas.
Not
a day goes by here in Australia without some report referencing gay
marriage rights. With the direction of all other developed nations
blowing the wind towards marriage equality, for many here, it only seems
like a matter of time.
Continued
coverage of this issue across all media platforms, both internationally
and locally, is keeping marriage equality on the forefront of
everyone’s mind. As research illustrates how people look to the media
for information on the existence and severity of current issues, it’s
fairly safe to say this particular issue of marriage equality is not
going away.
We
certainly can’t just sweep it under the same rug we continue to sweep
the horrific treatment of our Indigenous people (that’s another story
entirely).
Personally I am embarrassed by the sluggishness of my country in
supporting marriage equality. As was so beautifully articulated in a
recent article I read, this is ‘an issue that helps define the social
fabric of a nation’.
The change in law may not directly affect me but I want to be able to proudly proclaim that my country stands for equality.
That my country does not diminish a person’s love based on gender.
That above all, Love Fucking Wins in Australia too.
At
some point in the (hopefully) not too distant future, marriage equality
will go to vote in Australia, and I can’t see it being rejected when it
does. Sadly, while many countries can now report that #lovewins,
Australia has some way to go before we can proudly fly the same rainbow
coloured flag.
For
now, as the only developed English speaking country that has not
reformed their laws, Australia insists on staying in the Equality Stone
Age and I for one, am impatient to see that shift.