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So, what's this blog all about? Here is our "elevator" speech ::

MRSTER ::{pronounced :: miss + ter} is an online magazine for same sex and hetero couples who are planning their wedding day. Yes, wedding day! Our goal is to provide smart ideas, valuable resources, allied vendors, real life experiences and true stories for couples of all backgrounds.

With our unique line up of contributors our posts will be filled with lots of personality and passion. So grab a blanket and your laptop and snuggle up to some blog-talk with Mrster.

Entries in Political Perspective (27)

Tuesday
Jun152010

New Bumper Sticker for "The Movement"?

Guest Blogger :: Erika

I happen upon what I feel is "art" on a daily basis; the sky, people, buildings, movies, weather, the earth, children, music...you get the picture.

Speaking of picture, I happened upon some "art" while checking out this article:

Best American Spots for a Same-Sex Wedding

I was so impressed with this pic, I thought it important to share with my fellow Mrster peeps. Enjoy.

I'm hoping to find this on a bumper sticker...STAT!!

Guest Blogger, Erika Cárdenas, and her wife are sharing with us their journey of planning their same-sex wedding and what it's like to be married. Read more about them here

Tuesday
May182010

Same-Sex Prom Date

Guest Blogger :: Erika

If you have been reading the news, check out Time magazine, or glanced at any online newspaper, you have probably heard about Constance McMillen. After my wife showed me quarter-page article and pic in Time, I went on a little hunt online and found 100’s of articles detailing how Constance is challenging her high school district's ban on same-sex prom dates which resulted in her April 2nd prom being canceled…for all students. The articles also emphasize involvement by the American Civil Liberties Union who filed a lawsuit against the school officials and school district, calling them "defendants."

This story has ben compared to racial integration and is expressed on some sites like The Christian Science Monitor as a "new trend." Perhaps just like racial integration, the word "fad" or "trend" will begin to fade away when referencing "humans," although we all know total evaporation is unthinkable…

Or is it? She made it on Ellen:

Guest Blogger, Erika Cárdenas, and her wife are sharing with us their journey of planning their same-sex wedding and what it's like to be married. Read more about them here

Wednesday
Dec232009

Forget the Vote...

Guestblogger :: Ryan

Yesterday, the DC Council voted to allow same sex marriages in the District of Columbia. After listening to the usual freak-out that is talking-head cable news the other day, one argument kept popping up again and again:

Every time the issue has been put on a ballot to be voted upon, it has been stricken down so clearly the people do not want it.

My eloquent response: screw the people.

Minority rights are the EXACT reason we have institutions like legislatures that can pass laws. I am sure had the Civil Rights Act been put to a vote, "the people" would not have cared for it much either.  It does not mean that decision is right. So voters; sorry, I just don't care about you anymore. The history books will be the only vindication I need in the future of your utter lack of empathy.

 Photo courtesy of ABC

Wednesday
Nov252009

Will the Judge Allow Me My New Wife’s Last Name?

Guest Blogger :: Shannon Williams

After reading Maiden Names and Married Names, a post from Drew (a fellow Mrster.com blogger), I wanted to explore the process of changing my last name to Cárdenas. My fiancée, Erika, asked me to marry her, and I am honored to take her last name. I am confident that when we have children our family will feel a natural connection to each other, establish more recognition in this world that we are a traditional family, and are not choosing an “alternative life style” if we share a family name. I searched the county, state, and numerous “how to” sites and then came across this article, Gay Couple: Judge Barred Name Change . In it, a lesbian couple in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania submit a petition to change the last name of their 5-year-old son to that of his mother's partner of three years. 

Picture Courtesy of My Fox Philly

Permission denied! Words from the “honorable” judge: “It wasn’t in the boy’s best interest.” And, “name changes should be granted based on good sense, common decency and fairness." 

Submitting my petition requires a response to “I request that the current name of Shannon Elizabeth Williams be changed to Shannon Elizabeth Cárdenas for the following reasons,” followed by three blank lines that beckon my justification. I wonder if the Arizona judge will feel my request depicts common sense, decency and fairness. It appears the legal system may feel conflicted in receiving genuine, truthful responses, but here is mine:

Because I deserve to have the last name of my wife who loves me, adores me, will respect me always, and wants to live the rest of this wonderfully chaotic life…with me.

The mother's partner in the above article sadly alleged, "If she (her partner) would have walked in there and not mentioned me at all, the name change probably would have been granted." 

Perhaps the AZ judge that reviews my petition will say "PERMISSION GRANTED." Or perhaps I too will be faced with the alternate, and have to make something up.

 

Guest Blogger, Shannon Williams and her fiancée are sharing with us their journey of planning their same-sex wedding. Read more about them here.

Tags :: Modern Wedding Traditions, Personal Perspective, Name Changes, Real Stories, Political Perspective, Media.

Tuesday
Nov242009

Girls In Tuxedos: Where Homophobia Begins

Guest Blogger :: Erika Cardenas

My fiancée Shannon was eager to share with me a recent conversation she had with her mother. Shannon and I have had different experiences as far as our sexuality is concerned; she doesn't consider herself lesbian, straight or bisexual. However, Shannon fell in love with and is marrying me; someone who struggled with the knowledge of being gay from a young age. Shan’s mom informed her of an “interesting” picture in Time magazine that lacked an article, but did have a caption near it about Ceara Sturgis.  She insisted we look it up. I went online to the New York Post and found a similar article about Ceara, a senior in high school who wore a tuxedo in her yearbook photograph.  

Picture courtesy of New York Post

The school district in Mississippi reports they will not print the picture because their rules require girls to wear drapes (dresses) and boys to wear tuxedos.  Shan claims her mom kept saying how “pretty” Ceara was as if looking more masculine would have been reason enough to dismiss the picture from the yearbook. As for me, friends and family continue to assume that because I wear cargo shorts and used to have a faux-hawk that I’m the “man” in our relationship. I’d be lying if I didn’t say that Shan loves my femininity, but this article brought back many feelings of discomfort, insecurity, anxiety and guilt from my early childhood struggles with identity. When you check out this article, think of how you would feel if boys wore pink and girls wore blue. Oh wait! They do.

But what if boys wore pink dresses and girls wore blue suits? 

Until next time, live well, love well, be well! ~E~

Guest Blogger, Erika Cardenas and her fiancée are sharing with us their journey of planning their same-sex wedding. Read more about them here.