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I’m Richard Mohr, Professor of Philosophy and of the
Classics at the University of Illinois, Urbana.
My partner, Robert Switzer, and I have been living in the
Champaign-Urbana community for thirty years. You may
have seen us around town. We’re the grey bearded couple
who sit together in restaurants enjoying the food and
each other, but not talking much. That’s us hovering
over the heirloom tomatoes at the Farmers Market and
lining up at Ebertfest. You may have seen us in the
News-Gazette in 2003 when we went to Toronto and got
married at city hall. The New York Times also ran a
picture and article on us. That was funny. For the core
of our lives; our life is our taking care of each other,
and that shouldn’t have to seem newsworthy.
Unfortunately, none of the legal obligations and benefits of
marriage that we would have if we lived in Canada
currently apply to us here in Illinois. These legal
structures are designed to help people take care of each
other. They promote the patient caring that lives with
others requires, by providing for nurture, mutual
support, and persistence and by protecting against those
occasions when necessity is cussed rather than
opportune, especially when life is marked by crisis,
illness, and destruction.
Illinois, though, may soon fill this legal gap. In the
last legislative session, a bill was passed out of House
committee which would secure legal supports for same-sex
couples through civil unions, while separating the issue
from entanglements with religion. If passed by the
House, and it already looks like there are enough votes
in the Senate, the law would join Illinois to six other
states whose legislatures have moved towards justice for
all couples. Please contact local state representatives
Bill Black, Chapin Rose, Naomi Jakobsson, and Shane
Cultra in support of House Bill 1826, so that Robert and
I can get back to our own business, sniffing melons and
squeezing sweet corn at the Farmers Market. |