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Monday, July 30, 2012

REAL Family Values:Equality Activist Zach Wahls Comes to Provincetown


By Stephen Desroches
Zach Wahls
Provincetown Magazine
The United States has certainly changed since the children’s book Heather Has Two Mommies appeared in 1989, causing controversy. Marriage equality exists in six states and the District of Columbia, with the real possibility that Maine, Washington, and Maryland will join that list by the end of the year. “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” was repealed and the Supreme Court will soon decide the constitutionality of the so-called Defense of Marriage Act. And Barack Obama became the first president to publicly express his support for marriage rights for same-sex couples. 
The LGBT movement has certainly taken giants leaps forward in the past several years. But that movement isn’t driven by those within the walls of the Capital, the Supreme Court, or the White House. It gets its energy from people like Zach Wahls, who rocketed to fame when a video of him addressing the Iowa House Judiciary Committee in favor of marriage equality and in defense of his family went viral on YouTube with almost 17 million hits as of July 19.  That exposure led him to appearances on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, The Ellen DeGeneres Show, The Late Show with David Letterman, and Chelsea Lately,  as well as a new book, My Two Moms: Lessons of Love, Strength, and What Makes a Family.
“Roller coaster is a phrase I’ve been using a lot lately,” says Wahls, who lives in Iowa City with his two mothers and sister. “It’s been kind of scary. Kind of wild.”
Wahls was a 19-year-old student at the University of Iowa when he spoke before the House Judiciary Committee, who was preparing to vote on an initiative with the ultimate goal of amending the state constitution to ban same-sex marriage, effectively overturning the Iowa Supreme Court’s unanimous decision that made it legal in 2009. While the Republican-controlled Iowa House of Representatives ultimately voted to pass the anti-gay resolution, the Democrats in the state senate blocked it. But Wahls came out of the issue with rock-star appeal and a platform to advocate for equality for gays and lesbians. 

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