“We gather here to celebrate” are words I’m not sure you hear anywhere outside of a wedding. And perhaps outside of my late-eighties grade-school socials and your local easy-listening-and-R&B station, you don’t hear Luther Vandross’ classic “Here and Now” more often than you do when a married couple has their first dance at their wedding.
Matrimony, holy or otherwise, was this week’s biggest news. President Obama took a historic new stance on marriage equality, becoming the first American President to state that he doesn’t believe that marriage is just between a man and a woman. Whether you judge the decision as courageous, cynical, or catastrophic — or don’t care at all — the President’s now-completed “evolution” on the topic is incredibly newsworthy. As such, Melissa will lead an extensive conversation about it.
And yes, we’ll cover the rather apocalyptic reaction to it by some folks on the Right (like Franklin Graham) — pivoting to a conversation about how the continued religiosity and hard-Right stances that conservatives refuse to budge from are signaling, perhaps at just a deafening volume now, the end of moderation in politics. (For another signifier of that this week, we saw the career of Senator Richard Luger, considered a Republican moderate by some, end at the hands of a Tea Party challenger.) For that conversation, Melissa will talk to a man who has seen both sides of the aisle, and had Republican extremism cost him his seat — former Pennsylvania Senator Arlen Specter.








