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March for Marriage 2010 - 22nd of August!

March for Marriage 2010 - 22nd of August!

Last year a vibrant crowd of over five thousand people marched through the streets of the capital demanding full equality in the form of civil marriage.

Civil Partnership lacks many of the rights of Civil Marriage. The children of LGBT families are ignored by this bill. Civil Partnership forces vulnerable couples to participate in their own discrimination out of a basic necessity to protect themselves in whatever way they can. A separate system for certain citizen sends the message out to the rest of society that LGBT people can be treated differently and discriminated against in other areas.

Noise asks all those who support equal rights to gather their friends and family together to march with Noise on August 22nd. Further details and after-march party to be announced. Add LGBT Noise on Facebook or join our mailing list for updates.

Civil Marriage Now!

Love and noise,
The Noise Team

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NOISE Flash Demo. 6pm. Thurs 3rd Dec. Dáil Éireann

NOISE Flash Demo. 6pm. Thurs 3rd Dec. Dáil Éireann

NOISE Flash Demo

6pm Thursday 3rd December

Dáil Éireann, Kildare St.


The Civil Partnership Bill is due for discussion very soon in the Dáil. The schedule of the Dáil is released every Monday - as soon as we know the day of discussion of CP we will spread the word to you. This is a chance to stand-up and to tell our elected representatives that the Civil Partnership Bill is an inherently discriminatory piece of legislation and that the choice of civil marriage for all citizens represents full equality for Irelands LGBT community.

Demonstrating against this bill is about showing our elected representatives that Ireland’s LGBT community should not be forced to participate in it’s own discrimination by accepting, out of necessity, the measures contained within it. Joining NOISE in protest against the Civil Partnership Bill does not undermine any progress that this bill might represent for some members of our community who will avail of the limited rights within the bill to regularise their legal affairs. We need to continuously remind the Government that they have not done enough until they have actually granted us full equality. As equal citizens, we should have equal access to the various institutions of the state including the civil institution of marriage.

This demo will not be like other NOISE rallies. It is an opportunity for the lgbt community to come together quickly to make our feelings known directly- by chanting and through our visibility - to our elected representatives. NOISE will be inviting the TDs and Senators of the Dáil to mix with the demo to better undertand why Civil Partnership is not good enough for our community or for our children.

DEMAND EQUAL RIGHTS
DEMAND CIVIL MARRIAGE

Love & Noise,
The Noise Team

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5,000 Strong @ March for Marriage - Media Roundup

5,000 Strong @ March for Marriage - Media Roundup

Papers

Irish Times - Page 4
Irish Times - Page 4

Sunday World

Sunday World

Irish Examiner

Irish Examiner

The Sun
The Sun
Irish Independent

Irish Independent

Hearld AM
Hearld AM
Metro

Metro

Online

Belfast Telegraph

Pink Paper

Pink News

A special Thank You to John Hickey for scanning all of these articles for us. If we have missed any media coverage please let us know by commenting below.

Love and Noise!

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March for Marriage - August 9th 2009

March for Marriage - August 9th 2009

For details on March for Marriage 2010 please click here

Do your straight friends and family think you are equal? Now is their chance to show it!

It’s finally time to announce the next Noise protest: we ask you, your friends, your family and your co-workers to MARCH FOR MARRIAGE in Dublin on Sunday 9th August 2009.

All who attended Noise’s ‘Inequality? RED CARD!’ rally in May - over one thousand of you -  will remember Rory O’Neill aka Miss Panti Bliss calling on the community to show its “righteous anger”. You’ll also remember Noiser Eloise McInerney challenging everyone present to carry that anger to the wider community by bringing someone along to the next rally, be they straight, gay, bi or trans. Noise is reissuing that challenge - if everyone who attended that last rally brought three, or five, or even ten people along to August’s march, a message would be sent to our Department of Justice, Equality and Law Reform that could not be ignored: Ireland’s LGBT community - along with their straight friends and family -  demand the equality that is due to every citizen: the right to marry the one we love.

The march will gather at Dublin’s City Hall, Dame Street, and will end with a rally at the Department of Justice, Equality and Law Reform on St Stephen’s Green. Speakers at the rally will include Niall Crowley (equality expert and former CEO of the Equality Authority), Patricia Prendeville (former executive director of ILGA Europe) and Brendan Courtney (broadcaster and entertainer).

It’s time to MARCH FOR MARRIAGE - we look forward to seeing you there!

Sunday 9th August 2009 from 1.30pm, Dublin City Hall, Dame Street.

Love and Noise,

The Noise Team

Running Order

Running order can be downloaded here

Route

View March for Marriage - August 9th 2009 in a larger map

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Civil Partnership Media Coverage

Civil Partnership Media Coverage

Below is a roundup of media coverage surrounding the recent publishing of the Civil Partnership Bill.

Civil Partnership Bill Published- Irish Times article here

lgbtNOISE says: Second Class Partnership Is Not Equality!! here

Ailbhe Smyth (NLGF) talking about Second-Class Civil Partnership on TV3 here

RTE - Large turnout for Dublin Gay Pride Parade

Amnesty criticises Civil Partnership Bill here

Homophobes at the Iona Institute react to Civil Partnership. Shades of ‘Gathering Storm’? here

Mr Ahern told Newstalk that the new Civil Partner Bill is not a stepping stone towards gay marriage. here

Fiona McCann ‘On marriage and civil partnerships’ here

If we have missed any please let us know, just comment below.

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Our Big Pride Wedding - WE WANT YOU!

Our Big Pride Wedding - WE WANT YOU!

NOISE and MarriagEquality are joining forces for Dublin Pride 2009 ‘Pride and Prejudice’ and we want you!

pride_small1This year’s festival rightly celebrates our pride in who we are - both as LGBT people, and as a community. However, it also questions the prejudices we face from society at large - and, indeed, a few that emanate from within ourselves and our community.

As advocates and activists for equality in civil marriage, we want to communicate two core messages at Pride 2009: our desire to have the option of marrying the one we love, and the inequality we face with second-class partnership schemes.

Here’s the plan:

We want YOU to march with us at Pride - but not in your civvies.

Instead, we want you to channel what Miss Panti calls your righteous anger - and maybe the secret exhibitionist in us all - and march with us in HALF A TUX or HALF A GOWN.

Why? Because civil partnership is a HALF MEASURE - and half measures are not acceptable to anyone who believes in equality!

There’s no such thing as half-equal, or a half-citizen - and what bride or groom would settle for half a wedding?

For one day only, however, half-measures are where it’s at: for NOISE, MarriagEquality and YOU, it’ll be half meringue skirts, half morning-suit jackets…a wisp of veil here, a bit of top-hat there… which half you choose, and how you cover the rest of you, is entirely up to you!

Pride is a day for letting that inner exhibitionist shine through.

Let’s combine that with the inner activist in us all to produce a Pride Wedding Army that’ll really turn heads. To that end we?ve joined forces with PantiBar’s Monday Night ‘Make and Do Do’ for a special Pride Pimp My Wedding. On Monday 15th June, we?ll help you pimp that half-an-outfit into a full-blown glitter-and-sequins show-stopper. At Pride 2009, more is most definitely more!

So what next? Well we need to hear from you soon, so we’d love you to get in touch and register as soon as possible. Email info@lgbtnoise.ie to express your interest and for further information.

Ireland’s LGBT people want, deserve, and demand equality. Join the fight - email us today!

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Rally calls for gay marriage rights not in proposed Bill

Rally calls for gay marriage rights not in proposed Bill

GENEVIEVE CARBERY

SAME SEX marriage rights, not civil partnership was the call to the Government by over 600 members of the gay and lesbian community and their supporters at a rally held in Dublin city centre yesterday.

“The civil partnership Bill is an inferior piece of legislation which does not recognise families or give people the right to adopt their partner’s children,” said Eloise McInerney of Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender (LGBT) Noise, which organised the protest.

She told the crowd gathered at the Central Bank that partnership was a construct of the 1990s and had no place in 2009. “We don’t want crumbs from the master’s table, we want the whole cake. We want the wedding cake,” she said.

A civil partnership Bill is due before the Dáil shortly which will allow lesbian and gay couples to register with the State and avail of privileges in areas such as pensions, inheritance and tax.

The hard work done to bring the Bill to this stage was acknowledged by Alternative Miss Ireland organiser Rory O’Neill. However, he said equality was not a half measure.

“Either our relationships are equal to heterosexual relationships or they are not,” he told the rally.

“Our State asks of us all the responsibilities of citizenship. In return I expect the commensurate rights,” he said.

“Sometimes we gays are so happy we got this far, we don’t want to rock the boat. People are telling us that we should be happy sitting halfway up the bus. I am not happy sitting halfway up the bus.

“I want to sit at the front of the bus and if I feel like it I want to drive the bus,” he said.

Co-chair of Marriage Equality, Gráinne Healy , was also critical of the civil partnership Bill. She believed that politicians were nervous and out of sync with the public because research by Marriage Equality revealed that eight out of 10 Irish people believe gay people should have access to civil marriage.

She urged those gathered to join the “out to your TD campaign” by asking their local politician to push for the issue of gay marriage.

Her organisation will be flagging local and European candidates who were in favour of gay marriage, she said.

The positive impact which gay marriage would have on lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender teenagers was emphasised by Michael Barron, director of Belong To, an organisation which supports young people who are declaring their sexual orientation or “coming out”. Many of these young people are still bullied and taunted because of their sexuality.

“It would send a message to bullies and it would shift how society sees these young people every day,” he said.

 

This article appears in the print edition of the Irish Times

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Inequality? RED CARD! - A big noisey thank you!

Inequality? RED CARD! - A big noisey thank you!

To everyone who came out for equality on Sunday, a big Noisy THANK YOU!

To those who spoke, recited and sang, to those who braved the cameras in rugby gear and silly masks, and to those who made placards and t-shirts, a big Noisy THANK YOU!

To all who travelled from around the country to vent their anger at inequality, a big Noisy THANK YOU!

To all who helped prepare - with IT, graphics, printing, advertising, fundraising, raffles, choreography, pre-protest tea and post-protest burgers, a big Noisy THANK YOU!

Sunday was by far the biggest, most visible, out-loud expression of support for same-sex marriage that Ireland has yet seen - as reported correctly by the Independent, a thousand people with equality first and foremost on their minds; a thousand people who have the power to make the next rally a gathering of five, or even ten thousand - and why not? Pride season is coming. We all have plenty of time to get our friends from all over Ireland used to storming the streets - and in August, Noise will be calling on you again. Can we make it even bigger?

Sunday represented a turning-point in the the way people see the fight for marriage equality. It seemed as if everyone there felt a sense of ownership over the protest - a sense that it belonged to each and every one of the people at the Central Bank personally - and that’s the real success of the Red Card protest: the fight for equality doesn’t belong to Noise, or MarriagEquality, or couples, or radicals, or any other subset with a label - it belongs to each and every gay person in Ireland, and it belongs to our friends and families too.

We’re looking forward to the future struggle. Look out for the Noise Banner at Prides around the country - in particular, we’ll be calling on your help in a joint venture with MarriagEquality for Dublin Pride; and don’t forget to keep in touch via Facebook, the website (www.lgbtNOISE.ie), Twitter and the online communities.

Look out for a full report on Sunday’s protest, with pictures and press clips in the coming days - the protest was covered on local and national radio during Sunday, and in Monday’s Examiner, Times and Independent, thus bringing the message to a nationwide audience. Both US and UK gay news sources also reported on the event.

In the meantime, enjoy this beautiful slideshow of protest pics by photographer Peter Fingleton.

We look forward to seeing you all soon at Prides across Ireland!

Love and Noise!

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