Thirty years ago, Candace Lightner’s 13-year-old daughter was killed by a drunken driver while she was walking down the street near her Fair Oaks, Calif., home. Soon after, Lightner learned that the driver had previously been arrested five times for driving while intoxicated.
Enraged, Lightner, who had no previous experience in politics, decided she was going to change American attitudes about the dangers of drunken driving. Within three years, virtually every state in the country had a strict drunken driving law as a result of a hearts-and-minds campaign undertaken by the organization Lightner formed – Mothers Against Drunk Driving.
On an individual level, changing someone’s mind can seem nearly impossible. But in politics, experts say, given money, passion and patience, nearly anything is possible. That’s exactly what the people at Basic Rights Oregon, the state’s leading same-sex marriage advocates, are counting on.
When a federal judge ruled three weeks ago that a gay marriage ban passed by California voters in 2008 was unconstitutional, Basic Rights had fresh ammunition for a public education campaign it had begun last winter. The campaign includes direct-mail brochures to Oregon households, television and radio ads and hundreds of volunteers going door to door.
Full Story from the Portland Tribune
Click here for gay marriage resources in Oregon.
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