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Gay Californians take heart in Obama’s call for equality

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(MCT) — SAN FRANCISCO — In San Francisco, George Roehm got the chills and reached for his smartphone to text an out-of-state friend. In Long Beach, Stan Mallard thought about how far this struggling country has come — and the great distance still ahead to achieve anything like progress.

And dance instructor Chaz Knight, an urban dweller if ever there was one, found himself wondering Monday how President Barack Obama’s words would sound to a teenage kid in the rural South. How freeing it would be, he figured, to hear the president declare that this country’s work would not be done “until our gay brothers and sisters are treated like anyone else under the law.”

“I thought of a small family in Arkansas and their 13-year-old son who hasn’t come out yet, and how great he’s got to feel,” Knight, a West Hollywood resident by way of New York, said as he strolled along Santa Monica Boulevard, headphones on, iced coffee in hand.

The president took the stage with the Supreme Court justices — who soon will consider the constitutionality of gay marriage — arrayed behind him. When he told the world that “if we are truly created equal, then surely the love we commit to one another must be equal as well,” Obama brought the issue of gay marriage “into everyone’s home, whether they like it or not,” Knight said.

Monday wasn’t the kind of day that sent thousands of gay Californians into the streets waving rainbow flags and weeping tears of joy. Demonstrations like that usually are reserved for milestones — court decisions, election results, legislative breakthroughs.

Actions, not words.

But words still matter. And on the occasion of Obama’s second inauguration, his call for equality resonated from San Francisco’s Castro District to West Hollywood.

“I never expected in my lifetime to hear our president talk like that,” an emotional Roehm said as the inaugural parade tromped silently along on a muted television screen in Twin Peaks Tavern, known as the Castro District’s answer to “Cheers.”

It is believed to be the first gay bar in the country that uncovered its windows, opened its doors and let the world look inside. The San Francisco Board of Supervisors recently voted to designate the bright and cozy saloon an official city landmark.

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