The Alliance Defense Fund was founded by some of the
Christian Right�s most anti-gay
patriarchs.
James Dobson,
founder and chairman of Focus on the
Family. Dobson uses his down-home grandfatherly persona to help scare the sheeple into
believing his anti-gay nonsense. His 2004 book Marriage Under Fire was a testimonial to that. Using coy, folksy
lingo, Dobson deployed outdated research taken out of context (see �Out of
Focus on the Family: A Response to Arguments Against Same-Sex Marriage,� Popular Culture Review, 16:1 [February
2005], 45-75), ignored real-world, contemporary statistics and facts from the
General Accounting Office and corporate America � as well as common sense � to
arrive at his conclusion: if gay and lesbian Americans are allowed to enter
into the civil union called �marriage,� the world would end. Dr. Dobson has no
theological training. He�s a psychologist: a child psychologist who advocates
spanking.
D.
James Kennedy, a die-hard dominionist
and pastor of Coral Ridge Ministries. Kennedy regularly calls on his followers
to exercise �godly dominion� over every aspect of American life. At a
Reclaiming America for Christ conference in February 2005, he exhorted the
flock,
�Our job is to reclaim America for Christ, whatever the cost. As the vice regents
of God, we are to exercise godly dominion and influence over our neighborhoods,
our schools, our government, our literature and arts, our sports arenas, our
entertainment media, our news media, our scientific endeavors � in short, over
every aspect and institution of human society.� [italics added]
Rev. Kennedy, like other dominionists, claims not only to
know the mind of God, but to speak for the Divine as well. Isn�t such arrogance
the ultimate blasphemy? �Whatever the cost� sounds like something a
megalomaniacal tyrant would say, doesn�t it?
Don
Wildmon, founder and chairman of the American Family Association. Wildmon�s
organization thrives on threats,
conspiracy theories
and harming people. AFA is currently trying to hurt all
those who work � directly or indirectly � for the Ford Motor Company. Why?
Because the carmaker has the audacity to treat its gay and lesbian employees
equally and advertise in gay publications. Wildmon�s and AFA�s obsession
with demeaning gays and their families has led to campaigns against or boycotts
of other companies as well: Disney, Kraft Foods, K-Mart, Sears, and Yahoo to
name but a few. What kind of �Christian� organization would take pleasure in
hurting innocent employees and their families?
The Alliance Defense
Fund claims it litigates to �keep the door open for the spread of the Gospel.�
Doing so also keeps the door open for those who wish to force their malevolent
version of �religion� into civil law. Not surprisingly, ADF is well financed by
those trying to shove themselves and their agenda through that door. In the
fiscal year ending June 2005, its total revenues were reported
to be $21,986,553. It�s net assets, $22,072,926. According to The Washington Post, considerable support came from the American
Center for Law and Justice founded by assassination advocate
Pat Robertson, and from Liberty Council backed by the late Jerry Falwell.
People for the American
Way summarizes the Alliance Defense Fund this way: �Unique to
the Alliance Defense Fund (ADF) is their collective of high-power founders,
including wealthy right-wing organizations such as Dobson�s Focus on the Family
and D. James Kennedy�s Coral Ridge Ministries.
�The ADF embodies the beliefs of its founders, harnessing
the efforts of a cadre of right-wing groups with hundreds of millions of
dollars at their disposal. All of these groups are influential members of the
Right; they are pro-life and anti-gay, and their ultimate goal is to see the
law and U.S. government enshrined with conservative Christian principles.
�The relationship between ADF and it�s founders is one of
mutual self-interest; ADF has access to the resources and networking of large
organizations, who in turn are equipped with an endless supply of
readily-available lawyers.
�ADF�s strength goes beyond their budget due to their
influence with well-funded religious-right groups.
�Two issues common to each of ADF�s founders are their work
against the right to abortion, and against
the civil rights/liberties of gays and lesbians. They are particularly
persistent in attacking attempts by homosexuals to have families, establish
domestic partnerships or civil unions, or to be protected from discrimination
in employment or housing.� [italics added]
That focus was confirmed yet again by ADF�s most recent
�Christian� law suit meant to hurt gay people and their families. The
hysterical headline of Focus on the Family�s Citizenlink story
proclaimed �Suit Challenges New York�s Attempt to Redefine Marriage�:
Attorneys with the Alliance Defense
Fund (ADF) filed a lawsuit Wednesday [May 23, 2007] against the New York
Department of Civil Service, alleging the agency exceeded its authority when it
redefined the term �spouse� in its benefits policy to include homosexual
couples.
Brian Raum, senior legal counsel for
ADF, said the agency�s definition includes same-sex couples married in another
country or state where the marriage was legal � despite the fact that New York law defines marriage as the union of one
man and one woman. [italics added]
The New York Department of Civil Service did not �redefine
marriage� or even attempt to. To suggest they did or intended to is a
preposterous allegation. But the ruse had only just begun.
Was it an error that the FOF article asserted as �fact that
New York law defines marriage as the union of one man and one woman�? The same
claim was included in ADF�s press release:
�Marriage is not simply a state benefits system, and its
redefinition would be extremely damaging to our families and children,� said
ADF Senior Legal Counsel Brian W. Raum. �Because marriage is defined as the
legal union of one man and one woman, the New York State Department of Civil
Service has no legal authority to recognize out-of-state same-sex �marriages.�
New York does not have a Defense of Marriage Act, nor has
the state passed a constitutional amendment defining �marriage.� Even the
right-wing Heritage Foundation acknowledges that New York does �not have statutory or constitutional language
preserving the traditional understanding of marriage.�
If Mr. Raum was referring to the 2006 ruling
by New York�s Court of Appeals, he was still being disingenuous. In what some
called an attempt to side-step the issue, the Court ruled that the state�s
constitution does not specifically
require same-sex marriage. As Chief Judge Judith S. Kaye wrote in her dissent,
�I am confident that future generations will look back on today�s decision as
an unfortunate misstep.�
Heterosexual marriage and �traditional� families were not in
any way threatened by the action of the New York Department of Civil Service.
Mr. Raum and FOF�s Citizenlink were
simply pushing the bogus �save marriage/protect families� hot buttons to divert
attention from the fact that ADF�s suit is really about hurting people � a very
small group of people � and their
families by denying them healthcare and other benefits.
Why? Why would they do that? Why would people who claim to
be �Christian� try with all their financial, political and legal might to hurt
people and their families?
Perhaps the answer is as simple as power, money and the
application of religious dogma�s inherent �us vs. them� mentality and the attendant need to harm some for the
schadenfreude gratification of others. But Americans increasing know gay people
and understand that they and their unions are no threat to anything or anyone.
Like corporate
America, organized labor understands that as well and increasing fights for the equality
of all Americans.
According to their web
site, �the Alliance Defense Fund is a legal alliance defending the right to
hear and speak the Truth.� If that�s so, Mr. Raum, the other ADF attorneys, and
their supposedly �Christian� backers might want to read the words of Mrs. Hamm
in a November 2, 2004 Advocate.com First Person Commentary by her son Rob
Hamm. The lead-in to the article read: �A church-going mom called her gay son
last night to ask what he thinks about today�s ballot initiative to ban
same-sex marriage and civil unions in their native Oklahoma. The conversation
didn�t go as he expected.�
What did Mrs. Hamm have to say? To
begin with, she voted against the Oklahoma constitutional amendment to ban
same-sex marriage and civil unions because, as she put it, �God meant for
everyone to have choice in their lives. That is all about being human, and
anyone that takes that choice away is acting like God. That is blasphemy, and I
won�t be a part of it. . . . I don�t think it can be changed or should be
changed that you are gay. I don�t know if you were made that way or not, but as
long as there is a possibility that it is internal and can�t be changed, I
cannot judge anyone based on that. Besides, the Bible says there is only one
judge, and we should not be putting ourselves in his place.�
Her son commented further: �She said that since my partner�s family had
disowned him when he came out to them, he was now her son with all the rights
and privileges accorded to that position. . . . It took 12 years for my mom to
get to this point, and I know the world�s perceptions and many decades of
discrimination will take a while to change. I have hope that I didn�t have
before this phone call that eventually the true Christians like my mom will win
out, and eventually basic rights will apply to everyone equally, no matter
what.�