The Montana News Association headline
read �Focus on the Family Founder, James Dobson, Losing Credibility with
Christian Conservatives; Dobson Trying to Cover Up His Support of Gay
Endorsement of S.B. 166 �Reciprocal Beneficiaries� Bill.� So what�s S.B. 166?
[It]
would grant to gay partners and others many of the legal rights currently
reserved to married couples. These rights would include property-sharing,
decision-making powers over funerals and organ donations and, potentially,
health-care policy benefits. If adopted, the proposed legislation could force
employers to cover gay partners.
A Denver Post editorial said pretty
much the same thing. Their headline read �A fresh focus on domestic partners:
Focus on the Family is supporting legislation to provide expanded legal
benefits for heads of untraditional households including gay couples�:
We
were pleasantly surprised last week when Focus on the Family expressed its
support for state legislation that would provide expanded legal benefits for
same-sex couples and other non-traditional households. . . .
Focus
on the Family, the Colorado Springs-based organization of conservative
Christians, has endorsed a measure by Sen. Shawn Mitchell, R-Broomfield, that
would expand legal benefits to non-married heads of households, no matter the
orientation of the couple.
Dr. Paul Cameron, chairman of the Family Research Institute
(FRI), went ballistic over Dobson�s comments. Before getting into why, consider
Dr. Cameron�s reputation. This assessment comes from the psychology
pages of the University of California-Davis website:
Psychologist Paul Cameron has used his
own studies to claim that homosexuals threaten public health, social order, and
the well-being of children. His conclusions are generally at odds with other
published research, and objective indices show that his work has had no
apparent impact on scientific research on sexual orientation.
Although Cameron has been criticized in
the popular press, extensive scientific critiques of his group's research have
not been widely available. Those that have been published have been brief or
appeared in obscure journals. This inattention by the scientific community is
perhaps not surprising, given the poor quality of the Cameron group�s data and
the low prestige of the journals in which they have been published. Most
scientists have simply ignored the Cameron studies.
Another organization
agrees and has evidence to back up their claim that �Paul Cameron is . . . the
least credible of the various psychologists, medical doctors, and associated
professionals which actively collaborate with the Religious Right, and attempt
to lend a veneer of scientific respectability to the Religious Right's anti-gay
propaganda.�
As for Cameron�s Family Research Institute, its website proudly proclaims that
FRI �was founded in 1982 with one overriding mission: to generate empirical
research on issues that threaten the traditional family, particularly
homosexuality, AIDS, sexual social policy, and drug abuse. FRI believes that
published scientific material has a profound impact, both in the United States
and around the world.�
Quality research published by reputable scholars in
respected professional journals does have an impact, but Dr. Cameron�s
�published scientific material� is suspect, to say the
least, and as UC-Davis pointed out, is of poor quality and �simply ignored� by
reputable psychologists, scientists, and the academic community at large.
In touting the work of Cameron and his fellow �researcher,�
the FRI website included this bizarre blend of fact and pure fiction: �The �gold standard� of science is published
research, not books about research per se, but rather scientific articles in
peer-reviewed publications. On this score, only
about 1% of Ph.D.s and M.D.s ever publish such articles.� [italics added]
While it is quite
true that published, peer-reviewed research articles are �the gold standard,�
it is preposterously absurd to claim
that only �1% Ph.D.s and M.D.s ever publish such articles.� Every Ph.D. at every college and university in this country -- especially those
working toward tenure or promotion -- will confirm the same fact. Peer-reviewed scholarly
publications in respected academic journals are not an option. They�re a
requirement.
In his on-air radio
comments, Dobson was more than justified in sarcastically questioning that
Cameron �calls himself a researcher.�
The catfight continued:
Dr.
Dobson quoted a press release FRI issued that said of him: �During the confirmation
fight over Harriet Miers, Dobson, in a somewhat ambiguous manner, told his
radio audience that he was in favor of gay rights.� Dr. Dobson replied: �That�s
a complete fabrication. What I said is that I am in favor of gay rights in the
sense that homosexuals should not be treated unfairly under the law.�
However,
in October 2005, after a reference to Harriet Miers� statement that she
believed in gay rights, Dobson said on his radio broadcast �You know what? I
do. I don�t believe that homosexuals should be denied a job. I don�t believe
that they should not be able to buy a house. I don�t believe that they should not have the same rights everybody
else does. I just don�t believe that there should be special rights given
to homosexuals that are not given to everybody else.� [italics added]
Isn�t civil marriage a civil right given to just about �everybody else�? In its 1967 Loving
v. Virginia decision, the U.S. Supreme Court declared �marriage� is
�one of the basic civil rights of man� and that the freedom to marry is
�essential to the orderly pursuit of happiness.�
Moreover, the whole
�gay rights� argument is a semantic ruse. Activists are not fighting for
�gay rights�; they�re fighting for �equal civil rights.� But that�s something
Cameron vehemently opposes as he made so very clear in his quoted comments: �If Dr. Dobson believes that homosexuals
should not be denied a job or housing because of their bedroom behavior, then
he stands with the gay rights crowd on this issue. . . . He can�t give
homosexuals protections currently enjoyed
only by certain specified groups . . ." [italics added]
In other words, Dr.
Paul Cameron aggressively advocates and passionately supports discrimination
against gay and lesbian Americans in employment, housing, and everywhere else
it could be applied.
To be sure, James Dobson is no friend or ally of the gay
community or equality. He is and has been a vitriolic -- and often unhinged --
opponent of same-sex marriage as was made clear in his book Marriage Under Fire and his October 2004
statement that allowing loving, monogamous same-sex couples to wed would not
only �destroy marriage. It will destroy the earth.� His Focus on the Family organization
has its own faith-based �ex-gay
program� called �Love Won Out� which, according to Witness Magazine, �Masks [a] Message of Hate.�
So-called �ex-gay� aversion and reparative therapies have
been denounced as �harmful,� �dangerous� and �unethical� by the American
Medical Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American
Psychological Association, the American Psychiatric Association, the American
Counseling Association, the National Association of School Psychologists, and
the National Association of Social Workers.
The American Psychiatric Association�s position
statement is particularly pertinent in relation to both Cameron and Dobson.
It states, in part, �efforts to repathologize homosexuality by claiming that it
can be cured are often guided not by rigorous scientific or psychiatric
research, but sometimes by religious and political forces opposed to full civil
rights for gay men and lesbians.�
In fact, the American Psychiatric Association has endorsed same-sex
marriage as a way of promoting what it and the American Psychological
Association call �mental health.� A recent article
published in the peer-reviewed, highly respected (�gold standard�) Journal of
Epidemiology and Community Health agreed: civil marriage would boost the mental
and physical health of gay and lesbian people.
Without anything but the Bible -- that was also once used to
justify slavery and, later, segregation -- and the pseudo-science of
�researchers� such as Cameron to support their pro-discrimination campaigns,
could it be that Dobson and another infamous leader of the evangelical
Christian Right are beginning to see the proverbial writing on the wall: �civil
rights and equality always win�? Or is it more likely they have self-serving
political motives?
On August 24, 2005, The Washington Blade ran a story
about �Conservative leader calls housing, employment for gays �basic rights.��
That �conservative leader� was none other than Jerry Falwell.
Falwell, who in the immediate aftermath
of Sept. 11, 2001, blamed the terrorist attacks on �the pagans, the abortionists,
and the feminists and the gays and lesbians,� and who describes himself as
�very conservative,� told [Tucker] Carlson [on the August 5 edition of MSNBC�s
�The Situation with Tucker Carlson�] that if he were a lawyer, he too would
argue for civil rights for gays.
�I may not agree with the lifestyle,�
Falwell said. �But that has nothing to do with the civil rights . . .
When Carlson countered that
conservatives, �are always arguing against �special rights� for gays,� Falwell
said that equal access to housing and employment are basic rights, not special
rights.
�Civil rights for all Americans, black,
white, red, yellow, the rich, poor, young, old, gay, straight, et cetera, is
not a liberal or conservative value,� Falwell went on to say. �It�s an American
value that I would think that we pretty much all agree on.� . . .
�Like most Americans, it seems Rev.
Falwell has reached the conclusion that
everyone deserves basic rights,� said [Joe] Solmonese [president of the
Human Rights Campaign]. �I hope he also supports legislation that would deliver
on these values.� [italics added]
Paul Cameron would, of course, disagree that all Americans
deserve the same and equal civil rights, as would Lou Sheldon of the Traditional
Values Coalition -- whose hypocrisy and anti-gay campaigns are
legendary -- and Don Wildmon of
the American Family Association, who boycott any company that treats its
gay and lesbians employees equally or any organization that advocates equal
civil rights for all Americans.
A few days after his appearance on �The Situation with
Tucker Carlson,� Falwell seemed to reaffirm his stance for civil equality in an interview with the Lynchburg (Virginia) News &
Advance newspaper, as reported by
365Gay.com:
�I have
always believed that all Americans should have basic human rights,� Falwell
told the paper. �I�ve made it clear that I don�t consider the right to fair
housing or employment a conservative or liberal value. Those are American
values.�
However, in that same interview
Rev. Falwell exposed himself:
�I don�t
think homosexuals should be granted a special minority status,� he told the paper. However, he said that gays,
including teachers, should not be denied jobs solely because of their sexuality.
. . ."Every American should be
allowed to work wherever he or she wishes as long as they obey the law.�
[italics added]
That�s sounds good, but it�s a
Falwellian ruse -- one that Dobson also used in his �equality� comments --
because it remains legal in 38 states to fire workers because of their
sexual orientation.
And just for the record, a �minority� is defined as �a part of a
population differing from others in some characteristics and often subjected to
differential treatment.� Gays and lesbians -- approximately 2-4 percent of the
total U.S. population -- definitely fit the definition. As was noted in an
October 3, 1837, edition of U.S. Magazine and Democratic Review, �Though we go
for the republican principle of the supremacy of the will of the majority, we
acknowledge, in general, a strong sympathy with minorities, and consider that
their rights have a high moral claim on the respect and justice of majorities.�
How far we have and haven�t come since 1837.
I don�t think Mr. Solmonese or anyone else is holding their
breath for Falwell or Dobson to join the Human Rights Campaign�s battle for
equal civil rights for all Americans. So why did they make statements that seem
to contradict their previous theocratic efforts and successes? There�s no doubt
that the Republican Party has slowly but definitively
been �hijacked�
by the radical Christian Right. As the president of the Alamo City Republican
Women�s Club accurately observed in 1993, �The Grand Old Party is more
religious cult than political organization.�
Perhaps Dobson and Falwell are just being self-serving, as
usual, and using diversionary tactics to distance themselves from an
administration already caught
promoting overt discrimination in the workplace, something few Americans
(with the exception of Paul Cameron, Lou Sheldon and Don Wildmon) agree with or
support.
As Bush�s second term fails more miserably than his first,
even party stalwarts are waking up and taking a step back. Dick Polman�s report in the
Philadelphia Inquirer on February 12 told the tale:
Conservatives love to quote Ronald
Reagan at every opportunity, to invoke him as the exemplar of their ideology.
But in their winter of discontent, many on the right are breaching Reagan�s
11th commandment, which decrees that no Republican shall ever speak ill of
another.
And the target of their ire is
President Bush. . . .
The bashing has been quite intense in
recent days. Commentator Jonah Goldberg, miffed that Bush has piled up record
deficits and boosted the size of government, writes that Bush �is spending
money like a pimp with a week to live.� . . .
(Christian) right on cue, Goldberg�s observation was
confirmed in an
article that appeared in the Christian news service Agape Press and in this report from
365Gay.com:
With leaders
of some of America�s leading anti-gay marriage groups looking on President Bush
has signed legislation giving $500 million [total cost of the program is $750
million] to faith-based programs to promote and strengthen opposite-sex
marriage. The provision is part of the
deficit reduction bill . . . [italics added]
How does one
reduce the ballooning budget deficit by spending $500 million on a faith-based
program designed to promote discrimination?
Under the law
faith-based groups are able to circumvent
local and human rights laws that are supposed to protect LGBT workers.
Assistant
Health and Human Services Secretary Wade Horn said that the financial windfall
is not intended to specifically oppose same-sex marriage, although the
President is a major supporter of a proposed amendment to ban gay marriage in
the Constitution.
Horn said,
however, that none of the money could be
used to promote or support same-sex marriage in Massachusetts where gay
marriage is legal. The money also could not be used to support gay families
where civil unions or domestic partnerships are allowed. [italics added]
So much for the
equality of legal marriages in the
Bush theocracy. Horn�s statement also exposes the sham and scam of the
Christian Right�s and the Bush administration�s �pro-family� initiatives.
And how
transparently duplicitous for Mr. Horn to say
religious groups that receive federal funding for marriage programs will not be
allowed to proselytize or to discriminate against participants based on their
�faith perspective� when it is precisely
that �faith perspective� that is the basis for their -- and the Bush
administration�s -- discrimination against gays and lesbians, especially when
it comes to civil marriage.
As Chief Justice Margaret Marshall of the Massachusetts
Supreme Judicial Court wrote in the landmark decision, whether the barrier to
marriage is �skin color� or �sexual orientation . . . history must yield to a
more fully developed understanding of the invidious quality of the
discrimination.�
Mr. Polman�s observations continued:
Yet another, former Reagan
domestic-policy adviser Bruce Bartlett, is releasing a book this month titled Impostor: How George W. Bush Bankrupted
America and Betrayed the Reagan Legacy.
The vibes
here the other day at the annual Conservative Political Action Conference were
particularly toxic. . . . Even Rick Perry, who succeeded Bush as governor of
Texas, rebuked Bush . . .
There�s a big
conservative faction that thinks Bush is wrong for believing he can bring
peaceful democracy to Iraq and the rest of the Middle East . . . There�s a
conservative faction that believes Bush is wrong to conduct warrantless
surveillance of Americans; ex-Rep. Bob Barr, who led the early fight for
Clinton�s impeachment, suggested here that the Bush plan violated federal law .
. .
Rep. Bob Barr was
absolutely correct when he suggested that Bush�s domestic spying was a
violation of federal law. The Pentagon
recently acknowledged that, at least in relation to peace activists and gay
Americans:
Pentagon admits improper spying
Ann Rostow, PlanetOut
Network
Thursday, February 9, 2006 / 12:32 PM
SUMMARY: The Defense Department admits some of its
clandestine investigations of terrorist threats dealt
"inappropriately" with some protesters.
The
Department of Defense has admitted that some of its clandestine investigations
of foreign terrorist threats dealt �inappropriately� with peace activists and
gay protesters, said Sen. Carl Levin.
Mr. Polman also
noted in his Philadelphia Inquirer article that �there�s a big conservative
faction that is alarmed about Jack Abramoff, the confessed felon who morphed
from Republican activist to corrupt superlobbyist. They see Abramoff as a
symbol of the special-interest establishment.� Time magazine�s on-line edition
recently featured a
picture of Abramoff with Bush, the pro-discrimination, special interest
president.
An article entitled �How
Abramoff Funded The Anti-Gay Agenda� appeared on the website of
InfoShop.org. (Similar articles also appeared in the Washington Post and San
Francisco Chronicle.) The article�s opening was just the beginning of the
expos�:
One aspect of the corruption and
bribery mega-scandal shaking Washington that is swirling around conservative
lobbyist Jack Abramoff . . . and which hasn�t gotten much mass media attention:
how a lot of dough from Abramoff-controlled slush funds went to leading
homophobes from the religious right.
Some of that money went to one of America�s premier
homophobes -- and crusader
against internet gambling -- Rev. Lou Sheldon, founder and
chairman of the Traditional Values Coalition:
Abramoff did more than hire anti-gay
luminaries as Rev. Lou Sheldon (head of the Traditional Values Coalition) and Ralph Reed
(former head of the Christian Coalition [and current candidate for Georgia lieutenant governor])
with money from Abramoff�s clients and front groups to lobby for special
interests. Abramoff also funded an anti-gay group close to the lobbyist�s best
buddy and biggest water-carrier, Rep. Tom
Delay -- the U.S. Family Network
-- with laundered money that has been traced to Russian oil interests. [links
added]
According to the InfoShop article, �Sheldon�s Traditional
Values Coalition received at least $25,000 from an Abramoff client, eLottery --
an online lottery company.� [italics
added]
Warlord
Bush, his domestic spies and his homophobic, anti-equality, special-interest,
hypocritical theocratic supporters have consistently and persistently betrayed
and disgraced the very essence of what America once stood for: equal civil
rights for all citizens regardless of
their race, ethnicity, religion, political affiliation, or sexual orientation.