[Active-l] (NEWS) Today's Cultural Warfare Update
Dara (R'ykandar Korra'ti)
kahvi at murkworks.net
Wed Jun 20 10:34:09 PDT 2007
More catch-up. Lots to do, lots to do. Notible in today's update is
that we finally see activity out of the Concerned Women for America
sockpuppet organisation, the "Culture and Family Institute," headed
by longitme CWA wonk Robert Knight, with help from CWA writer Brian
Fitzpatrick, and a lot more crossover than usual between townhall.com
and CWA.
But now, this morning's news.
Focus on the Family unhappy with New Hampshire civil unions law;
quotes Republican state chair as saying that "New Hampshire voters
did not have civil unions in mind when they gave Gov. Lynch a
Democratic majority last fall";
eHarmony.com founder says "We don't really want to participate in
something that's illegal," referring to not providing matchmaking
service to GBLT people;
Focus on the Family reports, "United Methodists to Weigh
Transsexuality," and friendly-quotes an opponent calling GRS
"mutilation of the body" and opposing the concept of gender identity
disorder;
Focus on the Family wants Texas Supreme Court to issue ruling
recognising fertilised eggs as "persons," which has very specific and
important legal meaning;
FotF condemns opposition to Chief Executive Bush's anti-gay surgeon-
general nominee as religious discrimination, subheading their article
with, "man of faith is under fire for biblical stance on homosexuality";
Exodus International to try to "grow" its network of "ex-
gay"/"conversion therapy" counselors, and its church network; Focus
on the Family also promotes its own ex-gay religious-conversion
programme;
Focus on the Family, other theoconservative groups, want 10
Commandments postal stamps, quotes Roy Moore;
Catholic Church, Mexican Federal government challenge Mexico City
abortion law allowing first-trimester abortion, hope to overturn it;
FotF ad promotes David Limbaugh book _Persecution_, claiming that
Christians are persecuted in the US by the "mythical 'separation of
church and state'" and "tolerance"; this is part of the recurring
theme, that by not being able to impose their religious beliefs on
others via the force of law, they are the ones being persecuted. This
recurring theme has been ongoing since at least the mid-1990s, when I
started monitoring the fundamentalist movement;
Alliance Defense Fund sues New York State to halt New York State's
recognition of same-sex marriages performed in other states and/or
countries;
FotF: Democratic candidates all support abortion rights, stating that
they are all "radical" in "defending the killing of preborn children";
FotF rails against Cannes Film Festival critics for giving "abortion
film" the Palm d'Or;
Pro Life Virginia, Children Need Heroes, StreetPreach, and Paul Hill
Memorial announce Paul Hill Memorial Tour and a four-day event called
"Paul Hill Days"; who is Paul Hill? The assassin of John Britton, a
Florida doctor who provided abortion services, and James Barrett, Dr.
Britton's clinic escort;
Children Need Heroes, one of the sponsours of the above event
celebrating the martyrdom of Paul Hill (their words, not mine) has a
chintzy website, but here's a link to their "Three Heroes" page -
three anti-abortion-rights activists who either bombed women's health
clinics or killed abortion-providing doctors;
LA Times reporter Megan Stack writes on the experience of trying to
exist as a woman in Saudi Arabia, and how the high-level theocratic
government works to eliminate the existence of women from public
life; these are our "allies";
Indiana man beaten to death over a period of several hours and left
in a field to die (before they came back and tried to hide the body)
for being perceived as gay (reportedly he actually wasn't); the
alleged assailants are using the "gay panic" defense; there's been
virtually no press coverage, but http://bookshop.livejournal.com
wrote about it;
Concerned Women for America condemn CDC disease-prevention efforts
targeting GBLT people, saying, "CDC is sponsoring events that foment
the spreading of disease rather than those that prevent disease";
CWA's Matt Barber says, "It is the height of irresponsibility and
incongruity for the CDC, which is tasked with disease control and
prevention, to actively promote and encourage the very homosexual
lifestyle which they admit is most responsible for the spread of
preventable, and often deadly, sexually transmitted disease";
Concerned Women for America's Matt Barber condemns lawsuit against
eHarmony over eHarmony's refusal to server GBLT people; turns out the
founder of eHarmony "has ties to" James Dobson and Focus on the
Family. Matt Barber again calls GBLT people "immoral and disordered,"
and that the intent of the "lefty-lavender-bully-brigade" is "to fill
the vacuum with government mandated celebration of deviant, mutable
and disordered homosexual behaviors"; this article is also run by
townhall.com;
CWA's condemns Massachusetts vote not to eliminate marriage rights
for GBLT couples; most of the article is quoting Matt Barber again;
he's quite the busy fellow;
CWA's Janet Crouse ridicules the idea that anti-gay harassment and/or
pressure has any role on teen suicide; note that CWA is also against
anti-bullying and anti-harassment programmes that work to prevent
bullying or harassment of GBLT teens, even by teachers and staff at
schools; this article also ran on townhall.com;
CWA's Sarah Rode condemns the Equal Rights Amendment;
townhall.com asks "Why Do Gays Hate Religious Freedom?" a question
which is, of course, intended to further the association of anti-gay
activities with religion; making anti-gay politics a core part of
Christian religion has been a continuing de facto project of the
theoconservative movement over the last several years;
WorldNetDaily joins the crowd calling emergency-birth-control (Plan
B, the "morning after" contraceptive pill") an abortifacient, using
the same method of redefining pregnancy to be contraception rather
than implantation, which is a meaning nobody outside the
theoconservative uses. They even use scare-quotes around the word
"contraceptive," which is pretty sad;
Los Angeles Times article on the rift between Focus on the Family (et
al) and Colorado Right to Life (et al) over how to work on ending all
access to abortion;
Michael Medved, who should have stuck to writing good books about bad
movies, blames "TV addiction" for "liberalism"; what's interesting
about this is that he credits the "Culture and Media Institute,"
headed by Robert Knight. Longtime readers will recognise Robert
Knight as a CWA wonk; the Culture and Media Institute is a CWA
sockpuppet organisation. Also extensively quoted is the CMI's Brian
Fitzpatrick, who is also a Concerned Women for America writer, as
seen here:
http://www.cwfa.org/articles/6411/CFI/family/index.htm
----- 1 -----
N.H. Governor Signs Civil-Union Law
Focus on the Family
6-01-2007
http://www.citizenlink.org/CLBriefs/A000004762.cfm
Gov. John Lynch signed a law Thursday establishing civil unions for
same-sex couples in New Hampshire, allowing them to apply for the
same rights as married people as early as January, The Associated
Press reported.
It is the fourth state to offer civil unions and the first to do so
without a court order or threat of one.
“New Hampshire voters did not have civil unions in mind when they
gave Gov. Lynch a Democratic majority last fall,” Republican State
Chairman Fergus Cullen told The Telegraph of Nashua, N.H.
[More at URL]
----- 2 -----
eHarmony Sued for Only Matching Men and Women
Focus on the Family
6-01-2007
http://www.citizenlink.org/CLBriefs/A000004759.cfm
[...]
Linda Carlson of California sued eHarmony in Los Angeles County
Superior Court after she tried to meet a woman on the site this year.
The suit claims eHarmony violates a state law barring discrimination
based on sexual orientation.
Neil Clark Warren, founder of eHarmony, told USA Today that his site
promotes heterosexual marriage, about which he has done extensive
research. He said he does not know enough about gay and lesbian
relationships to do same-sex matching.
It "calls for some very careful thinking. Very careful research," he
told the newspaper. He adds that same-sex marriage is illegal in most
states. "We don't really want to participate in something that's
illegal."
[More at URL]
----- 3 -----
United Methodists to Weigh Transsexuality
Issue will be discussed at 2008 General Conference.
from staff reports
Focus on the Family
6-01-2007
http://www.citizenlink.org/CLNews/A000004764.cfm
The United Methodist Church has reappointed a transsexual pastor in
Maryland; once a female, she had an operation to become a man.
Mark Tooley with the Institute on Religion and Democracy said the
decision to reappoint "Drew Phoenix" – formerly known as Ann Gordon –
to lead St. John’s Church in Baltimore sets a disturbing precedent.
“It is very troubling for the church to give a blessing to what is
essentially a mutilation of the body, which is what a sex-change
operation is," he said, "rather than to encourage and affirm sexual
identity as God gave it.”
[More at URL]
----- 4 -----
Texas Supreme Court May Consider Personhood of Embryos
Are they people or property?
from staff reports
Focus on the Family
6-01-2007
http://www.citizenlink.org/CLNews/A000004765.cfm
A divorced couple is fighting over the future of three frozen embryos
and the Texas Supreme Court is being asked to decide whether the
embryos are community property or life that should be protected by law.
Randy and Augusta Romans divorced in 2002. He wants the embryos
destroyed, she wants them implanted. If the court does not take
action, the embryos will likely remain frozen.
David Prentice, senior fellow for life sciences at the Family
Research Council, said one item the court will likely not be able to
consider is what’s best for the embryos.
“Under Texas law, these embryos aren’t recognized as persons, just as
pieces of property," he told Family News in Focus.
[More at URL]
----- 5 -----
Gay Activist Group Opposes Surgeon General Nominee
Man of faith is under fire for biblical stance on homosexuality.
by Jennifer Mesko, associate editor
Focus on the Family
6-01-2007
http://www.citizenlink.org/CLtopstories/A000004766.cfm
What does faith have to do with being surgeon general? According to
Soulforce, a whole lot.
Last week, President Bush nominated Dr. James W. Holsinger to be
surgeon general. Now Soulforce, a national gay activist group, says
Holsinger needs to check his religion at the hospital doors, the
Lexington (Ky.) Herald-Leader reported.
[...]
"Dr. James Holsinger has demonstrated in the past that he harbors
religious-based prejudice towards homosexuals," Jamie McDaniel,
coordinator of Soulforce Lexington, told the Herald-Leader.
Bob Moffit, director of the Center for Health Policy Studies at The
Heritage Foundation, said there should never be a religious test for
public office.
[More at URL]
----- 6 -----
Exodus International Expands its Reach
The nation's largest Christian outreach to ex-gays is expanding its
vision, network and influence.
Focus on the Family
5-31-2007
http://www.citizenlink.org/CLBriefs/A000004746.cfm
Florida-based Exodus International plans to grow its professional
network of counselors, create an online resource center, streamline
operations within the organization's national network and increase
its influence on public policy issues.
[...]
Last summer, Exodus launched the Exodus Church Network, which
includes 40 churches.
"Issues related to homosexuality are some of the most culturally
prominent of our day," said Melissa Fryrear, director of the gender
issues department at Focus on the Family.
[...]
Focus on the Family's Love Won Out ministry also promotes the truth
that change is possible for those who experience same-sex
attractions. The next Love Won Out conference is Aug. 4 in Portland,
Ore.
FOR MORE INFORMATION
Visit Exodus and Love Won Out on the Web.
----- 7 -----
Faith Groups Press for Ten Commandments Stamp
First request was rejected as "religious."
from staff reports
Focus on the Family
5-30-2007
http://www.citizenlink.org/CLNews/A000004739.cfm
Faith-based groups are once again asking the U.S. Postal Service to
publish a stamp honoring the Ten Commandments.
An alliance led by Faith and Action and the Christian Defense
Coalition today presented petitions from all 50 states asking for the
stamp.
[More at URL]
----- 8 -----
Mexico Supreme Court Will Hear Abortion Challenge
Focus on the Family
5-30-2007
http://www.citizenlink.org/CLBriefs/A000004736.cfm
A Mexico City law that allows abortion in the first 12 weeks of
pregnancy is being challenged before the nation's Supreme Court.
Abortions will continue, pending the ruling, The Associated Press
reported.
The debate over abortion pits Mexico City's leftist government
against conservative President Felipe Calderón and the Roman Catholic
Church. The legal challenges were filed by two federal agencies,
according to the report.
[More at URL]
----- 9 -----
Persecution
How Liberals are Waging War Against Christians
David Limbaugh
Hardcover
http://resources.family.org/product/id/101737.do?code=CE07FCZL
Author David Limbaugh exposes the subtle but pervasive discrimination
against biblical Christianity in our culture. Using real, sometimes
shocking, examples from Hollywood, public schools and other venues,
he shows how terms like "tolerance" and the mythical "separation of
church and state" have been used to portray Christianity as
repressive, ignorant and offensive. This is a call to action for
those who want to exercise their right to influence popular culture
and find true religious freedom.
[More at URL]
----- 10 -----
Lawsuit Challenges New York's Same-Sex Benefits
Experts say new regulations are part of an agenda coming down from
the governor.
from staff reports
Focus on the Family
http://www.citizenlink.org/CLNews/A000004733.cfm
New York's Department of Civil Service broadened the term "spouse"
earlier this month to allow gay state employees who were "married" in
Massachusetts or in another country to receive health- and life-
insurance benefits.
Stephen Hayford, a spokesman for the Coalition to Save Marriage in
New York, said it's part of an agenda coming down from the top.
[...]
The Alliance Defense Fund (ADF) has filed a suit challenging the
state's position.
"We're asking the court to issue an order finding that the acts of
the Department of Civil Service are illegal under New York law, and
to void them," said Brian Raum, an ADF attorney. "It's simply an
attempt by special interests and political partisans to change the
fundamental definition of marriage."
[More at URL]
----- 11 -----
Democratic Presidential Candidates All Favor Abortion
Focus on the Family
5-29-2007
http://www.citizenlink.org/CLBriefs/A000004729.cfm
A survey of presidential hopefuls by the pro-abortion group NARAL
found that all of the Democratic contenders support abortion.
According to LifeNews.com, NARAL President Nancy Keenan wrote in an e-
mail to supporters that she was proud her group was the "first pro-
choice organization to provide statements directly from these
candidates."
[...]
"If you take a closer look at what these candidates stand for, you
see how radical they are in defending the killing of preborn
children," she said. "Senator Clinton and former Senator Edwards
voted against federal bans on partial birth abortion and all three
condemned the recent Supreme Court ruling upholding a federal law
against that gruesome act. They support unrestricted abortion without
limit, and that's not what most Americans want in public policy."
[More at URL]
----- 12 -----
Abortion Film Takes Top Award at Cannes Film Festival
Focus on the Family
5-29-2007
http://www.citizenlink.org/CLBriefs/A000004731.cfm
A panel of critics at the Cannes Film Festival in France awarded the
coveted Palm d'Or award to a dark film that follows a woman who is
trying to obtain an illegal abortion in communist Romania.
4 Months, 3 Weeks & 2 Days is named after the age of the baby when it
is aborted.
[...]
"From what I hear, it's very dark and morbid," he said about 4
Months. "It's very telling that the Palm d'Or is given by the critics."
[...]
"It shows the great divide between Americana, the average citizen of
the U.S., and what they believe, as opposed to this elite group of
critics who love darkness," Severino said. "They want to see the
worst of the human condition. I think people want to see the best of
the human condition."
[More at URL]
[Ed. Note: a lot of the elided portion of the article are pushing the
"life and pro-family theme" of a film called _Bella_, which
apparently did well at the Toronto Film Festival this year. That URL
is here:
http://www.bellathemovie.com/
]
----- 13 -----
Paul HIll Memorial
"Well done, thou good and faithful servant." -- Matthew 25:23
May 17, 2007
http://www.ezekielsystems.com/paulhillmemorial/
Dear Friends of Paul Hill,
After much discussion and prayer, Drew Heiss and I are announcing an
event to honor Paul Hill on the 13th anniversary of his actions in
defense of preborn babies in Pensacola. Memorial events will be held
in Milwaukee, Wisconsin to honor him as God’s man and our hero.
Paul Hill Days
July 26th – 29th of 2007
Why Milwaukee? Why not? There are people here who recognize Paul
Hill as a hero, and we would love to welcome others from around the
country who share our belief. Hopefully, in the future, others will
host events in their cities.
[...]
On July 29th, 1994, Paul Hill boldly defended 31 babies from
unspeakable violence by killing a paid assassin and his bodyguard.
He was arrested, given a sham trial, and executed as a martyr. On
the 13th anniversary of Paul Hill’s act of love and mercy, memorial
events will be held in Milwaukee, Wisconsin to honor him as God’s man
and our hero.
[...]
Sponsored By:
Paul Hill Memorial
Children Need Heroes
StreetPreach
Pro Life Virginia
[More at URL]
----- 14 -----
Children Need Heroes
Three American Heroes
Online as of 20 June 2007
http://www.childrenneedheroes.com/ [Click on "Three Heroes" link in
sidebar on left]
Three American Heroes
Paul Hill was a Presbyterian pastor who proclaimed boldly the
Biblical duty to defend the preborn as we would want to be defended.
On July 29th, 1994, he lovingly protected 31 preborn children in
Pensacola from a paid assassin, by killing the abortionist who was
set on butchering them. He was tried as a murderer in a sham trial,
never being allowed to say why he killed the abortionist. He was
executed on September 3rd, 2003. His final words were: “May God
help you to protect the unborn as you would want to be protected.”
[...]
Shelley Shannon
Shelley Shannon was a veteran of many rescues. In 1994 she became
convinced that it was Biblical to use force to protect innocent
children from murder. She successfully burned down several abortion
clinics. She shot a notorious Kansas child killer in an attempt to
disable him from killing innocent children. She was sentenced to 11
years for attempted murder. She was later sentenced to 20 years for
arson.
[...]
James Kopp
Known as “The Atomic Dog,” James Kopp was a long-time rescuer. A
Roman Catholic, he was a member of the “Lambs of Christ.” Famous for
his “lock and block” rescues, he was an inspiration to rescuers
across the country. In 1998 a notorious Buffalo NY abortionist was
shot and killed. James Kopp was charged and pro-life friends helped
him avoid arrest. He was arrested in France in 2001. He was
convicted of 2nd degree murder after claiming he was only trying to
disable the abortionist from further killing.
[More at URL]
----- 15 -----
In Saudi Arabia, a view from behind the veil
As a woman in the male-dominated kingdom, Times reporter Megan Stack
quietly fumed beneath her abaya. Even beyond its borders, her
experience taints her perception of the sexes.
By Megan K. Stack, Times Staff Writer
June 6, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-
women6jun06,0,5491632,full.story?coll=la-home-center
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia — THE hem of my heavy Islamic cloak trailed over
floors that glistened like ice. I walked faster, my eyes fixed on a
familiar, green icon. I hadn't seen a Starbucks in months, but there
it was, tucked into a corner of a fancy shopping mall in the Saudi
capital. After all those bitter little cups of sludgy Arabic coffee,
here at last was an improbable snippet of home — caffeinated,
comforting, American.
[...]
He didn't tell me what I would learn later: Starbucks had another,
unmarked door around back that led to a smaller espresso bar, and a
handful of tables smothered by curtains. That was the "family"
section. As a woman, that's where I belonged. I had no right to mix
with male customers or sit in plain view of passing shoppers. Like
the segregated South of a bygone United States, today's Saudi Arabia
shunts half the population into separate, inferior and usually
invisible spaces.
[...]
The rules are different here. The same U.S. government that
heightened public outrage against the Taliban by decrying the
mistreatment of Afghan women prizes the oil-slicked Saudi friendship
and even offers wan praise for Saudi elections in which women are
banned from voting. All U.S. fast-food franchises operating here, not
just Starbucks, make women stand in separate lines. U.S.-owned hotels
don't let women check in without a letter from a company vouching for
her ability to pay; women checking into hotels alone have long been
regarded as prostitutes.
[...]
ONE glaring spring day, when the hot winds raced in off the plains
and the sun blotted everything to white, I stood outside a Riyadh
bank, sweating in my black cloak while I waited for a friend. The
sidewalk was simmering, but I had nowhere else to go. As a woman, I
was forbidden to enter the men's half of the bank to fetch him.
Traffic screamed past on a nearby highway. The winds tugged at the
layers of black polyester. My sunglasses began to slip down my
glistening nose.
The door clattered open, and I looked up hopefully. But no, it was a
security guard. And he was stomping straight at me, yelling in
Arabic. I knew enough vocabulary to glean his message: He didn't want
me standing there. I took off my shades, fixed my blue eyes on him
blankly and finally turned away as if puzzled. I think of this as
playing possum.
He disappeared again, only to reemerge with another security guard.
This man was of indistinct South Asian origin and had an English
vocabulary. He looked like a pit bull — short, stocky and teeth
flashing as he barked: "Go! Go! You can't stand here! The men can
SEE! The men can SEE!"
I looked down at him and sighed. I was tired. "Where do you want me
to go? I have to wait for my friend. He's inside." But he was still
snarling and flashing those teeth, arms akimbo. He wasn't interested
in discussions.
"Not here. NOT HERE! The men can SEE you!" He flailed one arm toward
the bank.
[More at URL]
----- 16 -----
Perhaps I could describe what I'm feeling right now as "sudden heat."
Draco dormiens nunquam titillandus
2007-06-19
http://bookshop.livejournal.com/834653.html
I want to tell you all a story.
[...]
90 minutes southeast of Bloomington there is a town called
Crothersville, almost literally a four-way stop with its own Stop-In
Liquor store. Crothersville, as tiny as it is, made the national news
two years ago after a ten-year-old girl was kidnapped, sexually
assualted, and murdered. Everyone in Crothersville will tell you that
everyone in Crothersville knows everyone else.
On the afternoon of April 12, 2007, a man named Aaron Hall (nicknamed
"Shorty" because of his slight build and miniscule stature - he
barely topped 5'4" and weighed around 100 pounds) met some fellow
Crothersville natives, coming back from their Stop-In at the liquor
store. 19-year-old Garrett Gray,18-year-old Coleman King, and 21-year-
old Jamie Hendricks picked Hall up and went back to Gray's house,
where they proceeded to drink and hang out.
From every indication from sparse news reports and word of mouth, it
began as a verbal insult, maybe to Gray's dead mother, maybe to
King's heterosexuality, maybe to nothing at all.
The 'why' will probably never be fully known to us. Whatever the
details, Hall said the wrong thing. And sparked in Gray and King what
the official Initial Hearing report termed a "sudden heat."
A "sudden heat" which would last throughout the next 24 hours.
Note: The following descriptions are graphic and disturbing, and may
not be appropriate for sensitive readers.
[More at URL]
----- 17 -----
"Men for Hire" and "Booty Call": The CDC and Your Tax Dollars
Some shocking uses of your money by the CDC.
Concerned Women for America
6/18/2007
By Sara Rode
http://www.cwfa.org/articles/13193/CFI/family/index.htm
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is asking for more of
your money but using it for purposes anathema to the majority of the
American people. Fortunately for American taxpayers, Senator Tom
Coburn (R-Oklahoma) is demanding responsible spending from
legislators and government agencies. Sen. Coburn's hard work in
creating oversight in government spending has revealed some shocking
uses of your money by the CDC.
[...]
It is counter-productive to encourage homosexual behavior through
seminars that teach attendees how to flirt more effectively,
encourage homosexual pornography and advise hiring prostitutes rather
than going to "sex clubs." The CDC simultaneously reports statistics
that reveal homosexual men as the highest risk group for STDs:
"Homosexuals comprise the single largest exposure category of the
more than 600,000 males with AIDS in the United States. As of
December 1999, 'men who have sex with men' and 'men who have sex with
men and inject drugs' together accounted for 64 percent of the
cumulative total of male AIDS cases."1 This is an outrageous figure
considering that homosexual men account for only 1-3% of the male
population, but represent 64% of AIDS cases. The CDC also reports,
"Studies of MSM (men who have sex with men) treated in STD clinics
show rates of infection as high as 36 percent in major cities."2
Unfortunately, the CDC is combating the spread of AIDS by funding
homosexually explicit events and telling participants to use a
condom. It does not seem to be working.
Matt Barber, CWA's Policy Director for Cultural Issues, found it mind-
boggling. "It is the height of irresponsibility and incongruity for
the CDC, which is tasked with disease control and prevention, to
actively promote and encourage the very homosexual lifestyle which
they admit is most responsible for the spread of preventable, and
often deadly, sexually transmitted disease," said Barber. "What's
next? Is the CDC going to use our tax dollars to sponsor a cigarette
smoke-a-thon fundraiser for the American Lung Association? Are they
going to encourage people to avoid liver disease by drinking a fifth
of Jack Daniels per day? Someone at the CDC needs to be held
accountable for this."
[More at URL]
----- 18 -----
Queerly Beloved – “Gay” Activists Sue eHarmony
By Matt Barber
Wednesday, June 6, 2007
Send an email to Matt Barber
http://www.townhall.com/columnists/MattBarber/2007/06/06/
queerly_beloved_–_“gay”_activists_sue_eharmony
Luigi is living the American dream. He’s finally saved up enough
money to come to America — the land of freedom and opportunity — to
pursue his lifelong goal of owning and operating his own pizzeria.
Based on his grandmother’s old family recipe, his pizza pie quickly
becomes known as the best in town.
Bruce is hungry. As he strolls down the boulevard, he decides he’s
got a taste for Chinese food. Bruce walks past three Chinese
restaurants and goes into Luigi’s. Bruce has seen too many episodes
of The Sopranos, so he doesn’t like Italians. “I’ll have an order of
Egg Foo Yung,” Bruce says to Luigi. “Egg Foo who?” Luigi replies.
Bruce promptly sues Luigi for unspecified damages, seeking an
injunction to force him to add Egg Foo Yung to his menu.
[...]
Author and clinical psychologist Dr. Neil Clark Warren is founder of
eHarmony.com, Inc. Dr. Warren is an evangelical Christian with
former business ties to the Christian organization Focus on the
Family. eHarmony’s stated goal is to “[build] happy and lasting
relationships all over the world.” The company promotes traditional
marriage by matching prospective spouses based on “‘29 Dimensions of
Compatibility’ found in thousands of successful relationships.” Dr.
Warren has indicated in multiple press accounts that his expertise is
limited to heterosexual relationships, and for that reason alone,
eHarmony focuses on promoting traditional marriage.
[...]
Just as Bruce doesn’t like Italians, many on the left don’t like
Christians. They don’t like that Christians believe that there are
clear lines of demarcation between right and wrong. They don’t like
that both the Bible and natural law unequivocally condemn homosexual
behaviors as immoral and disordered. They don’t like hearing the
Good News that a Redeemer loves them so much He offers us freedom
from our sin. And for that reason, they don’t like Dr. Neil Clark
Warren, and they don’t like eHarmony. Oh, and the fact that Dr.
Warren is a Christian with ties to Dr. James Dobson’s Focus on the
Family — well, that just drives ‘em plain batty.
So, eHarmony becomes the latest casualty of the lefty-lavender-bully-
brigade as they seek to rid the world of contrived and twisted
notions of “heterosexism” and “homophobia.” The plan is underway.
The intent is to fill the vacuum with government mandated celebration
of deviant, mutable and disordered homosexual behaviors. (The terms
“homophobia” and “heterosexism” are made up word weapons used by the
left against anyone who agrees with the traditional values model of
human sexuality or who doesn’t unconditionally accept homosexual
behavior.)
[More at URL]
----- 19 -----
Massachusetts Lawmakers Betray Constituents on "Same-Sex Marriage"
Concerned Women for America
6/15/2007
http://www.cwfa.org/articles/13180/MEDIA/family/index.htm
Washington, D.C. — Despite broad support and almost two hundred
thousand petition signatures, Massachusetts lawmakers thumbed their
noses at constituents on Thursday and voted by just over a three-to-
one margin (151-45) to prevent the citizens of Massachusetts from
voting on a constitutional amendment in 2008 which, if passed, would
have properly restored the definition of marriage to one man and one
woman.
Addressing the vote, Matt Barber, Policy Director for Cultural Issues
with Concerned Women for America (CWA), said, “In its 2003 Goodridge
v. Dept. of Public Health decision, the Massachusetts Supreme
Judicial Court circumvented the constitutional process and
arbitrarily imposed ‘same-sex marriage’ on the people of
Massachusetts through a brazen and contemptuous act of judicial
activism. Now members of the liberal Massachusetts state legislature
have surrendered to the demands of the radical homosexual lobby and
have betrayed their own constituents and the democratic process by
precluding them from weighing in on this crucial issue.
“What are they afraid of? Well, we know the answer to that question.
They mustn’t allow the voters to decide on marriage because ‘gay
marriage’ proponents almost universally lose when the voters have
their say.
“Thousands of years of history, every major world religion and good
ole’ fashioned common sense dictate that legitimate marriage exists
only between a male and a female and that it is a sacred and
fundamental cornerstone to any healthy society.
“After the Massachusetts Supreme Court — through judicial fiat —
miraculously divined that the framers of the state constitution
really intended that Patrick Henry could marry Henry Patrick, many in
Massachusetts — embarrassed by the court’s unprecedented leftist
extremism — felt that their state had become a laughingstock and
initiated the constitutional process in an effort to undo this
insanity. Although this ballot initiative wasn’t perfect in that it
would have grandfathered existing ‘same-sex marriages’ in the state,
the citizens of Massachusetts should have at least been allowed to
speak. But instead, Massachusetts lawmakers have arrogantly and
disdainfully told their own constituents to shut up and go home. This
just underscores the need for a federal constitutional amendment
which would protect the true definition of marriage as being between
one man and one woman,” concluded Barber.
For Information Contact:
Jennifer Fedor
(202) 488-7000
media.cwfa.org
----- 20 -----
Talking Points: The HPV Vaccine
Concerned Women for America
2/12/2007
By Penny Harrington
http://www.cwfa.org/articles/12333/CWA/misc/index.htm
CWA urges lawmakers to resist mandating this vaccine.
[...]
5. The HPV vaccine offers false security. There is concern that a
vaccine involving STDs may give those receiving the immunization a
false sense of protection against such diseases, particularly if they
are not adequately informed about the vaccine's limitations. It is
important, but unfortunately not required, that recipients receive a
strong abstinence message so that they understand that the only real
protection from the broad range of STDs comes from refraining from
sexual activity prior to marriage.
6. The American College of Pediatricians agrees that legislative
mandates are inappropriate. The American College of Pediatricians
released a statement on January 22, 2007, showing their support for
the HPV vaccine but their opposition to measures that would mandate
such a vaccine. It reads, "The American College of Pediatricians is
opposed to any legislation which would require HPV vaccination for
school attendance. Excluding children from school for refusal to be
vaccinated for a disease spread only by penetrating vaginal
intercourse is a serious, precedent-setting action that trespasses on
the right of parents to make medical decisions for their children as
well as on the rights of the children to attend school. In addition,
this vaccine prevents a disease which is exclusively sexually
transmitted; mandating it as early as 9 years of age places the
medical provider in an ethical dilemma. First, the administration of
the vaccine requires explanation to both the parent and the child.
Parents may have chosen not to introduce the subject of sexual
activity to their nine year olds due to their physical and emotional
immaturity. Also, most 9-12 year old children are not sexually
active; many have not entered puberty. Forcing a parent to forsake
his/her better judgment and discuss this information with the child
would be inappropriate and unnecessarily intrusive."
[Ed. Note: The "American College of Pediatricians" is a
fundamentalist proxy organisation with an impressive-sounding name.
Their other concerns include - and this is top of their web page
today - banning marriage rights for same-sex couples, and banning
embryonic stem-cell research. This is a standard tactic of the
theoconservative movement. See earlier Cultural Warfare Updates for
more on the ACP and on similar sock-puppetry.]
[More at URL]
----- 21 -----
Teen Suicide: A Matter of "Sexual Orientation" or Sex Abuse?
Concerned Women for America
6/13/2007
By Janice Shaw Crouse
http://www.cwfa.org/articles/13178/BLI/dotcommentary/index.htm
Some activists claim that issues of confused sexual identity are
driving the documented increase in teen suicide attempts. The latest
issue of a publication from the Journal of the American Medical
Association, Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine (APAM),
June 4, 2007 begs to differ.
[...]
The activist groups, not letting facts stand in their way, continue
to claim, based on a flawed 1989 study that has been totally
discredited, that 30 percent of all teens who attempt suicide are
homosexuals. Instead, teen suicide reports from the major
psychological and pediatric associations either do not even mention
sexual identity or mention it near the bottom of a long list of other
risk factors associated with teen suicide. Other teen suicide factors
- family breakup through divorce, alcohol or drug abuse, and family
dysfunction - are mentioned in all the major health organization
publications as the main factors in teen suicide.
[...]
Viewing teen suicide through the distorted lens of the homosexual
activists puts large numbers of teens at risk. Those who insist that
the problem of teen suicide is primarily among teens who struggle
over their sexual identity overlook the vast majority of potential
teen suicide victims -- those who have other emotional or
psychological issues, those who abuse drugs and other substances, and
especially those who have suffered sexual violence and abuse. The
problems of emotionally and physically battered teens must be faced
and their minds and bodies healed; otherwise, the rate of teen
suicides will continue to rise.
[More at URL]
----- 22 -----
The Equal Rights Amendment: A Case for Rejection
Concerned Women for America
6/8/2007
By Sarah Rode
http://www.cwfa.org/articles/13163/CWA/life/index.htm
The Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) endeavors to remove all differences,
social, biological and sexual, between males and females. The
proposed Amendment gives the courts enormous flexibility in
interpreting the Amendment as judges deem appropriate. Several states
that have ratified a state ERA have been subject to judicial activism
on the most contentious issues. It paves the way for homosexual
marriage, federally funded abortion, the inclusion of women in the
draft and de-segregated prisons. This Amendment is not about rights;
it is about suppressing differences between males and females and
promoting a gender-neutral agenda.
[...]
Organizations like 4ERA and NOW claim that the ERA would not impact
laws regarding the draft, same-sex marriage or federally funded
abortion.6 Senator Hatch states the irony of their proposal: "It is
inadequate for ERA proponents to argue that all sorts of 'common
sense' exceptions will be made to the ERA when this is already the
law today. The courts will always assume (properly) that the intent
of a new constitutional Amendment is to change the law. If the ERA
would maintain in force the 'common sense' exceptions of present law,
it would not be needed." The most accurate method of discovering how
this Constitutional Amendment would impact law is to look at the
impact state ERAs have had on state laws.
Maryland passed a state Equal Rights Amendment in 1972. In the
Baltimore Circuit Court, Judge M. Brooke Murdock ruled that the ERA
made banning same-sex marriage unconstitutional:
The mere creation of a sex-based classification triggers application
of the Equal Rights Amendment, under which distinctions drawn based
on sex are suspect and subject to strict scrutiny. Because this Court
does not find that section 2-201 is narrowly tailored to serve any
compelling governmental interests, this Court must conclude that the
statutory ban on same-sex marriage is unconstitutional.7
Hawaii's State Supreme Court also ruled in favor of same-sex marriage
after activist Bill Woods "proposed that the state's refusal to issue
a license presumptuously violates Hawaii's Equal Rights Amendment
(ERA) which bars discrimination on the basis of sex."8 Other state
courts, such as Washington and Massachusetts, have ruled that the ERA
does not guarantee same-sex marriage. This presents a new problem:
The issue of marriage would be determined by the opinions of a few
judges, not a higher standard or even the will of the people.
[More at URL]
----- 23 -----
Why Do Gays Hate Religious Freedom?
By Harry R. Jackson, Jr.
Monday, June 18, 2007
http://www.townhall.com/columnists/HarryRJacksonJr/2007/06/18/
why_do_gays_hate_religious_freedom
I was excited last Friday when I got the word that I was featured in
an extensive article in USA Today. The voice on the other end of the
phone also informed me that a sizable picture of me would also
appear. Needless to say it only took but a few minutes for me to get
a copy of the paper in my hand. As I read the article, I was further
flattered by the fact that the writer included the story of my father
being threatened by a Florida State Trooper in a 1950s hate crime.
[...]
Both gays and blacks should get justice in America, but we cannot
allow either group to receive special privileges at the expense of
another group of Americans. If the loopholes in this legislation are
not closed, Christians and Bible-teaching churches could become
victims of a strange brand of reverse discrimination. These actions
are tantamount to the gay community saying, ”Freedom for me, but
bondage for you.” This attitude is just not consistent with America’s
ideals.
Despite the fact that legal experts like the Alliance Defense Fund
and the Becket Fund for Religious Liberties confirm the legal
legitimacy of my concerns, gay activists quoted in the US Today
article called my concerns "completely bogus.” Their hope is to
paint all outspoken leaders of faith as narrow minded Neanderthals
and bigots who are out of touch with the will of the nation. Nothing
could be further from the truth.
Major Christian ministries around the nation have begun to lift their
voices to join in a chorus of concern about the potential muzzling of
our pulpits. Radio and television ministries are trumpeting warnings
to the faithful. Many have produced special programs to inform the
average Christian citizen about the impending dangers to their
freedoms. As a result, there is a ground swell of popular opposition
to the Senate’s proposed Hate Crimes Bill emerging from grass roots
America.
[More at URL]
----- 24 -----
MATTERS OF LIFE AND DEATH
Proposal could fine pharmacists $500,000
Christians ordered to provide abortifacients on demand
WorldNetDaily
June 8, 2007
http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=56071
Democrats in Congress have proposed a plan to fine pharmacies up to
$500,000 if the pharmacists follow their conscience and decline to
dispense abortifacient chemicals.
"Pharmacists are professionals, not vending machines," said Wendy
Wright, president of Concerned Women for America. "The FDA has been
known to make mistakes in approving drugs, and doctors have made
mistakes in prescribing. Pharmacists provide a line of defense to
ensure that patients' lives and health are protected and can make
patients aware of ethical concerns.
[...]
The new plan, called the "Access to Birth Control Act," is being
pushed forward by U.S. Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., and Sen. Frank
Lautenberg, D-N.J.
The CWFA said the bill would simply repeal a pharmacist's fundamental
right to make ethical decisions. It already has been referred to the
U.S. House Committee on Energy and Commerce for action.
"This bill would force pharmacists to distribute the controversial
morning-after pill, … trampling on any professional or ethical
concerns," the organization said.
[...]
At issue is the Plan B morning-after "contraceptive." It essentially
is a very high dosage of birth-control chemicals taken within 72
hours of unprotected sex to prevent ovulation or implantation. If
ovulation is prevented, no egg is fertilized and no pregnancy occurs.
But if ovulation has taken place and the egg is fertilized, the
morning-after pill works to block implantation by the early embryo in
the mother's womb. The embryo is aborted, making dispensing
prescriptions for the pill a matter of conscience for pro-life
pharmacists.
[More at URL]
----- 25 -----
For some, antiabortion is all or nothing
Those who want an all-out ban accuse some of the biggest groups in
the movement of moral bankruptcy for focusing on incremental change.
By Stephanie Simon, Times Staff Writer
June 6, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/politics/la-na-
abort6jun06,1,2430940.story?track=crosspromo&coll=la-news-politics-
national&ctrack=1&cset=true
As they gathered Tuesday for a national strategy session,
antiabortion activists faced an unexpected revolt in their own ranks.
Some of the biggest groups in the movement, including Focus on the
Family and National Right to Life, are under attack from fellow
activists who accuse them of turning a godly cause into a money-
grubbing industry.
[...]
They are making their position clear in full-page ads that will run
in conservative publications over the next few months. They are
urging donors to stop contributing to groups that focus on making it
more difficult — but not impossible — for women to obtain abortions.
[...]
However, the ruling also explicitly endorsed other methods of
abortion; at one point, the justices explained that doctors could
avoid prosecution by killing the fetus with a lethal injection in the
womb before suctioning out its brain.
To Rohrbough, president of Colorado Right to Life, that decision was
nothing short of evil — an endorsement of murder. He was appalled
that his fellow activists not only claimed the ruling as a victory,
but also used it as a fundraising tool, appealing to donors for more
money to keep the momentum going.
[More at URL]
----- 26 -----
Why TV Addiction Links to Liberalism
By Michael Medved
Wednesday, June 13, 2007
http://www.townhall.com/columnists/MichaelMedved/2007/06/13/
why_tv_addiction_links_to_liberalism
Does heavy TV viewing push people toward more liberal opinions? Or is
it the impact of pre-existing leftist attitudes that lead viewers to
invest more of their lives on television?
Analysts may argue about causation, but there’s no real doubt about
correlation: an important new study from the Culture and Media
Institute shows that those who describe themselves as “heavy” TV
viewers embrace distinctly liberal attitudes on a range of crucial
issues, placing them well to the left of those who report “light” TV
viewing.
[Editor's note: the Culture and Media Institute is a sockpuppet of
Concerned Women for America, headed by CWA wonk Robert Knight.]
More information about the Active-l
mailing list