Rep. Randy Forbes to Raise Cash for Anti-Gay Hate Group on Friday
While some members of Congress will spend Friday working to end the government shutdown, Rep. Randy Forbes plans to raise money for the American Family Association, an . As the Virginian-Pilot , Forbes is 鈥渟cheduled to speak at a $40-a-plate American Family Association luncheon鈥 at the Values Voter Summit that begins Friday in Washington.
That鈥檚 why Faithful America, a progressive Christian organization, launched a TV ad this week calling on Forbes to cancel the appearance. :
Faithful America that Forbes, who founded the Congressional Prayer Caucus, 鈥渉olds himself up as a Christian leader鈥 but 鈥渢here's nothing Christian about the hateful rhetoric of the American Family Association.鈥 In a related effort, the Southern Poverty Law Center joined with Faithful America, GLAAD, Human Rights Campaign, the NAACP, the National Council of La Raza, and People For the American Way to call on public officials, including Forbes, to avoid the Values Voter Summit altogether. Read the groups' letter [].
When asked about the letter by the Richmond Times-Dispatch, Forbes spokesperson Dean Petrone the American Family Association, saying that the group was being criticized for opposing same-sex marriage. He also suggested that the group鈥檚 critics were 鈥渆ngaging in highly inflammatory rhetoric that diminishes civil public discourse.鈥
Both charges are laughable. There wouldn鈥檛 have been a letter or TV ad directed at his boss if the American Family Association actually held traditional views. Instead the group demonizes and lies about LGBT people, going so far as to for the Holocaust. The group's chief spokesman, Bryan Fischer, has said, 鈥淗omosexuality gave us Adolph Hitler, and homosexuals in the military gave us the Brown Shirts, the Nazi war machine and six million dead Jews.鈥
Forbes has until Friday afternoon to decide where he stands. In the meantime, Faithful America is continuing to run its ad and collect signatures.
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