Anti-LGBT Roundup of Events and Activities 6.26.17
The following is a list of activities and events of anti-LGBT organizations. Organizations listed as anti-LGBT hate groups are designated with an asterisk.
C-Fam* (Center for Family and Human Rights)
Lisa Correnti of C-Fam* (Center for Family and Human Rights) claimed in a June 22 email from the organization that the group had been in Cancun engaged in negotiations during the 47th General Assembly for the (OAS). C-Fam's update stated聽that, 鈥淟atin American countries pushed back this week against further promotion of gender ideology in a resolution.鈥
鈥淕ender ideology鈥 is a being used to combat equal rights for LGBT people and women in the global arena. C-Fam stated聽that the 2017聽OAS proposal for rights went beyond agreed-upon language, and included intersex traits as a protected category and called for condemnation of 鈥渦ndefined鈥 homophobia and transphobia.
The OAS adopted the same language it has been using for years in its human rights resolution, according to C-Fam.
C-Fam has a long history of anti-LGBT and anti-choice lobbying at the United Nations. 鈥 Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute 鈥 and the extreme anti-choice group Human Life International and Human Life International-Canada as a way to gain consultative status at the U.N.聽HLI was founded in 1981 and quickly garnered a reputation for its extremist rhetoric (like approving of sniper attacks on doctors who perform abortions) and actions, and for linking the abortion industry to Jews.
CAFHRI was founded as a legally distinct entity from HLI and HLI-Canada, but was closely tied to both and initially required to report to them. Over the years it聽apparently has evolved into its own entity doing its own anti-LGBT and anti-choice work.
Austin Ruse is the current president of C-Fam, which is . The group garnered press in March when it was revealed that Lisa Correnti, the group鈥檚 executive vice president, was named by the State Department to the U.S. delegation to the U.N.'s聽annual Committee on the Status of Women. Ruse has made inflammatory statements in the past, including calling for left-wing professors to be 鈥溾 and homosexuality to pederasty.
Ruse , claiming that 鈥渋t鈥檚 a good thing that there are laws against proselytizing the homosexual lifestyle to schoolchildren鈥 and saying聽that most Americans would be fine with a ban on pro-LGBT speech.
Family Research Council*
Radio Roundup: FRC president Tony Perkins does a daily radio show, 鈥淲ashington Watch.鈥 Guests for the June 8-23 episodes聽included:聽Rep. Mark Meadows (R-NC); Mayor Ben Baker (Neosho, MO); Robert Spencer, director of the anti-Muslim Jihad Watch*; Rep. Chris Smith (R-NJ); Rep. Ted Poe (R-TX); Everett Piper, president of Oklahoma Wesleyan University (guest hosted June 9 and 21); Rep. Clay Higgins (R-LA); Rep. Louie Gohmert (R-TX); Rep. Matt Manweller (R-WA); Rep. Mike Johnson (R-LA); Elaine Donnelly, Center for Military Readiness; Rep. Ron DeSantis (R-FL); Terry Jeffrey, editor-in-chief of CNS News; Sen. James Lankford (R-OK); Rep. Steve Russell (R-OK); Rep. Doug Lamborn (R-CO); Mat Staver, president of the anti-LGBT Liberty Counsel*; Tim Graham, director of media analysis at Media Research Center; Thomas Brejcha, Thomas More Society; Rep. Andy Biggs (R-AZ); Roger Clegg, Center for Equal Opportunity; Todd Starnes, Fox News columnist; Rep. Jody Hice (R-GA); Greg Baylor, Alliance Defending Freedom*; Sandy Rios of the American Family Association* (guest-hosted June 22); Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH); and Mark Krikorian, Center for Immigration Studies*
Florida Family Policy Council
Attorney John Stemberger, president of the Florida Family Policy Council, will be speaking at Tea Party Manatee鈥檚 鈥溾 event at Mixon Farms in Bradenton, Florida, June 27. According to an email FFPC sent out, Stemberger鈥檚 speech is titled 鈥淪tanding Alone鈥 and will focus on how ordinary people can become extraordinary and change history.
Stemberger also serves on the board of , an anti-LGBT alternative to the Boy Scouts that launched in 2014. On its (web archive), Jewish churches and organizations are precluded from chartering Trail Life troops and Jewish adults would not be allowed to serve as leaders because they would be 鈥渦nable鈥 to sign the statement of faith (Christian), though Jewish youth are allowed to participate.
Furthermore, the group's original site said that聽any boy who is 鈥減art of or advocating for the Gay Movement鈥 was also excluded from participation, though boys 鈥渟truggling鈥 with homosexuality and who confided such to a leader could participate and Trail Life would help counsel him about same-sex attraction. The website no longer includes that language, and instead now says that Christian men and women can serve as leaders as long as they sign the statement of faith and abide by membership standards. The site no longer mentions homosexuality.
Focus on the Family
Vice President Mike Pence June 23 in Colorado Springs at its fortieth anniversary gathering, becoming the first vice president to address the group.
In a speech 鈥渟teeped in Biblical imagery,鈥 according to the Denver Post, Pence assured FOTF that it has 鈥渁n unwavering ally鈥 in President Trump. Pence promised that the new healthcare bill would defund Planned Parenthood (PP), though PP . Rather, PP鈥檚 federal funding comes from reimbursements through Medicare and Title X. There is no 鈥渒eep Planned Parenthood running鈥 part of the federal government.
Furthermore, some 60 percent of PP patients rely on public health programs like Medicaid and Title X for preventative and primary care, so right-wing calls to 鈥渄efund Planned Parenthood鈥 actually mean they will attempt to block patients who rely on public healthcare programs from getting their care at Planned Parenthood clinics.
Pence has a of anti-LGBT and . He has linked gay relationships to societal collapse, supported the harmful and pseudoscientific practice of 鈥渆x-gay鈥 therapy (he wanted to cut funding for AIDS/HIV in order to fund conversion therapy), and opposed an anti-discrimination law that would have banned discrimination against LGBT people in the workplace. As governor of Indiana, he also signed the state's so-called 鈥淩eligious Freedom Restoration Act鈥 in 2015, which against LGBT people on the basis of religion. The outcry was so great that Pence to the bill which ensured that it did not single out LGBT people.
Pence also to what he called 鈥渇orcible rape鈥 in order to limit how federal funds could be used for abortion. Under current law, federal funding is available for abortion to women in cases of rape or incest. Women who were drugged, for example, and raped were thus not eligible for funding under the bill Pence authored.
Focus on the Family was founded in 1977 by anti-LGBT psychologist James Dobson in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Under Dobson鈥檚 tenure, FOTF was known for its strident anti-LGBT rhetoric and positions, as well as for pushing anti-LGBT pseudoscience and legitimate research. Daly took over the organization in 2005,聽and in 2013, the New York Times in which it appeared Daly has softened some of the group鈥檚 stances, though that interpretation.
Daly anti-LGBT statements in the past, including claiming that same-sex marriage endangers civilization. He has asserted聽that two gay parents contribute no value to parenting,聽that 鈥渉omosexual activists鈥 wish to restrict the speech of anyone opposed to homosexuality and that homosexuality聽鈥渞eally is a form of fascism.鈥 He聽 the anti-LGBT study by sociologist Mark Regnerus.
FOTF is perhaps best-known for launching the 鈥淟ove Won Out鈥 campaign and ministry in 1998, a push for the pseudoscientific and often harmful practice of ex-gay therapy. Its primary spokesman, John Paulk, was photographed in a gay bar in Washington, DC. He apologized for his role in the ministry and is living as gay.
Regardless, FOTF continues to push ex-gay therapy and the belief that people can 鈥溾 homosexuality on . Many of the "resources" are聽written by Jeff Johnston, who claims he is no longer gay. Johnston聽also has called same-sex relationships 鈥溾 and that people (especially men) are gay because they were sexually abused as children.
Help 4 Families Ministry
鈥淓x-gay鈥 group Help 4 Families (Ashland, Kentucky) are holding a conference July 28-29 at Metro Life Church in Orlando, Florida. The website 鈥渨ill provide help and support to individuals, families, and churches facing the challenges and heartbreak of transgenderism, and same-sex attraction.鈥
Speakers include Robert Gagnon and Sherry Holt, among others. Gagnon is a ,聽who has repeatedly linked homosexuality to pedophilia and called homosexuality 鈥渉armful鈥 and 鈥渦nhealthy.鈥 Homosexual relationships 鈥渁re repulsively contrary to nature鈥nd comparable to, or more likely worse than, the worst forms of adult-incest,鈥 he has said. He also聽has called on society 鈥渢o end the cycle of homosexual behavior.鈥
Holt claims to be a 鈥渇ormer lesbian鈥 who is a facilitator at 鈥,鈥 a group based in Louisville, Kentucky for women 鈥渨ho struggle with relational brokenness.鈥 Holt claims she was 鈥溾 of lesbianism through a 鈥渕iraculous, tangible encounter with Christ.鈥
Help 4 Families is part of the Restored Hope Network. They call themselves a 鈥淐hrist-centered ministry compassionately reaching out to individuals and families who are experiencing the challenges and heartbreak of transsexuality.鈥
National Organization for Marriage
The National Organization for Marriage held its annual 鈥溾 event in Washington, D.C. on June 11. Attendance at NOM events聽has been steadily declining since 2015. That聽year perhaps 6,000 participants attended, while in 2016,聽only a few hundred showed up. The count for 2017 was , amidst what NOM president Brian Brown claimed were scheduling and permit troubles.
The event has been聽bolstered in the past by church-sponsored buses bearing attendees聽and a larger contingent once bussed in by New York State Senator Ruben Di谩z, but聽this聽no longer appears to be the case. However,聽members of the anti-LGBT group 聽attended聽this year.
included Brown, who exhorted attendees not to be discouraged by low numbers and claimed that, 鈥渨e are on the side of true human rights, we are on the side of true civil rights." Brown said聽he was going to continue to work to overturn Obergefell, the 2015 Supreme Court decision that granted marriage equality. Longtime NOM strategist Frank Schubert also spoke, calling the Obergefell decision 鈥渁nti-constitutional鈥 and 鈥渋llegitimate.鈥
NOM continues to court anti-LGBT African-American pastors. Denise Walker of Everlasting Light Ministries in Minnesota spoke at the event, and said that the 鈥済ay rights movement is ungodly, it is from the pit of hell.鈥
Pray in Jesus Name Project*
Gordon Klingenschmitt of the Pray in Jesus Name Project* was in Lone Tree, Colorado and British politician and member of the European Parliament Nigel Farage, who was the at a gala and dinner June 17, at the Marriott Denver South (Lone Tree). , former leader of the anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim right-wing populist party UKIP who helped orchestrate the anti-immigrant Brexit movement, is a 鈥減erson of interest鈥 in the investigation into possible improper ties between the White House and Russia.
Klingenschmitt, who calls himself 鈥淒r. Chaps,鈥 served one term in the Colorado state house as a Republican. A former Navy chaplain, he was reprimanded for about appearing at political events in uniform. The Navy declined to recertify him and he was discharged in 2007 following the controversy. He appealed the decision,聽.
His brief tenure as a lawmaker was marred by controversy and he was at one point. He ran for a seat in the state senate in 2016 but lost in the Republican primary.
Klingenschmitt has a long history of anti-LGBT statements that run the gamut from conspiratorial to outlandish and harmful. He has a penchant for and recently are using the Disney film Beauty and the Beast to recruit children into homosexuality. He that LGBT people are trying to adopt the children of heterosexuals to 鈥渞ecruit鈥 them into 鈥渢he homosexual lifestyle鈥 and that LGBT people and 鈥渄emonic鈥 in them. In May 2017, he that the Air Force Academy chapel in Colorado Springs is closing for four years for repairs, and he blamed it on the nomination of a lesbian, Col. Kristin Goodwin, as Commandant of Cadets at the Academy.
Restored Hope Network
The 鈥渆x-gay鈥 group Restored Hope Network held its annual conference June 16-17 in San Diego. RHN claims to be a network of over 55 Christian ministries, pastors and counselors in the United States, works to 鈥渞estore hope鈥 to those 鈥渂roken by sexual and relational sin especially those impacted by homosexuality.鈥 RHN is one of the largest groups in the country that still believes people can 鈥渓eave homosexuality.鈥
RHN in 2012 after splintering from ex-gay juggernaut Exodus, which its North American outreach in 2013. RHN is helmed by veteran ex-gay activists like Stephen Black, who often worked with virulently anti-LGBT Oklahoma lawmaker Sally Kern (no longer in office) and Andrew Comiskey, who headed up the ex-gay Desert Stream Ministry, which in the past of sexual abuse.
This year鈥檚 conference -- held in a state in which ex-gay therapy for minors has been illegal since 2012 鈥 from local San Diegans, including the . Protest organizers claimed they would maintain a presence outside the venue throughout the conference. RHN spokeswoman Anne Paulk in San Diego that, 鈥淲e...respect [their]聽freedom to leave homosexuality as much as respecting their right to remain homosexual or transgender.鈥
RHN claimed on its that the protests allowed them to share their message more broadly than would have been possible.
Paulk was married to former ex-gay activist , who became the poster-child for ex-gay therapy in the late 1990s. The Paulks and John Paulk is as an out gay man.
The pseudoscience of ex-gay therapy (also referred to as 鈥渃onversion鈥 and 鈥渞eparative鈥 therapy) has a long history of demonizing and attempting to 鈥渃ure鈥 homosexuality through a range of discredited and often dangerous practices. Ex-gay therapy has been rejected by virtually every mainstream and legitimate medical and mental health organization for years. In 2012, the Pan American Health Organization鈥攖he North and South American representative of the World Health Organization鈥 and in 2016, the World Psychiatric Association to it, as well.
World Congress of Families*
The World Congress of Families* will be hosting its June 29-30, in St. John鈥檚, Antigua. According to an email sent out by WCF, the theme is, 鈥淏uilding Strong Caribbean Families鈥 and it will take place at The Perry Bay Convention Hall in St. John's. Previous Caribbean regional conferences have been held in Trinidad and Barbados.
Guest speakers at the St. John鈥檚 event include Sharon Slater, director of Family Watch International*; Sarah Flood-Beaubrun, Minister of External Affairs, Government of St. Lucia; Glenn Stanton, Focus on the Family; Don Feder, WCF regional conference coordinator; Philippa Davies, Jamaica Coalition for a Healthy Society; Godfrey St. Bernard, University of the West Indies; and Rebekah Ali-Gouveia, WCF Caribbean coordinator. Sean Bird of the Christian Coalition for a Healthy Society, Antigua, is listed as the conference organizer.
The Jamaica Coalition for a Healthy Society, of which Davies is a part, works to ensure the . Jamaica currently criminalizes it under British colonial 鈥渂uggery laws.鈥 Davies stated in 2016 that, 鈥淜eeping the law in place means that children will not be taught that perverted sexual behavior is acceptable. It also facilitates keeping marriage under the right definition, and if the buggery law is removed, then the doors for same-sex marriage will be open.鈥
Slater anti-LGBT and anti-choice activism at the U.N.聽and in Africa for years. In her book, Stand for the Family,聽Slater links homosexuality to pedophilia, claims that LGBT people 鈥渞ecruit鈥 children聽and claims that homosexuality can be 鈥渟uccessfully treated.鈥 Resource materials on the FWI website claim that 鈥渃hildren raised in same-sex households have serious problems.鈥
Glenn Stanton is a staunch opponent of marriage equality and once misrepresented the work of the American Anthropological Association (AAA) in an attempt to buttress his claims that human families function best with a heterosexual union between one cisgender man and one cisgender woman. His statement earned him and Focus on the Family a . He has also 鈥渁 particularly evil lie of Satan.鈥
In addition to Don Feder鈥檚 role at WCF, he sits on the of the anti-immigrant hate group Federation for American Immigration Reform*, which was founded by white nationalist John Tanton. Feder has a long history working against LGBT equality.
He also has argued against adding Harriet Tubman to the $20 bill because 鈥淎merican history was made by white males, who were overwhelmingly Christian,鈥 and he has called for 鈥淚slam control.鈥