But what if they don’t like the facts?

This “action alert” landed in my inbox a few days ago, from the reliably apoplectic Donald Wildmon. “Homosexuals,” it seems, are causing Montgomery County Public School students to be taught (of all the nerve) a health curriculum that is in agreement with medical science.

I encourage everyone to take a look at the curriculum. It’s really very good, with a lot of content about how gender stereotypes harm girls and boys, often leading to poor decision-making and unwanted sexual activity. That kind of thoughtful analysis of why abstinence is the best choice and what the obstacles are is exactly the antidote that’s needed for the demeaning trash that’s been imposed on some Loudoun students recently. You can view the entire curriculum here, compliments of Teach the Facts:

8th grade
10th grade

A lot of it seems to be way over poor Don’s head, as this comment attests: “The lessons teach that ‘gender identity’ is simply what a person feels inside rather than one’s anatomy.” Well, yes. That’s because that is the definition of gender identity. If it were not, by definition, distinct from anatomy, what would it be?

I think I like this little non sequiter the best:

Teachers must say that “sexual orientation is innate” without acknowledging that the scientific community has not found a “gay gene.”

Here’s a quiz: In how many ways can a human attribute be produced or mediated by biological processes – in other words, be “intrinsic” – that have nothing directly to do with a “gene”?

Is this obsession with genetics to the exclusion of all other biological factors indicative of the quality of science education in general, or are these folks just fixated on the idea of a “gay gene” because “they can’t find a gay gene” makes a nice, dumbed-down soundbite, and they think that most people won’t notice? Are they unfamiliar with the complex process of pre-natal sexual differentiation, or does the “Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve” thing do it for them? Don’t they find it embarrassing to present themselves as such simplistic rubes? Do they even realize that this is what they are doing? Inquiring minds want to know.

Coming up: The other faction in the universe of anti-gay “science,” the one that thinks it can play God.

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Uh-oh. See what happens when you act like Jesus?

Below are excerpts from a letter sent to the Soulforce Equality Riders by a student at Dordt College, a biblically-based college in Sioux City, Iowa whose policies define same sex relationships as immoral conduct and grounds for expulsion or dismissal.

Conversations between Dordt students and the Equality Riders took place in the wake of harassment and vandalism during which “anti-gay slurs — one of which was misspelled — had been painted on the bus” the night before. Despite disagreement over the school’s policies, the Dordt community welcomed the visit as “a learning opportunity for our students and an opportunity for Christian witness,” and even helped the riders clean the bus.

Does Patrick Henry College have the spiritual strength to welcome those who disagree with them, or is the risk of having even one student question their assumptions and open their heart like this too threatening?

Specifically, how would this principle – “..the ability to engage the world in debate requires us to truly listen and consider the opinions of others, while never compromising our commitment to God and His Word” – be served by forbidding contact with the Equality Riders?

You can read more about the experiences of the riders on their blog. More in-depth reporting on the ride, with photos, is here.

If someone had told me at the beginning of the week that I would be deliberately making and spending time with LGBT people, I might have told them they were crazy and laughed it off. I admit that I never had any intention of attending any of the presentations or the panel discussion when you guys were here at Dordt. But because one teacher decided that my Sociology class should attend the presentation instead of holding class, my life has been changed, and in an amazing way! My mind and my heart were really truly opened. Never has something really stuck with me this hard or so clear. Everything I experienced in the past couple of days has been so amazing. I met some incredible people and I have come to cherish every second that I spent in their company. God works in mysterious ways. I felt God pulling at my heart and now I understand why”¦

…I want to encourage you in that no matter what happens, you have friends here at Dordt College that are praying for you the whole way on your journey. You are warriors on a new battlefield. You are a few against many. But your strength is with each other and with God and you will shake the foundations of this nation and the church down to its core. For with God on your side, who will be able to stand against you? Whether you reach an entire campus or just one person, you have made an impact and you have initiated change. And that is something that will stick for life like it will with me. These past two days and the friendships I’ve made will stay with me my entire life…

…What you are all doing is courageous and brave. You face opposition and adversity and yet you continue on. You are all amazing people. I wish you all safe travels and I will pray for your safety as you will probably face communities that were not as pleasant or “accepting” as what you experienced at Dordt. May God watch over you in everything you do and protect you with his loving hands. And may He work in the hearts of those who so strongly stand against you. I love you all and God Bless!

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The moral universe of Peter Pace

Update: The Washington Post says that someone of General Pace’s stature is obligated “to consider facts and evidence” when evaluating public policy, not his personal beliefs (and by the way, that experiment with recruiting felons like the guy who raped a 14 year old Iraqi girl and murdered her family isn’t working out that well, either); former Republican Senator Alan Simpson provides a very credible reality check and wonders if General Pace would call Alan Turing “immoral” and unfit to serve as well; and, finally – will wonders never cease? – it turns out that there has been a sharp decline in the number of discharges under DADT since the inception of the Afghanistan and Iraq conflicts. Hmm. How very small General Pace and his apologists look right now. Just…small.


General Peter Pace thinks that “homosexual acts” are “immoral.”

Gen. Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said Monday that he supports the Pentagon’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” ban on gays serving in the military because homosexual acts “are immoral,” akin to a member of the armed forces conducting an adulterous affair with the spouse of another service member.

The military career of Eric Alva, 36, a former Marine Staff Sargeant, was cut short at 13 years duty when a landmine took his leg in Iraq. He was awarded the Purple Heart for his combat service.

“I do not believe the United States is well served by a policy that says it is OK to be immoral in any way,” says he.

So noted. General Pace must then logically find it moral to throw away this Marine, son and grandson of veterans, who lost his leg while serving his country on the first day of “Operation Iraqi Freedom.”

Since General Pace supports DADT, he must also believe that lying is a moral behavior.

Since, according to a 2005 Government Accountability Office report cited by the Chicago Tribune, our armed forces have discharged about 10,000 troops under the policy, General Pace must think that filling in the gaps by improperly altering the profiles of medically unfit soldiers and sending them back to Iraq is a moral behavior.

From Salon:

“This is not right,” said Master Sgt. Ronald Jenkins, who has been ordered to Iraq even though he has a spine problem that doctors say would be damaged further by heavy Army protective gear. “This whole thing is about taking care of soldiers,” he said angrily. “If you are fit to fight you are fit to fight. If you are not fit to fight, then you are not fit to fight.”

As the military scrambles to pour more soldiers into Iraq, a unit of the Army’s 3rd Infantry Division at Fort Benning, Ga., is deploying troops with serious injuries and other medical problems, including GIs who doctors have said are medically unfit for battle. Some are too injured to wear their body armor, according to medical records.

The Fort Benning soldiers interviewed by Salon “expressed considerable worry about going to Iraq with physical deficits because it could endanger them or their fellow soldiers.” The brigade leaders making these decisions are “going to get somebody killed over there,” said one (anonymously, because of fear of retribution). Hey, but at least nobody’s endorsing any “immoral behavior,” right?

Since that same GAO report counts among those discharged for their “immorality” at least 322 linguists, including 54 Arabic specialists, General Pace must think that putting our troops in enhanced danger due to a compromised ability to communicate and interpret intelligence is moral behavior. Maybe he thinks that such communication is superfluous, since (as David Corn astutely points out) General Pace and Islamic fundamentalism are in apparent agreement that “God is Straight.”

Finally, DADT is usually defended by citing the issue of morale, not to be confused with morality. Or is it?

One would hope that General Pace sees the moral problem with recreational rape, whether of Iraqi women or of fellow soldiers. Unfortunately, this pervasive problem (reported here in 2004 and here in 2007) is linked over and over again to the issue of morale – of the straight, male troops.

One of the soldiers interviewed for the 2007 article reports that she was told this by a superior:

“..the military sends women over to give the guys eye candy to keep them sane. He said in Vietnam they had prostitutes to keep them from going crazy, but they don’t have those in Iraq. So they have women soldiers instead.”

This kind of talk is anything but atypical. Says the author:

I have talked to more than 20 female veterans of the Iraq war in the past few months, interviewing them for up to 10 hours each for a book I am writing on the topic, and every one of them said the danger of rape by other soldiers is so widely recognized in Iraq that their officers routinely told them not to go to the latrines or showers without another woman for protection.

In 2005, an officer reported that three female soldiers had died of dehydration because they were avoiding having to visit the latrine after dark; it was known to be common practice for male soldiers to jump them in this isolated, unlit area and rape them.

Unhelpfully, in light of the above, the website set up by the Army to address this problem treats sexual assault as a given, paying “more attention to telling women how to avoid an assault than telling men not to commit one.” For female soldiers, avoiding rape is part of the terrain, like sand or heat.*

This message obviously does nothing for the morale of the survivors, but one has to ask: Do they matter any more or less than the gay and lesbian servicemembers who are also expected to keep their mouths shut? The damage done to the morale of soldiers like Eric Alva by the requirement to lie about themselves year after year is treated as immaterial, and so is the damage done to a soldier who carries a knife to defend herself from her own “battle buddies.” We are expected to accept that serving alongside gay soldiers would harm the morale of straight, male soldiers, and that such harm is too high a price to pay. Would it also harm the morale of straight, male soldiers to be required not to rape their comrades? That sure is what it looks like.

Boys will be boys, after all, and it’s only “natural” that they would expect sexual access to any woman within striking distance. Complaints from said women would harm morale, so it’s the responsibility of the women to avoid making themselves vulnerable (how?!?). And to uphold the idea that this is Just The Way It Is, we must pretend that everyone in the military is heterosexual. It’s hard to imagine a more peculiar, morally vacuous universe than this, but I’m open to suggestions.

*Notice that there seems to be no problem with gay soldiers assaulting anyone, as we would certainly be hearing about that in the most lurid terms imaginable.

Others blogging:

Pen and Sword
Blacknell.net
Bill Garnett
Terry Carter
The Shad Plank
Raising Kaine
Dogwood Pundit
Bored Young Professionals
Below the Beltway

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Chuck Colson has an agenda

Chuck Colson’s admiration of Rontrell Matthews’ work ethic is right on.

Last summer, Rontrell Matthews walked into Capers Preparatory Christian Academy in a poor rural community with terrible public schools. Rontrell held out a check for $32.86 – his first paycheck from his after-school job. If they would let him in, Rontrell promised, he would give them every paycheck from then on.

Rontrell proved the old saying that where there’s a will, there’s a way. So why is it different for same-sex couples who marry in spite of stereotypes, societal stigma and anti-gay legislation?

While criticizing David Brooks’ mother mentoring program, Chuck makes the funny argument that same-sex marriage is responsible for unwanted pregnancy.

The sickness is broken and unformed families.

Instead of relying on a government program to fix families after they break, wouldn’t it be better to keep families from breaking in the first place? Wouldn’t it be better to find ways to encourage parents to marry before having children, instead of telling them – as our cultural elites often do – that marriage does not matter?

Second, when it comes to families, government itself is often the problem, promoting policies destructive to families. For example, courts that force states to accept same-sex “marriage” are redefining true marriage out of existence. That’s not good for kids.

Hello, Chuck. Did you know that same-sex couples can’t – oops – have children by mistake? Oh, you forgot. Let’s revisit your friend Rondell. Like Rondell, same-sex families have to buck the system in order to succeed. We have to fight all these uphill battles against anti-gay government and religious institutions. As you say, “individual ingenuity always trumps the best government program” or legislation. And when our ingenuity wins, you can bet your sweet bippie that we are dedicated to our kids and that we make great parents. And that’s why you’re part of the problem.

And many studies have shown that kids do best in married, two-parent families.

Who’s stopping us from getting married, again?

Yet some states now force adoption agencies to send kids into the homes of homosexual couples.

“Two-parent”“couples”.. What did we miss? Is there some mystical mathemagic that slipped through the cracks? 1+1=2.

So stop it. Just stop it. Why do you admire Rondell’s agency and then treat us as invisible agents of an out of control government; “courts that force states to accept same-sex “marriage'”?

We had to work hard to win those court battles. We have agency, too.

You know, Chuck, we live right here in Loudoun, home of your Prison Fellowship Ministries. (Btw, what does any of this have to do with your mission of reforming prisoners? But let’s not digress.) You’re welcome to come to one of our social events, to meet your neighbors and see that we are real people, real families. No offense, but I’m not very hopeful. I get the sense that you don’t want to know the folks you judge, because you’d find your judgment to be un-Christian. Better to continue treating us as abstract objects of tyrannical government intervention. I’m beginning to think that somebody here may have an “agenda.”

p.s. – Chuck, isn’t that whole “faith-based initiative” thing that funds Prison Fellowship a government program?

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What’s left of decent conservativism

Well, what can one say, other than thank our lucky stars for Andrew Sullivan?

This seems all too applicable to our own local “not anti-gay” folks. It was just a joke, people (so spake the talking heads on Hannity), a “school-yard taunt” only intended to poke fun at a straight man.

Why would gays care? [Coulter] is “pro-gay,” after all. Apart from backing a party that wants to strip gay couples of all legal rights by amending the federal constitution, kick them out of the military where they are putting their lives on the line, put them into “reparative therapy” to “cure” them, keep it legal to fire them in many states, and refusing to include them in hate crime laws, Coulter is very pro-gay.

I’m guessing that “pro-gay” over at NoVA TownHall is defined as “we don’t think you should be dragged out behind the barn and shot.”

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Help is on the way for gay PHC students

When the axe walked into the forest the tree said, the handle is one of us.
— Alice Walker

We’ve seen several recent examples of what can happen when GLBT people are raised to hate themselves for who they are. In their misguided attempts to overcompensate, they all too often end up like a Ted Haggard or a Mark Foley, not only ruining their own lives but also harming many innocent bystanders in the process.

The young people on the Equality Ride 2007 tour have a simple message for those headed down that road: It doesn’t have to be that way. They know, because they were once headed down that road themselves.

As they approach the Soulforce battlefield on campuses like Patrick Henry College in Purcellville, Va., where 19 faculty members uphold the school’s motto of “For Christ & for Liberty” to 325 students, Reynolds and Heath say they don’t fear any conflict on the ride, because it wasn’t very long ago that they thought just like the Patrick Henry and Liberty University students.

“I used to be one of them,” Reynolds says. “I stunted my growth both as an individual and spiritually by believing what I did. It does seem that some of the people we are dealing with have never been exposed to anything else.”

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Quick, get the dictionary and look up “angel”

I noticed the other day that our friends over at NoVA Townhall were blogging the Conservative PAC conference, and chuckled in passing at Joe Budzinski’s fawning headline for Ann Coulter’s speech, “An angel alights.”

As it turns out, the Coulter speech was the biggest draw of the conference, and the line that got the biggest response from where Joe was sitting was this one:

I was going to have a few comments on the other Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards, but it turns out you have to go into rehab if you use the word ‘faggot,’ so I – so kind of an impasse, can’t really talk about Edwards.

That’s right, Ann Coulter called John Edwards a “faggot.” This is what the attendees of this conference found so funny and appealing, and this is what our local promoter of “traditional American values” thinks of as an “angel,” saying “I think you will enjoy this. Turn the volume up.” To their credit, it seems that from some other vantage points the audience was not as receptive.

Does Joe, and for that matter, the rest of this crew, really think that this is an acceptable term in political discourse?

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