A visit to Patrick Henry College

Patrick Henry College hosts an ongoing “newsmakers interview” series, and the guest Friday afternoon is a woman named Rosaria Butterfield, a resident of Purcellville. Dr. Butterfield “will discuss her new book, The Secret Thoughts of an Unlikely Convert, detailing her conversion to Christianity and her former lesbian lifestyle before marrying a pastor.”

This is the bio offered by World Magazine:

When Rosaria Butterfield was 28 she declared herself a lesbian. Her Ph.D. in English Literature and Cultural Studies led to a tenured position at Syracuse University, where she advanced a leftist agenda. Then God used her desire to write a book on the religious right, and the friendship of a biblically orthodox pastor, to draw her to Christ. She became a voracious Bible reader and gradually saw that her new beliefs required her to upend her former life. It’s a fascinating story—although she interrupts the narrative several times to insert speech text. Her book also shows the power of love and hospitality to soften hearts: Butterfield is now married to a pastor and the mother of four children by adoption.

I have not had a chance to read the book. However, I can say knowing nothing else about it that this is someone’s personal journey, which she cared enough about to put into words for others to read. Although it sounds like another “ex-gay” narrative, and although there is a robust history of “ex-gay” spokespeople being exploited by the anti-gay industry and later renouncing (or quietly abandoning) their “conversion” experience, I think we make a mistake when we fail to seriously listen to a person’s story, and instead act as if we know how it will, or should, end up. However this woman’s story ultimately unfolds, it is hers, and it’s no more kind to insist that her life will conform to that narrative than it is for those promoting an anti-gay agenda to demand that we “change” to suit their narrative.

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Pope Benedict has an argument with himself about gender

In a somewhat bizarre Christmas message, the Pope has delivered a stirring rebuttal to an argument no one is making. After noting a famous quote by feminist author Simone de Beauvoir (“one is not born a woman, one becomes so”), Pope Benedict makes this claim:

These words lay the foundation for what is put forward today under the term “gender” as a new philosophy of sexuality. According to this philosophy, sex is no longer a given element of nature, that man has to accept and personally make sense of: it is a social role that we choose for ourselves, while in the past it was chosen for us by society.

This might have been true if he had said it in 1974. But this is very nearly 2013.

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PHC’s Mike Farris reduced to making empty threats against LGBT student group

Update: An inquiry from Public Citizen explains Mr. Farris’ quick retraction of his threat.

Supervisor Ken Reid’s widely reported remarks in which he called members of a local atheist group and others “terrorists” has reignited contention over the use of the courthouse grounds just in time for the joyous season. Happy holidays!

As it happens, the “preeminent constitutional lawyer” advising the committee tasked with designing the county-sponsored religious display now on the grounds is none other than founder and chancellor of Patrick Henry College, Mike Farris. The chairman of that committee boasted of having had the pleasure of sharing lunch with Mr. Farris, and assured everyone involved that what they had planned was legally defensible.

Over the weekend, Mike Farris issued a threat to QueerPHC, the LGBT student/alumni group at Patrick Henry College we introduced readers to here. In a comment posted to QueerPHC’s Facebook page, Farris claims that the group is in violation of PHC’s “copyright,” and demands that they take down the page “at once.”

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So the people voted

Voters watch election returns in Washington

It feels weird to be standing in line with people who are going to vote up or down on my humanity, my civil rights.

That’s the sentiment I heard from friends in Maryland and Maine, states where The People got to approve or disapprove equal marriage rights for all couples. That shouldn’t have happened. No one’s basic civil rights should be subject to popular vote. But that’s how things played out, and now those who oppose marriage equality have played their final card:

Courts finding a fundamental constitutional right to marry the person of your choice? Judicial activism! Usurping the role of the legislature! Elected representatives enacting marriage equality legislation? They can’t decide that! Let the people vote!

I will confess, I never even entertained the thought that we would go four for four on the states with measures on the ballot to decide our status as citizens in this country. I expected to win Maine and possibly Washington, and was guardedly hopeful about Maryland, but expected Minnesota (the only one of the four with a negative constitutional amendment rather than a positive measure enacting equal marriage), to be another for the defeat column.

But we won all four. By popular vote. The “but the will of The People..” argument from the anti-gay right was ended Tuesday night.

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This just in from Box Turtle Bulletin (where they read all the “urgent” appeals for money from Loudoun County Supervisor/hate group director Delgaudio so you don’t have to):

I think it’s hilarious that he says that “supporters raised thousands of dollars,” and that “now thousands of ads are running in the state” as though a single dime given to him had anything to do with those ads. We know where that money really goes, which is why I recommend Delgaudio’s group to everyone who wants to donate money to fight marriage equality in Washington or anywhere else.

I concur. Especially if you are a Loudoun County “team player,” I heartily endorse this message. Give your money to Eugene. What could possibly go wrong?

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How far will the “Courthouse Gang” go to protect Delgaudio?

Theo Stamos, Arlington County CA

As reported in the Washington Post yesterday, Arlington County commonwealth’s attorney Theo Stamos says she never received the records and documents provided by former Delgaudio county aide Donna Mateer that support her allegations of his misuse of office. Stamos received only a “letter” written by Mateer. This is what she told the Post:

The question was, based on that letter, whether there was a basis upon which a prosecution might go forward,” Stamos said. “My assessment, from the statement alone, was that it would be extremely difficult to mount any type of a successful prosecution, as it was based on the observations of a now-terminated employee.

“The question was” according to who? This is an enormous revelation, pointing to a massive cover-up perpetrated by Scott York and/or Loudoun County commonwealth’s attorney Jim Plowman to protect their (fill in the blank here) Eugene Delgaudio. One or both of them calculated that obtaining an engineered recommendation from an independent commonwealth’s attorney that they not go forward with an investigation would allow them the pretense of due diligence. They weren’t counting on a reporter doing her job and talking to Stamos, nor were they counting on citizens mounting their own independent investigation. I’m afraid that “Oops, I forgot to include the attachment” is not going to get these boys off the hook.

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Documents? What documents?

A new Washington Post article about the Real Advocate PAC and its petition to obtain the documents provided to Scott York by a former aide to Eugene Delgaudio contains the following interesting passage:

In an interview, [Arlington County commonwealth’s attorney Theo] Stamos said she was sent a copy of Mateer’s statement but did not receive any of the records or documents to which the statement referred. [emphasis mine]

If this is true, it would seem that either Mr. York did not in fact provide the aide’s evidence of wrongdoing to Loudoun County commonwealth’s attorney Jim Plowman, as stated, or Mr. Plowman did not in fact provide that material to Ms. Stamos, as stated.

Ms. Stamos’ recommendation to not pursue charges is not founded on fact, since she didn’t have them. Statements from those entrusted by the public to ensure an independent investigation are shown to be unreliable right out of the gate. Is it any wonder that we believe a citizens’ investigation is warranted?

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