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Hopefully you are gearing up for a wonderful 4th of July weekend with friends and family, but before you do, be sure to check out PFOX on Facebook and Myspace!

You'll find inspirational pieces, links to tons of resources, and maybe even a music video!

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Obama declares LGBT Pride Month...a great opportunity to show America the truth

Most readers are likely by now aware that President Obama has declared the month of June national "LGBT Pride Month" in a show of his support for a gay identity for men and women living with SSA. In a proclamation full of glowing portraits of pro-gay accomplishments, Obama made no reference at all to the equal dignity and even greater bravery of those who resolve to transcend a sexual orientation that does not align with their chosen values.

That means it's up to us to speak the truth about SSA and the hope of change while the public is paying renewed attention to this subject. We have the answers that a shallow political pronouncement can never provide---the constructive answers to deep emotional needs that no sex will ever solve and timeless answers about the human person that are not tied to the fashion of the hour.

The following is a link to a post at First Things describing the phenomenon of Body Integrity Identity Disorder, in which patients request to be surgically mutilated in order to feel "whole." The parallels to current rhetoric about childhood GID are chilling: http://www.firstthings.com/blog_entry.php?blog_id=1&year=2009&month=05&title_link=should-doctors-amputate-healthy-limbs-for-patients-who-want-to-be-amputees-1243217192

Below is an article from Alan Medinger of Restoration Ministries (www.regenerationministries.org) about the need for healthy intimacy and affection for men struggling with SSA:

Emotional Longing in Men

"We have long recognized that the homosexual drive is not, at its root, sexual.  The drive gains its direction and power from certain things inside a person, in many cases unmet needs or fears.  Not always, but most often, in men it is an unmet need or a deficit, and in women, it is a fear.

This article will deal solely with male homosexuality because I am going to discuss an unmet need that comes out of deficit in a boy's relationship with his father.  To be clear, women dealing with same sex attractions (SSA) can have father deficits too, and so true healing for them may at some point require them to see men as protectors (a fatherly role).  But the dynamics of these father deficits are quite different, so I will focus on en with SSA.

The two most frequently seen non-sexual --- that is non-erotic- roots for male homosexuality are 1) a longing for manhood (one's own), and 2) a longing to connect with manhood (someone else's).  In most boys, their own manhood develops in the normal process of growing up; identification with the father, inclusion in the world of boys, and finally reaching outside of themselves to one who is "other", to a woman.

In most boys the connection with someone else's manhood is taken care of through early experiences with a loving and affirming father.  With most SSA men, however, this connection was not made.  Then, as often happens when a legitimate need is not met, the longing for it grows stronger and stronger.  It becomes a craving for those things that early connection with a father should bring -- security and affirmation.  And, as characteristic of males, the longing becomes sexualized.  At first, the boy may imagine his needs being met in a physical way (like a strong man befriending him or a brave man rescuing him), but eventually, the pictures develop sexual overtones.  The craving for an intense connection with a man becomes a desire for a sexual relationship with a man.

What I am talking about here is not just identifying a psychological need, but accessing a deep emotional longing.  These longings of the heart must be addressed because true and deep healing can only come as we uncover the pain of the past and experience where it remains present with us today.  Using a specific example, this what I will address in this article.

The Place of the Symbolic

Symbols are Tremendously important here.  If we can't understand the presence and power of symbols, there is much we don't understand about live..  This is particularly true with respect to human sexuality.  In what follows I am going to deal with one specific symbol that is significant to many SSA men.  If readers cannot identify with the symbol addressed another one could be substituted.

What are the symbols of manhood?  The most obvious one would be male genitals, but there are many others: physical strength, height, a deep voice, a hairy body.  There is one, however, that people who have not dealt with same sex attractions might never guess, but it is one I run into over and over.  A man in our ministry tells me, "I fell into masturbation last night after I started surfing the TV looking for chests."  Another says, "I'm not really after sex.  If I could only lay my head on some strong man's chest..."  The men in our groups complain about how difficult it is when spring arrives and construction workers start taking off their shirts.

This may seem strange to some, but when you think about it, a man's chest is a logical symbol of manhood.  The symbols of manhood are those characteristics of men that make them different from women.  (See the "Otherness" article in our July-August newsletter).  A man's size, hairy body - and chest - all distinguish him from women.  And the chest, in more than just a physical or figurative way, is at the center of a man.  In our culture, the core of a man is his heart -- located in his chest.  Typically, the chest is big, thick and solid; it often connotes strength.

An old command to military recruits was "chin up, shoulders back, chest out."  This up-front chest declared manhood.

It can greatly help the man struggling with SSA, or those trying to help him, to recognize not just the sexual attraction that draws him, but also the deep emotional longing --the ache-- that lies at the root of his attraction to men.  The longing for intimacy is why he might picture being satisfied by laying his head on or touching the bare chest of a man.

I think hat this kind of longing for intimacy is natural in a little boy, and usually it is met in the normal physical contacts of a father and son.  My son demonstrated this quite clearly.  When he was first able to crawl out of his crib, sometimes on Saturday mornings, when my wife and I were sleeping in, he would come get in our bed.  He would unbutton my pajama top, then pull his little pajama top up, and lay on my chest, bare skin to bare skin.  Steve grew up with quite a healthy male identity, and this expressed his little boy's desire to connect with his father. 

Now picture the adult man with a deep unmet need for the security and affirmation that could come from a  father; what could seem more comforting than imagining his face resting on the strong, warm chest of a man, the man's strong arms wrapped around him.

Filling the Empty Place

For the adult SSA man, however, filling the empty place in his heart through such contact today is probably not possible.  First, if physically intimate male contacts were healing, then all active homosexual men would outgrow their homosexuality and be healed.  To the contrary, these longings of men in the gay life continue or get worse.  Even in a Christian setting, if one were to find a man who had the heart to minister to the SSA man in a physical way such as this - which is extremely unlikely - the struggler could perpetuate his self-image of being a little boy.

Still, healing from homosexuality requires that we address the aching heart.  Unfortunately, it is likely that for most, the ache will n ever go away totally, but there are actions we can do to diminish it.  Here are some suggestions:

1 Grieve the loss -- with Jesus.

Fully acknowledge the pain of never having experienced the loving physical intimacy of a father. Let the pain of that reality come to the surface.  Bring it to the Lord; talk to Him about it.  Let Him minister to you in the loss.

2. Let Jesus minister to you physically.  I have become convinced that no mere man can fill the deep needs that are in the man who has spent years longing for a certain type of male love and intimacy.  The void is too great.  But there is One who can meet these needs.  In my early years as a Christian, Jesus would allow me to be intimate with Him in my quiet times in ways that clearly filled the empty places in me. I could imagine that He was my older friend or brother, and after a long day of hiking, we would sit down by a rock and I would rest my head on His chest.  I worried that this would turn erotic, but I sensed Him saying, "Don't worry about it if it does," and it never did.  As He met the deep needs and filled the empty places, the longing diminished, and after a time, my need for male relationships became as healthy and normal as anyone's.

I am not sure that the Lord will work this way in every SSA man's heart, but do grieve the loss, go to Him and He will minister to you in some way.

3.  Desexualize the need.  Hopefully, reading this article has already started the process.  As the Lord to help you identify the specific longings that might be driving you -- security, male intimacy, being valued by a man, physical touch, whatever -- and whenever such needs are felt, say to yourself and the Lord, "It really isn't sex I want; what I really want.....(whatever needs you have identified)".  Ask the Lord to meet that need at that moment.  Over time the link between the felt need and sexual desire will diminish.

4.  Repent of any idolatry.  If a man's chest, or any part of a man's body has become so important to you that you  think you maybe e falling into idolatry, repent of the specific sin of idolatry, and every time you find yourself going there again, picture yourself smashing the idol and turning to the one true God.

5.  Accept the fact that the need may never be fully met in this life.  However, when acknowledging this, put the problem in the perspective of your total life.  Seek to avoid self-pity and seek to develop a grateful heart.  Every man goes through life missing out on some things.  But for the believer, God has given each of us so much.

6.  Become a father.  I say this a bit facetiously -- of course fatherhood is not possible or practical for every man -- but for those men who have started to receive from the Father, those who have begun to really experience some significant healing and growth in the area of their own manhood, when these men become fathers, there is a way in which, as they pour out love and intimacy to their little sons or daughters, God pours into them the same thing.  When that happens, our sense of our self moves further from that of a needy little boy to that of a life-giving man. 

7.  Watch healthy fathers.  If fatherhood isn't realistic for you, let me suggest something else.  Tom and his wife and young son and daughter are often a few rows in front of me in church. Tom and has children are very physical.  The kids are constantly snuggling up to tom or touching his face.  He puts his arms around them or strokes their heads - all in a very natural and unobtrusive way.  Whenever I see this, my heart warms, and I feel joy for this family.

Witnessing such an interaction will likely stir up longings in you, and when the feelings arise, go to the Lord with your longings, seeking to lay them down before Him.  With your eyes turned from yourself, start praising God for the blessings that these children are receiving.  This not say you should stuff the ache you feel, but as you bless God for what these children are receiving that you did not receive, you may find a new freedom to receive the intimate love of your heavenly Father.

God does not leave any of us alone in our pain.  He has promised to be the father to the fatherless.  Let Him do that.  Let Him start to fill the empty places in you.
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Children Need Freedom to Know and Love their Mother and Father

News Advisory:  June 3, 2009

Contact:  Regina Griggs, Director, Parents and Friends of Ex-Gays & Gays (PFOX)

804-453-4737  PFOX@pfox.org   www.pfox.org 

Children Need Freedom to Know and Love their Mother and Father

In response to Dick Cheney’s statements regarding same-sex marriage, Regina Griggs of PFOX made the following comments: 

“Former Vice President Dick Cheney has stated that ‘people ought to get a shot’ at same-sex marriage and referenced his lesbian daughter, Mary.  My heart goes out to Vice President Cheney.  As the mother of a homosexual, I understand how Mr. Cheney feels. 

But what I think is best for society, especially children, is for children to have both a mother and a father.  As responsible members of society, we must look to what is best for our culture as a whole.  Marriage goes beyond the individuals involved and affects society every day.  

For example, children do best when raised by their Mom and Dad.  When adults make a decision to enter into genderless marriage and deliberately deny a child a mother and father, it is about self-gratification.  The forced restructuring of society and attempts to deny Americans the right to vote against redefining marriage will not provide approval for homosexual couples nor a Mom and Dad for children.  Which one of you would deliberately forfeit your mother or father?  

President Ronald Reagan never let his children’s liberal views get in the way of his running the nation according to his conservative philosophy.  He did what he felt was right for his country, no matter how much it angered his children.  Today they respect his legacy.    

As the executive director of Parents and Friends of Ex-Gays & Gays (PFOX), I believe parents do not have to approve of everything their children do.  Responsible parenting is loving and respecting our children in spite of our differences.  Most gay activist groups insist that parents love their children only when they affirm same-sex marriage.  PFOX believes that parents and children should love one another unconditionally, by respecting our right to hold different views.  Thus parents like Vice President Cheney and I can love our children without having to support genderless marriage.”

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Pepsi Shareholders Asked to Stop Funding Hate

Contact:  Greg Quinlan, Parents and Friends of Ex-Gays & Gays (PFOX)
513-435-1125  PFOX@pfox.org   

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

PEPSI SHAREHOLDERS ASKED TO STOP FUNDING HATE

Plano, Texas – May 7, 2009/ Speaking at the PepsiCo annual shareholders meeting yesterday, Greg Quinlan of Parents and Friends of Ex-Gays & Gays (PFOX) asked PepsiCo to stop using shareholder profits to fund anti-heterosexual groups.  Citing his experience as a former homosexual, Quinlan cited PepsiCo’s donation of over a million dollars to controversial gay activist groups that support genderless marriage and oppose equal rights for ex-gays.

PepsiCo produces Frito-Lay snacks, Pepsi-Cola and Gatorade drinks, Tropicana juices, and Quaker foods.  In his speech, Quinlan asked PepsiCo stockholders to stop donating money to groups that aim to discredit the ex-gay community:

“Last year PepsiCo gave away half a million dollars to PFLAG, Parents and Friends of Lesbians and Gays.  PFLAG is a gay organization that supports tolerance for gays but does not believe in tolerance for ex-gays and other heterosexuals.  When Republican Vice Presidential nominee Sarah Palin’s church sponsored an ex-gay conference last year, PFLAG issued press releases against Sarah Palin and organized protests at her church. This same church was later anonymously vandalized by fire, reminiscent of the burning of black churches in the South during the civil rights movement.  Churches should welcome former homosexuals like me and PepsiCo should not fund organizations like PFLAG that do not welcome diversity, but promote hatred.  

I have been shouted and heckled by PFLAG members because I am out and open in society as a former homosexual.  Why does PepsiCo fund groups like PFLAG that hate people who are different from them?  This is not tolerance; this is not inclusion by any definition. 

PFLAG publishes anti-ex-gay literature and opposes ex-gay inclusion although they advocate for gay rights – they just don’t believe others should have the same equal rights.  PFLAG contributes to the intolerance of the ex-gay community and stereotypes former homosexuals like me.  By funding PFLAG, PepsiCo promotes fear and hostility against the ex-gay community and our supporters, and spreads lies about ex-gay organizations.  Diversity does not and should not mean funding one organization so that it can attack another. 

PFLAG also funded support for the gay marriage political battles across the country last year.  But the American people voted for traditional marriage and against gay marriage in every state where an initiative was held.  In fact, 30 states, 3/5 of the United States supports marriage as one man and one woman.  So why is PepsiCo involved in funding an organization like PFLAG that supports genderless marriage when the majority of the American people do not?  This could hurt Pepsi’s image and stock value.

In fact, it already has.  Currently, there is a boycott of PepsiCo by AFA the American Family Association.  AFA is a grassroots organization of concerned families across the country that successfully boycotted Ford Motor products for donating money to gay activist organizations.  Now they’re boycotting Pepsi products because they claim PepsiCo is funding the gay agenda, including same sex-marriage.  Their boycott petition already has over 300,000 signatures by concerned Americans who are boycotting all PepsiCo brands.  You can see the signature for yourself at www.boycottpepsico.com AFA has over a million members nationwide. AFA works closely with 10,000 religious organizations and denominations in the United States, representing nearly 30 million American consumers. 

The PepsiCo Board of Directors approved a $13 million total compensation package for the CEO, Indra Nooyi, in addition to her free personal use of the PepsiCo company plane, and a car and chauffer for commuting.  If PepsiCo can afford that, then it can afford to issue a report revealing to you, the shareholders, how your money is being spent on dubious charities that support genderless marriage and hate against ex-gays like me.” 

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Who is behind the recent push for same-sex "marriage"?

Find out here about the multi-millionaire gay activist who is bankrolling a coordinated, multi-state effort. VERY fascinating and informative reading. We have to be just as dedicated as he is!

http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=31685
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PFOX Director Greg Quinlan on Hatred from the Gay Movement

PFOX Director and ex-gay man Greg Quinlan has some sobering thoughts to share about about the way gay activists treat him and other supporters of an organic vision of human sexuality. Take a look at what Quinlan has to say about his past interactions with Wayne Besen, formerly of the Human Rights Campaign:

"In his continuing zeal to discredit the ex-gay community, Besen likes to bully ex-gays by insisting that we still look "gay."  When he was Director of Communications for the Human Rights Campaign, Besen delighted in telling me to "butch up" so "normal people" wouldn't think I'm still "gay."  See his emails for yourself at http://pfox.org/Human-Rights-Campaign-Hate-Against-Ex-Gays.pdf 
 
 At the conference, Besen stuck his finger in my face and called me a "fu*king faggot," "fu*king cocksu*ker," "fu*king f*g b*stard," "fu*king nellie fairy," and so on.  I guess he skipped the tolerance class where school kids learn to appreciate diversity and gays.  "You're still having gay sex," he yelled at me.  We had to call security to escort him out of the convention hall because we were scared for our safety.   
  
Hate against ex-gays like me is all too common.  What's going to happen when Congress passes the national Hate Crimes Prevention Act for gays?  It was introduced last week in the House of Representatives by Rep. John Conyers (D-MI) and Rep. Mark Kirk (R-IL)."

Read on at the PFOX website.
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New Organization: Protect Isabella Coalition

Too often, the debate about same-sex marriage, homosexuality, or other gender-identity issues becomes abstract and loses sight of the people it affects--and at the end of the day, it is children who will be most affected. Again and again, we see homosexual persons seeking change who have experienced emotionally traumatic childhoods. Efforts to redefine marriage and the family deconstruct the healthy, organic environment that children need to develop.

The Protect Isabella Coalition is a new group named after a little girl named Isabella, who is at the center of a custody battle between her biological mother, Lisa Miller, and Miller's former lover, a lesbian named Janet Jenkins. Miller left the lesbian lifestyle years ago and separated from Jenkins, but Jenkins continues to seek visitation and custody rights over Isabella. Isabella is reportedly "frightened" of Jenkins, a woman she hardly even knows, and exhibited "disturbing behaviors" after her first several visits to her, prompting Miller to cut off the contact.

So far, activist judges in Vermont and Virginia have ruled to force unsupervised visits for Isabella over the summer. Isabella's mother Lisa and her legal counsel are appealing these decisions, but this will not be the first or the last time we hear of such a case if we do not raise our voices and stand beside Isabella and her mother.

Because ultimately, as the Protect Isabella Coalition notes, "Children are neither tokens to be collected at the whim of selfish adults nor notches in the belts of social activists."
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Charlotte Christian Leader Asks the Human Rights Campaign, 'Do Ex-Gays Have Human Rights?'

Dr. Michael Brown, director of the Coalition of Conscience and a speaker at Focus on the Family's Love Won Out Conference at Central Church of God in Charlotte this Saturday, February 21, claims that the Human Rights Campaign (HRC), has a history of "discriminatory and defamatory treatment of those who choose to leave the homosexual lifestyle." (The HRC will be holding its annual fundraising dinner in Charlotte on Saturday night, less than one hour after the conclusion of the Love Won Out Conference.)

Over ten years ago, the HRC published a 28 page booklet designed to counteract ministries devoted to helping people come out of homosexuality, claiming that, "Most people who have been through these ministries . . . refer to their experience as psychological terrorism." In the same publication, conservative Christian organizations were described as "religious political extremist groups." The HRC also enthusiastically backed the recent anti-ex-gay movie, "For the Bible Tells Me So," claiming on their website that the movie "examines how a select few biblical verses are used by right-wing extremists to deny gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people their basic rights."

Brown, however, questions how an organization which claims to stand for the rights of gays and lesbians can so strongly oppose the rights of those within that community who are not at peace with their same-sex attractions and who choose to pursue change.

"How," Brown asks, "can they be called the Human Rights Campaign? What about the human rights of ex-gays? And how can the HRC call for tolerance and understanding and yet be so intolerant and bigoted in their treatment of those with unwanted same-sex attractions? Why heap scorn on ex-gays and deny their very existence? Isn't this the height of hypocrisy for an organization ostensibly devoted to the basic rights of gay and lesbian people?"

Sponsors of this year's HRC Carolinas Dinner include Bank of America, Wachovia, Duke Energy, Food Lion, American Express, and Audi. Despite this high level of corporate sponsorship, Brown claims that the HRC hardly represents mainstream America, noting that Joe Solmonese, president of the HRC, has stated that all Americans who believe that marriage should be defined as the union of a man and woman are "right-wing extremists." The HRC also calls on businesses to have special bathroom accommodations for employees undergoing sex-change operations.

"Who are the real extremists?" Brown asks.

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Italian Pop Song Tells the Story of a Former Homosexual

Hat tip to Roberto Marchesini, writing over at NARTH. Italian pop star Povia recently debuted his new song "Luca Era Gay" (Luca Was Gay) at the prestigious musical event "Festival di San Remo," to the consternation of gay activists in Italy. The progressive, open-minded gay activists manifested their tolerance by attempting to shut down Povia's performance, and even enlisted the help of an EU Parliament member, Vittorio Agnoletto, in their attempt.

Povia's moving live performance can be seen here on YouTube. The former president of Italy's largest gay activist organization, ARCIgay, took the stage after the performance to denounce Povia, but was booed and hissed by the audience.

An English translation of the lyrics, thanks to Wendell Ricketts:

"Luca Once Was Gay"
Povia


Intro:
Luca once was gay but he’s with her today. When Luca speaks, he holds his heart in his hands. Luca says: Today I am a different man.

1st Verse:
Luca says: Before I talk about the change in my sexuality, let me make one thing clear: If I believe in God, I can’t depend on human beings for my answers. Human thought is divided on this issue, so I didn’t look to psychologists, psychiatrists, clergymen, or scientists. My search took me into my own past, and when I dug down deep, I found the answers to my questions about myself.

My mother loved me—too much. Her love became obsession. Under the weight of her beliefs, her attention, I felt myself suffocating.

My father was a man who didn’t make decisions. I could never talk to him because he was always at work, though I suspected the truth was a little different. In fact, when I was twelve, my mom told him she wanted a separation. I didn’t understand what was happening, but my father said, “Yeah, that’s the right decision,” and after that he started drinking.

My Mom never had a good word to say about my Dad. She used to tell me, “Whatever you do, don’t get married.”

She was jealous of my girlfriends; it felt so unhealthy. And my identity was more confused than ever.

Chorus:
Luca once was gay but he’s with her today. When Luca speaks, he holds his heart in his hands. Luca says: Today I am a different man. (Repeat.)

2nd Verse:
Today I’m a different man, but back then I needed answers. I was so ashamed, I did my looking in secret. There were people who told me, “It’s natural,” but I studied Freud and he didn’t see it that way. I got through high school, still not knowing what happiness was. An older man made my heart race and that’s when I realized I was homosexual.

With him, I didn’t hold back. He showered me with attention, and I thought it was love. Sure, I could be myself, but then the sex became a competition.

I felt like I was the guilty one. I figured they’d catch him sooner or later, but I could make the truth disappear so he wouldn’t get in trouble.

I was looking for my father in all those men. I went with them because I didn't want to betray my mother.

Chorus:
Luca once was gay but he’s with her today. When Luca speaks, he holds his heart in his hands. Luca says: Today I am a different man. (Repeat.)

Finale:
Luca says: I was with a man for four years. Sometimes there was love and sometimes only deception. We cheated on each other constantly.

I was still searching for my truth, for the kind of love that would last forever. Then one night I met her at a party. She was just there with a lot of other people. She had nothing to do with what I was going through, but she listened, she laid me bare, she understood. All I remember is: the next day, I missed her.

So that’s my story—my personal story. No sickness, no recovery.

Dad, I’ve forgiven you, even though you went away and never came back.

Mom, I think about you all the time, and I’ve never stopped caring. Sometimes I still see your face, but I’m a father now, and my heart belongs to the only woman I’ve ever truly loved.

Chorus:
Luca once was gay but he’s with her today. When Luca speaks, he holds his heart in his hands. Luca says: Today I am a different man. (Repeat.)
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Ex-Gay Is OK!

What is PFOX?


Parents and Friends of Ex-Gays & Gays (PFOX) is a national non-profit organization that supports families, advocates for the ex-gay community, and educates the public on sexual orientation. PFOX’s statement of principles is found at www.pathinfo.org
PFOX promotes an inclusive environment for the ex-gay community, and works to eliminate negative perceptions and discrimination against former homosexuals. PFOX conducts public education and outreach to further individual self-determination and respect for all Americans, regardless of their sexual orientation. Please join us in our journey for truth, tolerance, and understanding.


Who are PFOX families?


PFOX families love their homosexual child unconditionally. Unlike other organizations which insist that parental love is conditional on affirming homosexual behavior, there are no conditions on our love for our children. We do not have to approve of everything our children do. Blanket approval is not responsible parenting or love. True love is loving in spite of our differences and treating each other with kindness and respect.


Aren’t some people born gay?


We have all heard of individuals who entered homosexuality later in life after marrying and having children with an opposite-sex spouse. No scientific evidence has established a genetic cause for homosexuality or found a “gay gene.” There is no medical or DNA test to determine if a person is homosexual. Sexual orientation is a matter of self-affirmation and public declaration. “Gay” is a self-chosen identity to publicly demonstrate an individual’s conformity with homosexual behavior and ideology.

According to the American Psychiatric Association, there are no replicated scientific studies to support that people can be born “gay” or that homosexuality is innate. And according to the American Psychological Association, “…no findings have emerged that permit scientists to conclude that sexual orientation is determined by any particular factor or factors. Many think that both nature and nurture both play complex roles…” (2008)


Who are ex-gays?


Each year thousands of men and women with unwanted same-sex attractions make the personal decision to leave a gay identity via secular therapy, faith based ministries, and other non-judgmental environments. Their decision is one only they can make. However, there are others in society who refuse to respect individual self-determination. Consequently, formerly gay men and women are reviled simply because they dare to exist. Without PFOX, former homosexuals would have no voice in an increasingly hostile environment.


What is the ex-gay movement?


Former homosexuals are the last invisible minority group in America. The ex-gay movement ensures the safety and inclusion of former homosexuals in all realms of society, and supports the ex-gay community’s equal access to all public venues. Ex-gays and their supporters should not have to be closeted for fear of other’s negative reactions or disapproval. They do not think something is wrong with them because they decided to fulfill their heterosexual potential. Nor do they believe others should condemn them for the personal decision they have made for their lives.


What are some of the discriminatory actions against ex-gays and their friends?


Due to media indifference, many Americans are unaware of the widespread intolerance practiced against those who leave homosexuality:

  • Unlike gay groups, ex-gay groups like PFOX are routinely denied equal access to participate in public school events, donate books to public school libraries, and present speakers on diversity day.

  • Transgenders and cross-dressers are affirmed for changing their gender but former homosexuals are ridiculed for making the decision to change their sexual orientation.

  • Ex-gay conferences and seminars across the country are frequently picketed by anti-ex-gay protestors like PFLAG, a parents organization run by a gay activist, and Soulforce, a gay religious organization.

  • Presidential candidate Barack Obama was criticized by gay activists for allowing ex-gay gospel singer Donnie McClurkin to sing at a fundraiser. They insisted that Obama drop the African-American singer from the program. Gay singers did not receive this treatment.

  • Harvard University conducted two separate investigations against employee Larry Houston because he discussed his former homosexuality on campus.

  • Equality Virginia demanded that Washington DC Metro remove PFOX’s subway billboards advocating tolerance for ex-gays.

  • An ex-gay volunteer staffing PFOX’s exhibit booth at the Arlington County,
    Virginia Fair was physically assaulted because he refused to recant his ex-gay testimony.
  • Wayne Besen, a former spokesperson for the Human Rights Campaign, falsely reported that the assault had never occurred.

  • After speaking at an ex-gay conference, Michelle McKinney-Hammond lost her programming on a broadcast station because a gay activist had complained to the station.

  • Larry Dombrowski, an employee with the Federal Aviation Administration, was suspended without pay and reassigned because he talked about former homosexuals with other employees.


The list is endless because every day brings new hostile acts against the ex-gay community. This irrational phobia of those who have overcome unwanted same-sex attractions perpetuates misunderstanding and harm against the ex-gay community. It also demonstrates a disregard for diversity and a refusal to respect a basic human right to dignity and self-determination.


Why do gays hate ex-gays so much?


Gay activist organizations instruct their members to reject ex-gays and homosexuals who refuse to self-identify as "gay." This rejection is a form of heterophobia that can be overcome with education and outreach. Gay activists cannot claim sympathy as victims when they victimize their own. We should all be tolerant of each other regardless of our sexual orientation.

The demonization of ex-gays by gays themselves is a sad end to the long struggle for tolerance by the gay community. That ex-gays and their supporters are now oppressed by the same people who until recently were victimized themselves, demonstrates how far the gay rights movement has come. Indeed, a new chapter in the movement has begun – the right of homosexuals and lesbians to leave unwanted homosexuality.


Why would anyone choose to leave homosexuality when there is so much discrimination against the ex-gay community?


Because of the abuse heaped upon them by society, former homosexuals experience discrimination at every level. When a former homosexual marries an opposite sex partner, that ex-gay is ridiculed by former friends. Ex-gays find heterosexuals also reject them if their past is known because "Once gay, always gay" is assumed. While gays can come out of the "closet," ex-gays are forced to stay in theirs because of public prejudice. While gays gain sympathy as victims, ex-gays are criticized and face life-long intolerance for simply existing as living proof that homosexuality is not innate. Americans need to face the real issue of bigotry -- oppression of ex-gays.


Do gay activists oppose the efforts of PFOX to protect the equal rights of ex-gays?


They shouldn’t. Although gay organizations advocate for the rights of homosexuals, lesbians, bisexuals, and transgenders, transsexuals, the intersexed, and questioning youth, they do not add ‘ex-gay’ to that list. Yet the addition of ex-gays ensures tolerance for all segments of our society.

Many ex-gays are afraid to come out of the closet because of the harassment they will receive. The tactics of gay activists are to go after anyone who comes out publicly as ex-gay, force them back into the closet, and then claim that ex-gays don't exist because there aren't any out in public.

PFOX is not an anti-gay organization – we are a pro-ex-gay organization. All people should be treated with dignity. We respect the opinions of others, even if they disagree with us. Indeed, we do not ask for their approval – only their tolerance.


I’m happy being gay, so why should gays change their sexual orientation?


Change is only for those with unwanted same-sex attractions. What makes you happy may not make someone else happy because we are all individuals. Please respect other people’s decisions for their lives. Ex-gays can testify to the fact that those with unwanted homosexuality deserve the right to self-determination and happiness based on their own needs, and not the needs of others. According to the American Psychological Association, “[m]ental health organizations call on their members to respect a person’s right to self-determination.” (2008)


Do I have to dislike ex-gays if I have gay friends or family?


No! You can have friends who are gay and other friends who are ex-gay. Befriending the ex-gay community does not mean that you are being disloyal to the gay people you know and love.


What about gay teens and suicide that I’ve heard about?


Research shows that the risk of suicide decreases by 20% for each year that a person delays homosexual or bisexual self-labeling. Suicide attempts were not explained by experiences with discrimination, violence, loss of friendship, or current personal attitudes towards homosexuality. (Source: Risk Factors for Attempted Suicide in Gay and Bisexual Youth by Remafedi, Farrow, and Deisher, in Official Journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics, Pediatrics 87: 869-875 June 1991.)

Schools should not encourage teens to self-identify as “gay” before they have matured. During adolescence, sexual attractions are fluid and do not take on permanence until early adulthood. Rather than affirming teenagers as “gay” through self-labeling, educators should affirm them as people worthy of respect and encourage teens to wait until adulthood before making choices about their sexuality. If teens are encouraged to believe that they are permanently “gay” before they have had a chance to reach adulthood, their life choices are severely restricted and can result in depression. Once a child self-identifies as “gay,” he is stuck with that label because gay activists and other heterophobic influences refuse to acknowledge that an individual can leave homosexuality.


Why should schools present ex-gay information?


Schools that address the issue of sexual orientation must present all of the facts in a fair and balanced manner. According to Public Schools and Sexual Orientation Consensus Guidelines, school officials are urged to include the viewpoints of all participants, including ex-gays and their supporters, in order to develop policies that promote fairness for all. Actions by educators to exclude some views merely because they disagree with them constitute viewpoint discrimination in violation of the First Amendment. Therefore, the ex-gay viewpoint in public schools is protected by the First Amendment and should be heard. These guidelines are endorsed by the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network (GLSEN), American Association of School Administrators, Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development, and the First Amendment Center. In addition, the National Educators Association (NEA) Ex-Gay Educators Caucus endorses ex-gay equal access to schools.


How do sexual orientation laws and hate crime policies discriminate against ex-gays?


Ex-gays are subject to an increasingly hostile environment where they are labeled as perpetrators of hate and discrimination against homosexuals simply because they advocate for or live out a different view of homosexuality.

Gay activists have created an environment where anyone who does not accept homosexuality as equivalent to heterosexuality in every way is labeled a “bigot” whose attitude equates to racism. Consequently, alternatives to homosexuality are interpreted as harassment “against” gays. Sexual orientation non-discrimination laws and hate crime policies are used to silence the ex-gay community and legitimize intolerance against former homosexuals. Fighting “hate” and “discrimination” against gays has become a euphemism for attacks against ex-gays and their supporters. For example:

  • Davis Ott of Madison, Wisconsin was charged with a hate crime because he stated his own experience as a former homosexual.

  • The Gay, Lesbian and Straight Educational Network (GLSEN) distributed a booklet to every public school superintendent accusing former homosexuals of “harassment” because ex-gay groups want the same access to public schools that gay groups currently enjoy.

  • Cornelius Baker, executive director of the Whitman Walker AIDS clinic, labeled ex-gays as “political extremists” who “tortured and brainwashed” teens, although he endorses gay outreach to questioning youth.

  • After receiving “threats, insults and brutal letters” for running an advertisement for an ex-gay book, Psychology Today editor Bob Epstein acknowledged the “dark, intolerant, abusive side of the gay community.”

  • Orlando Commissioner Patty Sheehan denounced her fellow commissioner for issuing a proclamation honoring an ex-gay organization even though she herself freely makes proclamations celebrating “Gay Days” every year at Disney World. Ms. Sheehan, an open lesbian, went so far as to compare the ex-gay organization to the KKK, thereby demeaning African-American ex-gays.

  • Former homosexual men and women, as well as their friends and family, feel threatened because they are subjected to a hostile environment if they publicly claim their former homosexuality or support of the ex-gay community. Courageous men and women who have left their gay identity must not be denied their Constitutional rights. To give sexual orientation protection to one group while excluding another is outright discrimination.



Why must ex-gays be included in sexual orientation topics?


Ex-gays must be included in the formation of public policy because we have much to contribute to the understanding of sexual orientation. Without testimony from all sectors of society, public policy on this issue is seriously flawed.

Copyright © PFOX www.pfox.org
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Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae Give Tens of Thousands of Dollars to Gay Agenda

News Advisory: December 19, 2008

Contact: Regina Griggs, Director, Parents and Friends of Ex-Gays & Gays (PFOX) 804-453-4737 PFOX@pfox.org

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Bankrupt mortgage giants Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae give thousands to homosexual groups

As mortgage giants Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae hurtled to financial ruin, their charitable foundations continued to pour big money into homosexual causes. 

Their largest single gifts came in the last year — just months before both companies collapsed and were taken over by the government. 

Freddie Mac gave more than $20,000 to the 2008 fundraising gala of the Washington, D.C., chapter of Parents and Friends of Lesbians and Gays (PFLAG-DC). Fannie Mae gave between $10,000 - $19,000 to the same event. 

According to its records, the Freddie Mac Foundation gave over $125,000 to gay-activist groups since 2005. The Fannie Mae Foundation donated about $80,000 to these groups over the last decade. 

Both foundations gave money to PFLAG-DC for years. 

Regina Griggs, executive director of Parents and Friends of Ex-Gays & Gays (PFOX), said, "We support individuals' rights to self-determination. We support families who have homosexual loved ones. We support those who have come out of homosexuality. We provide outreach and educate teens on same-sex attractions." 

To Freddie and Fannie, Griggs says, "We would like equal money. We want the same financial opportunity that gay groups enjoy." 

Shawn Flaherty, a spokeswoman for Freddie Mac, said she was not sure PFOX would meet the grant guidelines, adding the foundation focuses on three priorities — stable homes, foster care and adoption, and youth development. 

The grants have not focused on the gay community, she said. "It's a piece of it." 

Yet the Human Rights Campaign (HRC), the nation's largest gay lobby group, also benefited from the generosity of the government sponsored mortgage giants. During the last two years, Freddie Mac gave $65,000 to HRC to help homosexual couples adopt children. 

Fannie Mae has sponsored at least five Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD) events for a total of nearly $40,000 since 1998. GLADD’s purpose is to pressure the media to positively portray homosexuality and censor positive portrayals of ex-gays. 

Griggs said the process seems agenda-driven: “PFLAG, GLAAD and HRC are gay-activist groups that oppose the civil rights of the ex-gay community.” 

Representative Barney Frank (D-MA), the openly gay congressman who chairs the Housing Banking Committee charged with oversight of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, has received more than $40,000 in campaign donations from Fannie and Freddie since 1989. Frank’s former boyfriend, Herb Moses, was an executive at Fannie Mae from 1991 to 1998 -- the same time Frank was serving on the Committee. In 2003, Frank rejected warnings about the soundness of both Fannie and Freddie as exaggerations and conjuring. 

For now, all grants are under review. 

### 

Parents and Friends of Ex-Gays & Gays (PFOX)promotes an inclusive environment for the ex-gay community, and works to eliminate negative perceptions and discrimination against former homosexuals.
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Black Woman Fights Back

This is a WorldNetDaily printer-friendly version of the article which follows.
To view this item online, visit http://www.worldnetdaily.com/index.php?pageId=82453

Saturday, December 06, 2008


LAW OF THE LAND
WorldNetDaily


Homosexuality editorial puts 1st Amendment on trial

Woman sues after she was fired for saying being 'gay' is not same as being black


Crystal Dixon

A woman is suing the university where she worked for firing her over a privately written newspaper commentary expressing her Christian views on homosexuality.

Crystal Dixon, the former associate vice president of human resources at the University of Toledo, was fired in May after she objected to an opinion article in the Toledo Free Press that compared striving for "gay rights" with the civil rights struggles of black Americans.

Dixon responded with a Free Press editorial of her own, written not in her capacity as a university employee but as a private citizen.

"As a Black woman," Dixon wrote, "I take great I take great umbrage at the notion that those choosing the homosexual lifestyle are 'civil rights victims.' Here's why. I cannot wake up tomorrow and not be a black woman. I am genetically and biologically a black woman and very pleased to be so as my Creator intended."

University of Toledo President Lloyd Jacobs immediately suspended Dixon and condemned her statements. Within days, Dixon was fired.

Now, with the help of the Thomas More Law Center, a not-for-profit law firm dedicated to the defense and promotion of the religious freedom of Christians, Dixon has today filed a lawsuit in Federal District Court claiming violations of her constitutional rights of free speech.

"Crystal Dixon has a constitutional right to privately express her personal opinions," said Richard Thompson, president and chief counsel of the Law Center, in a statement.

"This particular opinion represents the view of a majority of Christian Americans," Thompson continued. "Essentially she was fired for being a Christian."

According to the Free Press, the University of Toledo's media relations policy does not specify whether faculty and staff may submit opinion pieces to the media.

"Supreme Court decisions remind us, that the fact you are a public employee doesn't mean you give up your First Amendment rights," Floyd Weatherspoon, a professor at Capital University Law School in Columbus, told the newspaper. "The majority of her column is about her personal views."

Weatherspoon said courts are usually supportive of employees in First Amendment cases, citing Pickering v. Board of Education, in which the Supreme Court ruled school officials had violated a teacher's free speech rights by censuring him after he criticized them in a newspaper editorial.

The chain of events in Dixon's case was launched by Toledo Free Press Editor in Chief Michael S. Miller's column boasting of his support for the "gay" community.

"I have been tangentially immersed in the gay culture for so long, it's a natural and common aspect of life. Three decades of loving these friends and family and sharing their successes in managing careers and raising families has jaded me to the hatred and prejudice many people had against the gay community. … As a middle-aged, overweight white guy with graying facial hair, I am America's ruling demographic, so the gay rights struggle is something I experience secondhand, like my black friends' struggles and my wheelchair-bound friends' struggles," he wrote.

He then wrote about moderating a town hall meeting sponsored by two homosexual activists groups.

It dealt "with issues of employment discrimination against gay people," he said. According to the panelists, he continued, "UT has offered domestic partner benefits since then-president Dan Johnson signed them into effect. The Medical University of Ohio did not offer those benefits. When the institutions merged, UT employees retained the domestic-partner benefits, but MUO employees were not offered them. So, people working for the same employer do not have access to the same benefits."

Dixon then responded.

"I respectfully submit a different perspective for Miller and Toledo Free Press readers to consider. … First, human beings, regardless of their choices in life, are of ultimate value to God and should be viewed the same by others. At the same time, one's personal choices lead to outcomes either positive or negative," she said.

"As a black woman who happens to be an alumnus of the University of Toledo's Graduate School, an employee and business owner, I take great umbrage at the notion that those choosing the homosexual lifestyle are 'civil rights victims.' Here's why. I cannot wake up tomorrow and not be a black woman. I am genetically and biologically a black woman and very pleased to be so as my Creator intended. Daily, thousands of homosexuals make a life decision to leave the gay lifestyle evidenced by the growing population of PFOX (Parents and Friends of Ex Gays) and Exodus International just to name a few."

WND also reported an author who wrote two books about homosexuality told managers at Toledo in an open letter they should praise an administrator who said being "gay" is not the same as black, not punish her.

Robert A.J. Gagnon, the author of "The Bible and Homosexual Practice: Texts and Hermeneutics" and "Homosexuality and the Bible: Two Views," said, "Ms. Dixon is absolutely right that sexual orientation is not akin to race or sex. Unlike a homosexual orientation, race and sex are 100 percent congenitally predetermined, cannot be fundamentally changed in their essence by cultural influences, and are not a primary or direct desire for behavior that is incompatible with embodied structures."

"Your suspension of Ms. Crystal Dixon, associate vice president of human resources at the University of Toledo, for rejecting a comparison between homosexuality on the one hand and being black or handicapped on the other hand constitutes, in my view, a gross injustice and an expression of the very intolerance that you claim to abhor," he wrote.

Gagnon said the closer parallels to adult-committed homosexual relations are not ethnicity or gender but, rather, adult-committed incestuous unions and adult-committed polysexual unions.

"Give America more exposure to upscale, adult-committed polygamous bonds (and adult-committed incestuous bonds) and American will learn to be more tolerant of such bonds…," he wrote. "Those who dismiss a polygamy analogy and an incest analogy on the grounds that polygamy and incest always produce 'demonstrable harm' are simply responding out of their 'polyphobia' and 'incest-phobia.' And then you can suspend people who say critical things about such relationships, once you overcome your own prejudices."

Gagnon, who holds degrees from Princeton, Harvard and Dartmouth, wrote the "Sexuality" entry for the "New Dictionary of Christian Apologetics," the same entry for the "Dictionary for Theological Interpretation of Scripture," and dozens of other such articles. He's written for "Theology Matters," "Catholic Biblical Quarterly" and "Journal of Biblical Literature."

He says the most "shameful" part of the University of Toledo's actions is that managers are shutting off any dissent.

Such actions "come out of the Stalinistic, Soviet state. This is the kind of elimination of any expression of differences of opinion [found there]," he said.
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