Thursday, February 05, 2009

Say it with me now - GO AWAY SALLY KERN!

I never did like the controversy regarding Oklahoma legislator Sally Kern.

I didn't like the way she consistently relied on bad information from Paul Cameron and the religious right to make her case that lgbts are as bad as terrorists.

I didn't like the way she hid behind her so-called Christian religion when questioned about her comments.

And most of all, I didn't like how the lgbt community pretty much let her get away with it.

We wasted time speculating on whether or not her son was gay or talking about what Ellen DeGeneres said about the situation. The fact that Sally Kern was a good example of how the religious right flim flams guillible people of faith into believing the worst about lgbts was a point that got lost in all of the controversy.

I was glad when the controversy died down. One wonders if Kern was because she keeps making an ass of herself:

Speaking at the Clouds Over America conference, run and organized by the John Birch Society in Oklahoma City, Kern told a welcoming crowd that she found the elusive gay agenda between the pages of Marshall Kirk's and Hunter Madsen's 1990 book After The Ball: How America Will Conquer Its fear & Hatred Of Gays In The 90s. Its authors mostly argue in 432 pages that gays and lesbians will most likely be accepted once they are liked by the general public.

Oklahoma Gazette, the Oklahoma City alternative weekly, reports Kern spoke to a packed crowd.

“You know,” Kern said, “I've done a lot of reading on this. I wish I could describe to you their behavior. I will not because I would be redder than this suit. It's their behavior that we oppose.”


Here we go again. Gays are following a six point plan to take over America. It's a standard urban legend in religious right dogma.

From time to time, the religious right will claim that the lgbt community is using the book After the Ball as a sort of blueprint to allegedly force acceptance. Then they will point to certain incidents that somehow "connect all of the dots."

To a lot of us, these incidents (i.e. more visibility and a little more acceptance for lgbts and our families) mean nothing more than positive evolutionary steps of the human existence. To the religious right, these steps are the result of planning by a group of evil geniuses intent on conquest.

Apparently they got us mixed up with their efforts to ban same-sex marriage nationwide.

For the record, the vast majority of lgbts have never heard of After the Ball - not that it matters to Kern and folks who agree with her.

The real question is will our community finally bring more attention to the fact that the religious right is intentionally putting out bad propaganda about lgbts?

Somehow I doubt that this will happen.

To some of us, it's much more fun to focus on issues such as Kern's age or weight.

5 comments:

PersonalFailure said...

Hi! A friend of mine mentioned you, and I wish she'd said something sooner.

You know, I tried to tell someone that if you think After the Ball is an agenda, you must think Pepsi has an . . . and then I realized people like this do think Pepsi has an agenda. They also think that a group of Jewy Jew conspiring conspirators involved in a conspiracy are running the world. (The holocaust? Elaborate misdirection. Yes, someone actually said that.)

Talking to people like that is a lot like trying to explain physics (real physics, not imaginary moral physics) to my dog.

BlackTsunami said...

Amen my friend. All you can do is bat those lies down when they come up. ;p

Anonymous said...

Speaking of conspiracy theories and whatnot, did anyone by me notice that Kern was speaking at an event sponsored by the John Birch Society, which, among other things, is well known for members with a love for conspiracy theories?

So maybe Sally found her perfect target audience?

BlackTsunami said...

I noticed that. LOL. I bet the religious right won't be so quick to run to her defense this time.

Anonymous said...

Honestly, it's hard to say. After all, Fred Clark over at Slacktivist has pointed out numerous times (and provided evidence) that End Times prophecy guru Timothy LaHaye was once a very active John Bircher, himself.

And given how quickly many of the Religious Right cozied up to the LDS Church during their Prop 8 campaign despite the troubled past between the two groups, I'm not sure I'd find any bedfellow of the Religious Right all that surprising anymore.