Archive for the 'Homophobia' Category

Ed Whitfield And His Code Words!

Jim Pence August 5th, 2008

I have friends, acquaintances and family that are gay and I know a gay code word when I hear one, most of the time. I also have black friends and acquaintances and I know the subtle code words for racism and I suggest the video below will show Ed. Whitfield spewing these code words out of his homophobic racist mouth.
Mr. Whitfield as a congressman is supposed to represent the all folks in his district, not divide them. It’s a shame he’s wrote off some of those he’s supposed to be representing as unworthy!!!

DEMOCRACY AT WORK IN KENTUCKY!!

Jim Pence January 31st, 2008

I just talked to Heather Ryan ( The Young Lady that Senator Mitch McConnell got fired from her job) on the phone and she is currently building her campaign web-site, in her home, that’s in Kentucky’s 1st Congressional District, on her computer that sits next to her kitchen table. The web-site will be up soon with all of her contact information.
This is in contrast to to her opponent, Ed Whitfield that doesn’t live in Kentucky’s 1st Congressional District, who will have professionals building his campaign web site.
According to some sources Ed Whitfield owns a Newport Beach, California condo but in Kentucky only owns “a lot in Madisonville” worth between $1,000 and $15,000 and nothing more.
It’s odd that no show Ed Whitfield is so enamored with California. Is it possible that we have another Larry Craig right here in Kentucky????
Stay tuned, we’re gonna find out!!!!
Just for the record, for the Whitfield folks that have the ability to read, check out the photo below. Do you see bitch anywhere on the sign? If you don’t then shut the f$%# up!!!!!!
By the way Ed., can you count to 12????

heavenprotestweb.jpg

He Didn’t Win That Either, Sen. McConnell

Terri Whitehouse November 7th, 2007

Regarding Gov. Ernie Fletcher’s defeat, Sen. Mitch McConnell says:

Ernie Fletcher ran a hard-fought campaign that showed a deep commitment to the Commonwealth and to the principles that propelled him into office four years ago. He lost the race, but won our respect by fighting hard to build on the achievements of his term — achievements that will benefit Kentucky for many years to come.

You respect bigots, Sen. McConnell? Do you even believe your own lies any more?

H/T: PolWatchers

Soon-to-be Gov. Steve Beshear can transform how the world sees Kentucky and how Kentuckians see themselves

Matt Gunterman November 5th, 2007

Yesterday morning a German friend emailed me to say that The New York Times Sunday travel section was running a feature on the finer qualities of bourbon and bluegrass in Kentucky.

He’s read much about Kentucky lately, and it’s intriguing him. Just last week, both the London-based Guardian newspaper and The American Prospect magazine ran pieces on the growth of progressive culture and politics in Kentucky. These follow in the wake of Bob Moser’s monumental cover story on Kentucky for The Nation in September.

When Terence Samuel, who authored the Guardian and TAP articles, interviewed me, he made the comment, “Everyone’s talking about Kentucky.”

People around the world are talking about Kentucky because — right here, right now — Kentuckians are offering them hope. In us they see the potential that the American spirit that has inspired so many generations of the past is finally awakening and is ready to take on the wicked specter that is the creation of hate- and fear-mongers like Pres. George W. Bush (R), Sen. Mitch McConnell (R), Gov. Ernie Fletcher (R), and Rep. Stan Lee (R).

They see it in the workers who are out canvassing neighborhoods today. They see it in the peace demonstrators who are agitating to end a senseless war. They see it in the families who are fighting for their children’s health care. They see it in the crusade to protect and restore our environment. They see it in people of faith who are standing up to the bigots and bullies who have dominated Kentucky pulpits for too long.

The evidence is all around that something is happening in Kentucky, and the world is hungry for that something to be a people who are innovative, bold, tolerant, and progressive.

There is not a thing about McConnell, Fletcher, or Lee that’s any of those things. They are instead calculating, rigid, bullying, and conservative.

Soon-to-be Governor-elect Steve Beshear (D) will have the opportunity to communicate to the world what the new Kentucky is all about.

Ernie Fletcher saw “selling” Kentucky as a mere re-branding exercise. Nothing of the substance changed, and the discerning public could see through that. Fletcher’s take on “unbridled spirit” was anything but.

But Beshear can change the substance because he is not beholden to the baser elements of Kentucky society; his opponent will win the vote of every sort of bigot our state has to offer. With Kentucky’s urban center of Louisville poised to enter a sort of renaissance (barring the next Bush recession undermining its growth), Kentucky can become part of a new face for the United States to the rest of the world, one that is dynamic and provocative, welcoming and welcomed.

Kentucky can’t move forward on jobs, education, or other quality of life issues if it doesn’t tackle those elements of its culture that are holding the state back, and Beshear is well positioned to change the conversation and move down a different path.

Rep. Stan Lee (R) is Kentucky’s version of Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (R?)

Matt Gunterman October 31st, 2007

God bless Joe Sonka. God bless Joe Sonka because he works his tail off traversing Kentucky covering the various manifestations of right-wing lunacy in the commonwealth [If you haven't checked out Joe's blogosphere-famous coverage of the Creation Museum from earlier this year, do so].

I envy Joe because he has that ability to observe the multitude of nitwits that make up the Kentucky GOP with a humorous eye and a sly smirk. I, on the other hand, don’t suffer these fools so well, even from a thousand miles away. Yet Joe has the gift, through his writing, of putting the crazy nature of social conservatives in Kentucky in perspective.

For example, Joe has a frightening new report over at BlueGrassRoots (the article itself will be published in the Lexington-based W Weekly) about a recent meeting of the American Family Association of Kentucky.

I’m going to include some excerpts from Joe’s piece below, but the most important thing to remember is that both the Republican candidate for state attorney general, Rep. Stan Lee, and for state auditor, Linda Greenwell, were in attendance and fully engaged at this meeting.

You know how most of the world has been up-in-arms against Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (R?) over his years-long effort to promote the cause of holocaust denial? It’s craziness. Rational people know it. That didn’t stop the Iranians from organizing and hosting a Holocaust denial conference last year. Birds of a feather flock together, as even the U.S.’s very own former Klu Klux Klan member David Duke took part.

In the end, we will never eliminate crazy beliefs like Holocaust denial, racism, xenophobia, or homophobia, but we can marginalize them. Peer pressure does work, especially here in the United States. Americans, by and large, want to be perceived as successful, accepted, and mainstream. So, by framing these sorts of beliefs as radical, extreme, undesirable and out-of-the-mainstream, you necessitate that people who continue to cling to them make an overt choice for themselves: which is more important to them, their hatred of others or their own prosperity?

It’s objectively true that hatred is not rational; it is morally wrong. Yet some people will not make the rational choice on their own; they need a little cajoling along the way. That’s where societal pressure comes into play.

Keep that in mind as you read what Joe has to say below about this meeting. Think about how outrageous its content was, and how scary it is that two of the Republican candidates for statewide office embraced this message and those who propagate it.

In short, these people at the American Family Association of Kentucky are free to have their beliefs; it’s a free country. The rest of us, however, should expect that men and women who strive to attain the highest levels of elected office in our land would not associate with them, would shun them. Instead, they are embracing them, and on election day the people of Kentucky will shun Stan Lee and Linda Greenwell as punishment.

Raging Bigotry and the Dying of the Right

Did you know that Lexington is run by the “Homosexual Hegemony”? That “the gays” own the government and the media? And the only way to get access to this power is to have the dirty gay sex with them?

Yea, neither did I.

[...]

Roughly 50 people squeezed into the cafeteria. After the first speaker told us how he escaped the evils of today’s society when God told him to start his own line of athletic apparel, it was Kent Ostrander’s turn. Ostrander, the founder of the like-minded Family Foundation, was a key player in the push to amend KY’s Constitution so that gay marriage and civil unions are now outlawed.

He was sure to preface his points with “now, I’m not trying to vilify homosexuals”. For example, he would say this just before his inaccurate tangent on how gay sex is the cause of 75% of AIDS in the world. “These people bring this on themselves!”

He further chastised UK, saying that allowing partners to receive health insurance is to tolerate and “validify” these relationships. Again, he “wasn’t trying to vilify gays”, but the “predatory ideas of the radical homosexual agenda” will destroy our families and society. Ostrander ended his speech, nearly shouting, “Our God shall reign!”

Next, a sociology student presented her research project on why the black community in Lexington is faced with the problems of poverty, crime and drug abuse. Her conclusion, after repeatedly informing us that she was a “scientist”? Young blacks in Lexington are mired in this because of….. The Gays. You see, homosexuals own all of the power in the black community of Lexington, coining it the “Homosexual Hegemony”. Those gays force young blacks wanting access to that power to tolerate and become acclimated to the gay lifestyle. One acclimated to this immorality, they succumb to the evils of drug abuse, crime and dirty gay sex.

But these are just the crazy ramblings of some small fringe cult, right? Apparently, not. Linda Greenwell, Republican candidate for Auditor in next week’s election, was happily handing out campaign literature to the crowd. Ostrander pointed out state Sen. Stan Lee in the crowd, thanking him for all of his work to “support our cause in Frankfort”. Lee, the Republican candidate for Attorney General, took a bow and soaked in the applause.

Then, it was Frank Simon’s turn. He jumped right into the “culture war” routine, blasting the godless villains who have taken the commandments, literal creation science and prayer out of public schools. “We need to stop them and GOD will stop them!”

Simon started in with the gays, then paused, putting on a coy exterior of doubt. “Oh, I don’t want to get into this…” before deciding to share his shocking video with the crowd. The lights were dimmed, and he presented a video that he claimed was being shown in schools. It showed a series of families, in which a child introduced us to his/her two mothers or fathers. Each child explained how, despite their differences, they love and protect each other just like any other family does.

The visceral reaction from the crowd was palpable. Audible gasps. Loud cries of “no!!!”, “my God!!”, “how dare they!” It resembled the “2-minute hate” out of Orwell’s 1984, the crowd whipped up into frenzy at the traitorous Goldstein. “This is what we’re up against!” cried Simon.

“Sure, kids drank beer back in my day, but it wasn’t until the gays that they started smoking the dope! ….. We never used to have to lock our doors!”

They culprit was the ubiquitous “They”. “They” took over our government. “They” want gay sex taught to our children. “They control the media! You’re only going to find out about these votes in Frankfort after they happen. That’s no accident. They don’t want you to know about them!”

Such bigotry among fundamentalists has many forbearers. This used to be the argument against “race-mixing”, how the Bible warned against it and it would tear down the fabric of our society. Such bigots were swept to the margins of society after the civil rights movement, but there is always a new “they” to latch onto. And while fomenting hatred towards gays has proved quite successful for the Christian Right, they also know that the gig is up.

Shortly after this AFA meeting, UK had a “coming out week”, where gay and straight students could show solidarity and promote tolerance. At one event, state Sen. Ernesto Scorsone, our first openly gay representative, told the crowd, “When I went to UK, something like this was unheard of. We’ve progressed to the point where this is now possible.”

And that is why we see the vitriol of the Christian right. They know that their loss in the culture war is imminent. A recent poll showed that those under 30 have rejected this brand of bigotry in politics, supporting gay rights in overwhelming numbers. There is even a rift among evangelicals, as a recent NYT article found many churches abandoning the obsession with gays, moving towards the social justice aspect of Christianity.

Tuesday’s election would seem to validate this trend, as Republicans Ernie Fletcher and Stan Lee are expected to lose by nearly 20 points. But victory is not yet upon us, as KY politicians will still seek to capitalize on this homophobic demographic (Even Todd Hollenbach, Dem. candidate for Treasurer, refuses to renounce Simon’s endorsement).

But at least we now know that it will take more than simply using homophobia to get elected in KY.

Of course, if I was Mexican, I’d be sweating a bit.

Same-sex marriage will one day be the law of the land, and it will happen with a whimper

Matt Gunterman October 11th, 2007

Did you see where Dear Abby endorsed gay marriage this week?

And what happened? The nation — or the national majority — just yawned.

Yes, I know, the right-wing, conservative fringe probably got upset.

Once upon a time, conservatives believed that ethnic minorities and women weren’t whole or rational people. In fact, the proud fascist and anorexic Ann Coulter recently reiterated that she still strongly believes so (and just today said that the nation would be better off without Jews).

Many, many conservatives still believe these things, but they are shunned as a dangerous fringe. Such views were, sadly, mainstream back in the day. Yet, happily, our nation matures and such views don’t inform how we forge a common future.

Today’s conservatives — Republicans and some Democrats — are still hung up on same-sex marriage, but the nation as a whole is waking up to how conservative arguments about marriage don’t make sense. Marriage in the United States is a secular, legal arrangement.

Yes, conservatives will scream louder and louder about same-sex marriage as it increasingly but gradually becomes a reality across the nation. Kentucky will probably not be at the forefront of that movement, but it will happen. Soon-to-be governor Steve Beshear will not be the one to legalize it. This movement will be one that comes from below, as movements for justice almost always are. It will take a half generation or so.

What conservatives don’t realize is that, even though they’re screaming louder, fewer and fewer people will be screaming with them.

Today’s homophobe will one day soon occupy his or her place among the dark annals of American history where slavery proponents, suffrage opponents, and segregationists reside.

Until then, however, we’ll have more of what’s below from desperate conservatives, like Gov. Ernie Fletcher (R) and Rep. Stan Lee (R).

From the always insightful Pat Crowley:

How low can you go

I thought I had seen about everything in a politics, but the Fletcher campaign is hitting a new low in gay bashing. Check out this release; I’m waiting for a response from the Beshear campaign.

In spite of the fact that 75% of Kentuckians voted for a 2004 amendment defining marriage in the Commonwealth as an institution between one man and one woman, Steve Beshear’s latest campaign finance report listed two male individuals as spouses to one another.

“Steve Beshear’s liberal agenda for Kentucky has been exposed yet again,” said Jason Keller, Communications Director for Governor’s Fletcher’s campaign. “While Beshear likes to talk about his conservative roots, it’s clear he departed from that course long ago.”

Keller continued, “Steve Beshear’s recent finance report shows two things; one, that it sure takes a lot of money to hide a liberal record from Kentuckians, and two, that Steve Beshear and his cronies obviously believe that the marriage amendment was a farce.

“Beshear signed his name to a document, under the penalty of perjury, swearing that he believed the contents of the report were accurate. When he signed that document, he violated the Kentucky Constitution’s definition of marriage in the Commonwealth,” concluded Keller.

McConnell should listen to Ahmadinejad; they speak the same language of hate and delusion

Matt Gunterman September 25th, 2007

Our Senator Mitch McConnell (R) always has his finger on the pulse of the nation. After all, why — on a day when Kentucky GM workers went on nationwide strike for the first time in over a generation to decry loss of job security and benefits, and GM bosses insisted that the government needs to do something about the health care crisis in the nation (health care cost GM $5.2 billion in 2005) — why worry about that health care crisis [and McConnell certainly doesn't as he's busy obstructing expanded health care to American children] when you’ve got a premier American university to criticize.

McConnell lashed out yesterday at Columbia University’s decision to allow Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (R?) to speak to the student body. Of course, in introducing Ahmadinejad, the president of the university called him a “petty and cruel dictator,” and the audience laughed at his ludicrous claims.

However, Ahmadinejad had a lot to say to American conservatives. After all, the Iranian leader repeated no fewer than three times that his country didn’t suffer from the twin plagues of homosexuals and homosexuality.

Isn’t homosexuality one of the chief threats to the United States in the eyes of Republicans? Isn’t this lifestyle choice a sign of moral decay and the rot of empire? Didn’t the Roman empire fall because its soldiers were too busy engaged in homosexual acts to defend themselves from invading hordes?

If Iran has eliminated homosexuality from its borders, then perhaps Mitch McConnell and other Republicans should approach what Ahmadinejad has to say with an open mind. Perhaps they should think harder about what true theocracy is and whether their preferred Christian faith is simply inferior to Islam.

Think long and hard, Mitch.

Redneck bigots like to invoke Jesus, but that doesn’t mean Jesus listens

Jim Pence September 6th, 2007

[Message from Matt: Jim's work is ever provocatively ornery, but there are times when it not only captures the humor and mood of the moment when making its point, but also is elevated, quite frankly, to the level of art. If ever MOMA does an exhibit on folk blogging, then Jim Pence and his HillbillyReport will be Exhibit A.]

Rep. Ron Lewis (KY-02): Sen. Larry Craig (R) must resign

Matt Gunterman August 30th, 2007

I think I’m correct in saying that Congressman Ron Lewis (R) is the first in the Kentucky delegation to call for Senator Larry Craig’s resignation.

My question: Since Lewis doesn’t stipulate that the indiscretions must occur while serving in one’s current office, how does Craig’s predicament warrant this response and Senator David Vitter’s buying of prostitutes and wearing of diapers with them differ here?

For Immediate Release
Contact: Michael Dodge
August 29, 2007
(202) 225-3501

Rep. Lewis Calls for U.S. Senator Larry Craig to Resign

WASHINGTON, D.C - U.S. Rep. Ron Lewis issued the following statement Wednesday concerning Idaho Senator Larry Craig:

“Senator Craig’s failure to disclose this incident and unwillingness to legally claim his innocence undermine the conservative principles of the Republican Party and should not be tolerated by voters or his congressional colleagues.

“There should be no moral relativism applied to elected officials who tarnish public office with private indiscretions. I call on Senator Craig to do the right thing for our party and for the people of Idaho by stepping down from the U.S. Senate.”

Kentucky in 2007 is the national GOP’s canary in a coalmine

Matt Gunterman August 19th, 2007

With all the tragedy as of late in our nation’s coalmines and with Kentucky’s Senator Mitch McConnell and his wife Secretary of Labor Elaine Chao at the center of a web of money-grubbing and influence-mongering in Washington that has left these many coalmines the deathtraps that they are for the sake of the almighty campaign contribution and a few ticks on the profit margin, I think the analogy of Kentucky’s gubernatorial election this year being the GOP’s canary in a coalmine is a fitting one.

Watch this latest video from Jim Pence of DitchMitchKY and the HillbillyReport. What’s going on in the video with security personnel at the Kentucky State Fair trying to end an anti-war protest (until they’re set straight by the State Police) is fascinating enough, but what’s even more fascinating is what’s going on in the background: all those cars honking in support of the protest.

Recall that thirteen years ago in 1994, on the cusp of the so-called Republican Revolution, Kentucky served the Democrats in a similar capacity. Then the death in March of that year of Democratic Congressman William H. Natcher (KY-02)—who had represented the district since 1953 and who continues to hold the all-time record for consecutive votes in Congress at 18,401—set up a special election for the seat.

I was only 17 years old at the time, but I had been politically aware since the 1988 presidential campaign, when a longtime Democratic activist in my church started hauling me to rallies, the biggest of those being Democratic vice presidential candidate Lloyd Bentsen’s appearance at the Big Tobacco warehouse in Owensboro, today the largest city in the Second District. I don’t remember anything about the substance of what was said there, but I remember the energy, the pomp, and the confidence among the Democrats gathered.

Yet, a mere six years later the entire region of the Second District was seething against the political establishment and its status quo, its distance, and indifference. That establishment was Democratic.

Perhaps that environment is best encapsulated in a scene that has now been immortalized in Michael Moore’s latest film SiCKO. On August 29, 1994, at a rally in Owensboro, “Tobacco Rights Activists” burned an effigy of then First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton in protest of President Bill Clinton’s health care plan. With a bluegrass band playing the back ground, Stan Arachikavitz, president of the Kentucky Association of Tobacco Supporters, chanted “burn, baby, burn,” as the effigy was doused in gasoline and two women set it ablaze. When asked for comment by a reporter, Arachikavitz replied, “Hillary didn’t last as long as my Marlboro.” The nation was outraged, but there was a quiet satisfaction among many across western Kentucky.

At that rally was Ron Lewis, the Second District’s newly elected Republican congressman. In what had been a shock to Kentucky’s political establishment—if no-one else—Lewis had defeated longtime Kentucky State Senator Joe Prather in the May special election to succeed Natcher. Lewis had won with 55 percent of the vote on a turnout of less than 20 percent. A fundamentalist Christian, Baptist minister, and religious bookstore owner, Lewis had been recruited to the race by Senator Mitch McConnell, who had been narrowly elected to his own seat ten years earlier in 1984 on the coattails of Ronald Reagan.

You may recalled that Lewis’s campaign commercials in the special election had famously morphed Prather’s head into that of Bill Clinton, who was then near the height of his unpopularity. The national GOP considered the technique a success and went on to use it widely in the general election that year. Meanwhile, rumors had circulated in the district that Joe Prather was in Washington to look for a house. Perhaps it was just a rumor spread by the McConnell machine, but it might as well have been true, such was the arrogance and sense of entitlement of Kentucky Democrats of the day.

McConnell went on to recruit Republican Ed Whitfield—who had just as much personal dynamism as Lewis—to run in the First Congressional District in the fall. Both Lewis and Whitfield won; Whitfield became the first Republican ever elected to the First District.

My point with all this is that the political establishment in Kentucky at that time—conservative Southern Democrats—was a bloated and opaque bubble. Its bloated-ness allowed the good old boys to make room for more of their own inside and its opaqueness kept their less-than-altruistic dealings hidden from the masses, but those very same qualities kept the good old boys from witnessing the trouble that was brewing for them on the outside–in the real world.

Mitch McConnell burst their bubble.

Unfortunately, the Kentucky Republican Party that Mitch McConnell replaced the good old boy Democrats with was a political machine that set about inflaming the ugliest elements of Kentucky’s own culture: its racism, its bigotry, its sexism, its churlishness, its phobias, and its anti-intellectualism.

The thing to remember about Mitch McConnell (and this is something that his fellow Republicans in the U.S. Senate are discovering now about him in his capacity as Minority Leader) is that McConnell always has McConnell’s interests first. He’s not at all concerned about the long-term consequences of his tactics and actions on the people of Kentucky. What he’s counting on is that Kentuckians and the state’s chattering class will never fully digest the disaster that was McConnell’s Senate career so long as there’s plenty of pork named after him spread around the state.

Mitch McConnell took Kentucky, a state already at the bottom of the cultural and economic barrel of the nation, and he exacerbated the very social qualities of the place that had kept true progress (making gains on its peers, rather than playing catch up) out of reach for so long. McConnell’s strategy was to spear his political legacy with a wicked trident of slash-and-burn partisan politics, redneck populism, and moneyed corporate interests.

McConnell’s Kentucky GOP is today the political establishment in the state, and you can see what sort of establishment it is by the criminal behavior and incompetence of the administration of Governor Ernie Fletcher (R).

As I write, that Republican establishment is bunkering itself deep beneath the political reality on the ground in Kentucky. While Ernie Fletcher and his minions ratchet up their language of fear on expanded gaming and hate against sexual minorities and while Mitch McConnell continues to cultivate the corrupt environment of campaign finance in Washington that he fathered and stands steadfast behind the reckless presidency of George W. Bush, neither Fletcher or McConnell is making headway among Kentuckians.

Both are indeed consolidating support among their conservative base, but that base is shrinking. Kentuckians are waking up to the reality of what Fletcher, McConnell, and conservatives truly are.

The people of Kentucky are once again seething against their political establishment, but this time there is an energized and organized progressive Democratic party waiting in the wings. Whereas last time when Kentuckians cleaned political house they replaced bad with worse, this time the alternative to entrenched Republican corruption is a Democratic party that offers the hope of change and a better future for us all.

FEAR THE STACHE YOUTUBE VIDEO

Jim Pence August 6th, 2007

A little Stan Lee fun, enjoy.

Kentucky’s commonsense majority is standing up to fundamentalist Christians; defeat of Fletcher and Lee this November first big step

Matt Gunterman August 1st, 2007

Whenever the church doors are open, my family is there. For worship, that’s thrice weekly, but with all the meetings and activities that the congregation plans, it’s usually more frequent than that.

When I was running for office last year, the congregation’s minister, who had been with the church for less than a year and who was finally getting an inkling that I was a liberal, asked me if I’d hire an open gay man or lesbian to work in my office if I won. I said yes, of course, I’d hire any qualified person. He was horrified: how could I do something like that and publicly endorse that practice?

So, I asked the preacher, “Do you think Baptists are going to hell? Isn’t that what we teach and believe here?” Because, you see, my religious tradition believes that salvation only comes by way of baptism by immersion for the remission of sins, and Baptists are not baptized for that reason. Ergo: they are damned.

He replied yes. Then I asked the obvious follow-up question, “If I hire a Baptist, who is ably and amply qualified, am I similarly making a statement to the community at large that I endorse that religion, which I personally and we as a congregation believe to be a path to destruction and against the will of God?”

That was the end of that conversation.

You may not agree with my religious beliefs, but let’s all thank the Lord that I keep them where they belong: in me, my family, and my congregation.

When we start injecting our religious beliefs into the public sphere and into the nation’s politics, it’s a slippery slope of whose religion is the preferred religion, the one that dictates what all the rest of us can and can’t do with our lives. In a nation where the supposed will of God — and not commonsense and reason — determines what’s right and wrong and what’s legal and illegal, who do we empower to determine what the will of God is and what is sinful?

I don’t know why some people. like Representative Stan Lee (R) and, sadly, my own Representative Jim Gooch (D), who also attended the hate rally put on by the Family Foundation this week, are so immature in their Christian faith that they believe it’s their duty to force the world to conform to their narrow versions of Christianity. My reading of the scriptures shows that Jesus taught us to share His message, not ram it down anyone’s throat. And mature folk understand that rational and thinking people can and will refuse to accept what we share. It’s not irrational to deny Christ; I think most of the Greek bible authors admitted that Christians were a “peculiar” people for their beliefs, which defied commonsense. So, mature folk should be able to live in harmony with people and a world that deny that Christ and God have any bearing on their lives.

It’s time Kentucky stands up to the fundamentalist Christians and shuns them as the unstable element of society that they are.

The defeat of fundamentalists like Governor Ernie Fletcher (R) and Stan Lee will be the first big step in that process.

Here’s an excellent editorial from today’s Courier-Journal:

Marriage Is Safe

The decision by two of Kentucky’s public university boards to offer domestic partner benefits is no threat to marriage. That’s the truth.

No matter how many little gatherings of grim-faced, self-appointed pietists the Family Foundation of Kentucky stages, the facts remain the same. Under Kentucky law, marriage remains what it always has been: a union of one man and one woman. The state constitution has been amended to emphasize the point.

Trustees at the campuses in Lexington and Louisville have done nothing to change the law. They’re just trying to make sure everyone in their university families has access to health care. What they’ve done is pro-life and pro-family.

Some of the demonstrators against domestic partner benefits at this week’s Capitol rotunda rally held signs that said, “Marriage: God’s Way.” They were asserting a Christian basis for their protest.

Nobody mentioned Matthew 25: 36, which says, “I was sick, and ye visited me,” not, “Ye visited my partner and me, and told him to fend for himself.”

Senate President David Williams, R-Burkesville, stood in front of a sign that read “PROTECT MARRIAGE,” a scene that had a sort of humor of its own.

What the Republicans want is to protect the marriage of convenience between anti-gay bigotry and Gov. Ernie Fletcher’s re-election prospects.

Remember, as Attorney General Greg Stumbo points out, Dr. Fletcher appointed nine trustees who voted in favor of domestic partner benefits.

The fact is, those trustees acted to help the University of Kentucky and the University of Louisville compete for some of the nation’s best teachers, scholars and researchers.

Republicans relentlessly praise the wisdom of business, and those who run businesses. Perhaps they haven’t noticed that the number of Fortune 500 companies offering domestic partner health insurance benefits has risen from only one in 1992 to more than 250 today.

Fully 86 percent of those top corporations have banned discrimination based on sexual orientation — not only because it’s the just thing to do but because it makes good business sense.

Ask the Conference Board, which bills itself as the world’s preeminent business membership and research organization. It has, for over 90 years, “equipped the world’s leading corporations with practical knowledge. …”

Listen to Ellen Galinsky, from the Conference Board’s Work Life leadership Council:

“Ultimately it comes down to an economic decision. If you want to meet the needs of employees and your customers, then you have to accept that this country is diverse.”

That’s the truth too.

Hate Mongers Gather at the Capitol Today

Shawn Dixon July 30th, 2007

If you want to see some of Kentucky’s most hateful people on display, look no further than a rally being held today at the state Capitol by the Family Foundation. Please don’t let the name fool you, the Family Foundation is anything but pro-family.

From the Courier Journal website:

The Lexington-based Family Foundation called the rally because it wants lawmakers to pass a bill that would block state government institutions - particularly the University of Louisville and the University of Kentucky — from offering health benefits to domestic partners.

What makes the rally so disgusting is that their protest runs much deeper than even homophobia – it’s simply a pro-hate rally.

Of course I’ve come across people who, for one reason or another, think that homosexuality is immoral. I disagree, but fine. However, I don’t know any one of those people who would deny healthcare to another human being just because of their sexual orientation. That is exactly what the Family Foundation is advocating today.

Right here in America, nearly 18,000 people die every year simply because of a lack of healthcare coverage. With nearly 1 in 6 people in the country living without access to healthcare, we should all be rallying in favor of anything that helps cover more Americans. Anything less is simply unconscionable.

Shame on you Family Foundation. If only you would work half as hard for families as you did spreading hate, you might actually make a positive difference in our state.

Republican-Ruled Kentucky plummets in Forbes business rankings

Matt Gunterman July 11th, 2007

So, you know that whole spiel about how Republicans are the party that’s favorable to business? Well, in case you hadn’t noticed, President George W. Bush has brought the U.S. economy and the dollar to the point of possible meltdown and free fall, and now we learn from Forbes.com that Kentucky — thanks to the bold and effective leadership of Republican Governor Ernie Fletcher — is plummeting in its “The Best States for Business” rankings (here’s the table of rankings).

Notice that Kentucky fell from 33rd to 41st place in the last year.

Kentucky plummets in Forbes 2007 rankings

Do you know what the essential problem is here? The problem is that Republicans in Kentucky have empowered rednecks for their short-term political gain, and the end result of the empowerment of rednecks is that redneck priorities consume the politics of the state. While other states pass meaningful and fully funded education reform, while other states promote progressive taxation plans and seek to develop infrastructure that will benefit generations to come, while other states move to improve quality of life and access to health care — Kentucky is stuck decades behind debating the intricacies and merits of God, gays, and guns.

Yes, because working out all those problems with God, gays, and guns is going to provide one hell of a foundation for the future generations of Kentucky.

KY GOP: A Real Class Act

Terri Whitehouse July 11th, 2007

Via the Owensboro Messenger-Inquirer, Joe Biesk reports that the KY GOP is making robo-calls to Kentucky residents criticizing the House’s decision to adjourn after Governor Ernie Fletcher called a special session.

The House claimed that issues including tax incentives for power companies, more than $400 million in projects and a ban on domestic partner benefits at public universities were not urgent enough to justify the approximately $60,000 per day cost to operate the legislature. The Senate disagreed.

Yes - how dare they adjourn when there is corporate welfare to dole out and people left undiscriminated against!

But as Fletcher was making his public plea for compromise, the state Republican Party was launching a telephone offensive of between 150,000 to 180,000 phone calls to voters across the state criticizing House Democrats for their actions. The calls, which Fletcher’s campaign knew about, started in the afternoon and carried into the evening night.

The Kentucky Republican Party on Monday night targeted more than 40 members of the state House — mostly Democrats representing coal constituencies — with automated phone calls, state GOP Chairman Steve Robertson said.

I especially like this part of the article:

State Rep. Jeff Greer, D-Brandenburg, said calls to his constituents near Fort Knox claimed he was antimilitary. The Senate passed legislation Monday that would give an income tax break to members of the military.

Because, you know, the Republican Party has such an outstanding track record for giving a flip about military personnel.

As for KY Democratic Party Chairman Jonathan Miller, kudos for stating the obvious:

Nevertheless, Miller said the calls were evidence that Fletcher’s motivation for calling a special session was an attempt to spur his re-election campaign. Fletcher, a Republican, is seeking a second term against Beshear in the Nov. 6 election.

Dang, Fletcher. You’re about as transparent and substantive as a piece of saran wrap.

Coming This Thursday: Dr. James W. Holsinger is Bigotry as Spectacle

Matt Gunterman July 10th, 2007

This Thursday Dr. James W. Holsinger will appear before the Senate’s Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, which is chaired by Senator Edward Kennedy.

I plan to live blog the appearance.

Democrats are laying a strong foundation to make the case that President George W. Bush will use Holsinger to advance a radical rightwing agenda of hate and fear.

The House Oversight and Government Reform Committee held hearings today that featured Bush’s first surgeon general, and he had not much good to say about the Bush administration. Here’s a report from Think Progress:

Former Surgeon General Was Muzzled, Censored By Bush Administration

Richard Carmona served as President Bush’s first Surgeon General from 2002-2006. Today he spoke before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee and revealed that political appointees in the Bush administration muzzled him on key issues such as “stem cell research, contraceptives and his misgivings about the administration’s embrace of ‘abstinence-only’ sex education”:

[A]lthough most Americans believe that their Surgeon General has the ability to impact the course of public health as “the nation’s doctor,” the reality is that the nation’s doctor has been marginalized and relegated to a position with no independent budget, and with supervisors who are political appointees with partisan agendas. Anything that doesn’t fit into the political appointees’ ideological, theological, or political agenda is ignored, marginalized, or simply buried.

Watch it part of Carmona’s testimony:

Carmona revealed that when he tried to explain the science of stem cell research to the American public, he was “blocked at every turn, told a decision had already been made, stand down, don’t talk about it.” Additionally, political appointees were specifically assigned to “vet his speeches” and “spin [his] words in such a way that would be preferable to a political or ideologically pre-conceived notion that had nothing to do with science.” He was also barred from speaking freely to reporters.

The politicization of “America’s doctor” fits with broader White House efforts to politicize faith-based initiatives, global warming, contraceptives, and the Justice Department.

On Thursday, the Senate will consider the nomination of Dr. James Holsinger to be the next Surgeon General. Perhaps not surprisingly, Bush has this time nominated someone who has repeatedly put ideology over sound science, peddling views of homosexuality that have been rejected by the medical community.

Here’s a press release today from Senator Kennedy:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Laura Capps/Melissa Wagoner
July 10, 2007
(202) 224-2633

STATEMENT OF EDWARD M. KENNEDY ON THE HOUSE’S OFFICE OF THE SURGEON
GENERAL HEARING

WASHINGTON, D.C—Today, Senator Edward M. Kennedy, Chairman of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, released the following statement in response to the U.S. House of Representatives hearing on the Surgeon General nominee, Dr. James Holsinger, Jr.

“Dr. Carmona’s strong testimony is yet another disturbing account of how the Bush Administration has put ideology ahead of the health needs of the American people – this time in the Office of the Surgeon General. Americans want their families to be safe and healthy. As we consider the President’s nominee for Surgeon General this week, we owe it to the American people to be sure that he will base his policies on sound science and best medical practices, and not the politics and ideology that have put our health care at risk.”

###

STAN LEE KENTUCKY’S OWN NED FLANDERS YOUTUBE VIDEO.

Jim Pence July 8th, 2007

Let the Judge see what you got.

[From Matt]:

I’d like to thank Jim for another brilliant video. Even though The Simpson’s Ned Flanders is a generally lovable, if misguided, figure, I think the power of comparison here between the two is that the politics of State Representative Stan Lee (R) are cartoonish, and while being cartoonish is quite alright if you’re a cartoon, it’s bad when you’re the Republican nominee for attorney general.

I’m always amazed at how people like Stan Lee and his analogue in bigotry in the State Senate, Richard “Dick” Roeding, can be so oblivious to this nation’s history to the extent that they are. It’s all well and good to study the ins-and-outs of the book of Genesis as much as they do, but I think a man should seek for some balance and might want to pick up a book that details something slightly more recent on the cosmic time line. Say, the 18th through 20th centuries in the West would be a start.

Of the two, Senator Roeding is the worst offender in ignorance. Why? Let me show you how little historical perspective the man has. If you check Roeding’s biography on his website (and I’m not giving it the dignity of linking to it; you’ll just have to google it), you will notice that he is an active Catholic. And, with a name like Roeding, I can only imagine he, like me, is of Teutonic extraction.

Now, if you will recall, German Catholics and Catholics more generally were terribly unwelcome in this nation not even a century ago. I’m sure there were plenty of Kentuckians back in the day warning about letting the Catholic hordes into the commonwealth. I’m sure there were plenty of people who expressed sentiments about Catholics similar to what Roeding had to say about gays and lesbians.

You see, when the University of Kentucky and the University of Louisville announced that they were going to extend benefits to domestic partners, a category that would include same-sex partners, and that they were doing this to attract the best-of-the-best in academia and be competitive as institutions of higher learning, Roeding responded, “I don’t want to entice any of those people [gays and lesbians] into our state. Those are the wrong kind of people.”

Can you imagine a man so detached from historical perspective? Roeding truly is an example of a man who’s educated but lacks the power of mind to be intelligent.


* * * * *

Stan Lee’s Hate-Fundraiser-Session a Goner

Joe Sonka July 6th, 2007

Well, the gratuitously calculating government welfare special session called by Gov. Ernie Fletcher fortunately appears to be dead and gone. Especially displeased must be the opportunist homophobe Stan Lee, who would have loved to try to block UK and UL’s domestic partnership benefits. Stan was surely hoping to give rousing floor speeches and press releases about how the gays were trying to destroy marriage and corrupt our youth with their filthy ways. Following that, he would have opened up the coffers to every fundamentalist extremist/gay hater in the state, rallying them to fight Teh Gay behind their mustached crusader.

Fortunately, the House Democrats stood their ground and nixed the Peabody-Gov’t welfare session. And Ned Flanders will have to find some creative new way to fleece the fundies of their money.

(crossposted at BlueGrassRoots)

Elizabeth Edwards Rocks Lexington (and chats with Jim and Joe!)

Joe Sonka July 2nd, 2007

I’m not really sure how many supporters John Edwards had in Lexington on Friday morning, but I know that he has a lot more now. The line on John Edwards that is making the rounds is that his best asset in the campaign to win the presidency is not his humble Southern background, health-care platform or charm, but his wife, Elizabeth Edwards. After watching her performance during Friday’s Small Change for Big Change event in Lexington, I think that statement isn’t too far off base.

Elizabeth Edwards performed a rather spectacular hour+ Q & A session with over 200 contributors, fans, and potential voters. And due to the online outreach efforts of the Edwards campaign (thanks to Tracy and Amy, via DMKY’s Shawn Dixon) and the southern charm of DMKY’s own Jim Pence, Jim and I were able speak with Elizabeth face to face for roughly 10 minutes before her public Q & A session.

Though the Edwards staff thought we had a decent chance of chatting with her for a couple of minutes, shortly after we entered the venue and set up our cameras (Jim and fellow film guru Erica), we were told that there was no time for an interview. After Jim disappeared for a few minutes to chat up the Edwards folks, he came back saying that she might be doing a short “meet and greet” with some people.

“What’s a meet and greet?”

“I’m not sure”

“I’ve never been to a meet and greet”

“Yea, me neither”

Ten minutes later, Jim pulled me backstage and one of the staff stopped us and asked if we were the guys from DitchMitchKY and told us that we could speak with Mrs. Edwards in a few minutes, but not on camera or on tape. So while all of the slick, dolled up TV reporters waited for Elizabeth to come out for the Q & A, the blogger in ratty Chuck Taylors and ripped pants, and the hillbilly with the Acapulco shirt were whisked upstairs to meet her.

Continue Reading »

The Bigot Writes an Editorial

Joe Sonka June 25th, 2007

Our favorite mustached bigot writes an editorial in the Courier-Journal about how domestic partner benefits will destroy, I say DESTROY traditional marriage.

I think I’ve finally figured this out, correct me if I’m off base. We have Stan Lee, who obviously has had some issues growing up about his sexuality. In order to defend himself from anyone who might catch on to his sexual confusion, he puts on a lifelong front of virulent hatred of homosexuals, so that no one will question his hetero manliness. But why this fear of something as innocuous as health benefits for domestic partners? As Ned says, the universities are trying to "systematically dismantle marriage in our society". I think what Ned fears is that sexually ambiguous married folk like himself, when presented with the public and visible acceptance of homosexual couples, will be unable to resist their urges. Therefore, waves of such men will be forced to divorce their wives, now presented with the option to follow their repressed sexual urges.

Well, at least that’s the only explanation that makes sense to me. Maybe I’m wrong. That, or he’s just a crude, hateful and immoral politician that is making political gain by tapping into hatred of unpopular people.

(crossposted at BlueGrassRoots)

A lament for what might have been for Kentucky and what will not be

Matt Gunterman June 19th, 2007

As a society and a state, we only have so much energy — whether it be intellectual, emotional, or physical — to devote to the causes we collectively identify as important to our present and future.

Where we put our collective efforts and what we make our common priorities are our free choices, and each and every state and our nation as a whole faces its choices.

And those choices have consequences.

I think it’s fair to say, and I believe historians of Kentucky agree on this point, that the aggregate of our state’s decision making since about the end of the Civil War has been on the less progressive side, and the end result is that — relative to the other states — Kentucky has fallen behind. We are undeniably at the bottom of nearly every indicator one cares to cite on trends of potential and prosperity.

Lots of lip service comes from our business and political communities about doing what needs to be done to “get Kentucky ahead” in the nation, but when the going gets a little tough, Kentucky always seems to take a little break from the action to wipe its brow and contemplate the world, while the persistent states chug right along, rarely taking their eye off the goal. That’s what happened in Kentucky with education reform and investment, that’s what’s happened with infrastructural development, that’s what’s taken place with the environment and natural resource management, and it’s even a trend that’s measurable in our culture.

Our culture? Yes, our culture. Most people probably think of Kentucky’s culture as an asset, and in many ways it most certainly is, from the landscapes of the Bluegrass, to Churchill Downs, to the musical sounds of Appalachia and Rosine and so much more.

Yet, there are terribly regressive elements to our culture, as well, and that fact has been made painfully clear in the reaction of Kentucky’s social and political “establishment” to President George W. Bush’s nomination of Dr. James W. Holsinger, with his record of an irrational and unscientific anti-gay agenda, as the nation’s next surgeon general. I’m not talking about the reaction of the everyday Kentuckian here because we haven’t seen any measure of it. What I’m speaking of is the collective voice of Kentucky’s chattering class, its self-defined elite population: it has come out in full force behind the Holsinger nomination.

Before I turn to the specifics of that reaction and the problems with it, I want to first make this more general point. Why is it important for Kentucky to embrace — not just tolerate — its homosexual population? Well, can any society prosper and turn its back on something like 5 percent of its population — a population that research tells us is generally very well educated and earns high-than-average incomes? And, keep in mind, while we turn our backs on them, other states are welcoming them with open arms. Some people might argue that we can do without that highly productive 5 percent or — perhaps it is better to say — we can do without that 5 percent producing at its highest potential.

Yet, imagine the aggregate effect of oppressing and/or losing that population over the course of a generation. It will be substantial, won’t it? Furthermore, our loss will be the gain of others. These people won’t simply roll over and not produce in their lives and careers; they’ll simply go elsewhere and find success. And, let’s be realistic here: a generation from now, attitudes towards homosexuals will be very accepting and lax, just as in the last generation we’ve seen attitudes towards race and interracial marriage liberalize.

So, for a moment, let’s put ourselves in the shoes of our grandchildren, who will not have inherited our general fear and hatred of homosexuals, but who will have inherited the inferior society and economy that we ourselves built around that fear and hatred. Attitudes will change, but there’s nothing stopping them from changing now except our own refusal to do so.

The hard thing for us to do as Kentuckians today is to say to ourselves, “You know, I don’t agree with it, I don’t think it’s right in the eyes of God, I would never engage in that sort of activity myself, but by golly these people are human beings, taxpayers, and they have their civil rights, and so let them be and let’s build a society where we call prosper and all have an equal stake.”

That would be the hard thing for Kentuckians to do, and — quite frankly — I can tell you today that we aren’t going to do it. We aren’t going to do it because its the cultural equivalent of work, and we’re taking the lazy way out on this one. We’ll let time take its course, and we’ll let our children’s children suffer the consequences and lament the repercussions of what was our emotional sloth.

Now, back to Kentucky’s chattering class and its favorable reception of Dr. James W. Holsinger’s nomination. Both the Louisville Courier-Journal and the Lexington Herald-Leader have endorsed the nomination, and even as more facts about Holsinger’s controversial and pseudo-scientifically problematic views on homosexuality have come to light, they have continued to aggressively defend their previous endorsements.

In fact, their articles have taken a rather populist tone by stating that Holsinger’s greatest sin is arguing that “male homosexual sex was unnatural and unhealthy,” a statement most Kentuckians likely agree with, but their belief of it, or Holsinger’s for that matter, still doesn’t change the fact that it’s well outside the realm of established medical consensus. Furthermore, Holsinger’s huge lapse in judgment was his attempt to wrap his own religious opinions on homosexuality in an aura of science by disingenuously cherry picking research data.

The Op-Ed pages of the papers have been filled with taunts like this from Martin Cothran, a senior policy analyst for the Family Foundation of Kentucky:

Yes, it sounds incredible, but there it is: a doctor who thinks anal sex isn’t healthful. Just what turnip truck did this guy fall off of anyway? Where has he been the last few years? Studying AIDS data or something? OK, we know that people used to take medicine seriously and that once upon a time, doctors based their opinions on actual evidence. But aren’t we past all that? Haven’t we come to the realization some things are more important than medical facts?

Or, let’s take this piece from Matt Barber, policy director for cultural issues for Concerned Women for America, which both Kentucky papers have now run.

The irrefutable reality that thousands of former homosexuals have chosen to leave the gay lifestyle they once chose to enter serves to further bolster — if not prove entirely –Holsinger’s advised medical assessment.

Kentucky’s major newspapers are gladly serving as platforms for the radical right to rile up the basest fears and hatreds of Kentuckians. Why? Because to stir up this outrage serves the purposes of the chattering class: to push the Holsinger nomination at all costs. The chattering class in Kentucky tolerates gays, so long as those gays are content to know their place and accept their second-class status.

Now, however, this arrangement is out of whack because the progress of the nation and Kentucky’s gay community is conflicting with the agenda of the state’s chattering class. The chattering class wants a Kentucky surgeon general; they want the prestige and have grand visions of Holsinger developing into the next C. Everret Coop.

The gay community and the nation as a whole, however, believes it’s time we stand up to the bigotry that Holsinger’s professionally stated opinions represent. The opinions he holds, in other words, are unacceptable to the mainstream of the nation, regardless of what the mainstream of Kentucky is; the nomination, after all, is to serve as the nation’s surgeon general, not Kentucky’s.

The surgeon general is in significant part a figurehead position, a symbol of the vibrancy of the medical profession in the United States, and it’s quite obvious to everyone involved but Kentucky’s chattering class that this nation can find a far more appropriate and unifying figure to be that head than Dr. James W. Holsinger.

The person in all of this who has disappointed me most, however, is Democratic Congressman John Yarmuth, who represents Louisville and who yesterday endorsed Holsinger’s nomination.

Yarmuth fashions himself a liberal, and we don’t have many politicians in Kentucky who do that. He represents a traditionally Democratic city and district, one with a sizable population of people who have suffered from persecution in the past and continue to do so. I don’t expect Republicans or conservatives to understand the nuances of this issue or even what’s at stake for our future in it. That’s why we have liberals and progressives: to imagine a better future and fight for it. That’s their social and political function.

We needed Yarmuth’s leadership on this one, and we’re not going to get it. It’s a shame. We know how the future will judge his failure on this one, and I for one plan to be around to remember it.

As I pointed out yesterday, if the paper that Holsinger had published in 1991 had argued against interracial marriage, a practice which is still abhorred by many on the religious right in this nation, I doubt Yarmuth’s representative would have said that the congressman:

“…finds ample reason to believe that those opinions will not interfere with (Holsinger’s) work (as surgeon general), that as a practicing professional he’s never let that interfere.”

So, the chattering class in Kentucky could have made a powerful statement in opposing the Holsinger nomination. It could have said:

It would be flattering to have a Kentuckian as surgeon general, but unfortunately President Bush, while choosing a man with impressive professional credentials, has also selected one whose religious campaign against homosexuals, which he attempted to bolster by misrepresenting and inappropriately contextualizing scientific data, places the nominee outside the mainstream on the issue of increasing tolerance of homosexuals in American society. This issue is one our nation — and our state, especially — needs leadership on, and we believe that James W. Holsinger cannot provide that leadership. Therefore, we oppose his nomination.

But that didn’t happen.

UK Amends Benefits Plan for Domestic Partners

Joe Sonka June 18th, 2007

In order to comply with the Kentucky constitution, UK has creatively amended its plans to offer Domestic Partner Coverage. Under the new plan, a UK employee may extend coverage to one qualifying adult and/or children in their household. Such a broad definition should comply with AG Stumbo’s earlier decision.

The full text of UK’s news release is here.

And that sound you hear? That’s Stan Lee’s head exploding.

(h/t Sandlestraps)

(crossposted at BlueGrassRoots)

Representative John Yarmuth endorses homophobe Dr. James W. Holsinger for surgeon general

Matt Gunterman June 17th, 2007

Yep, you read that correctly: the most liberal member of Kentucky’s congressional delegation has endorsed the nomination for surgeon general of Dr. James W. Holsinger, the right-wing ideologue, certifiable homophobe, and major financial donor to the Republican party and George W. Bush.

What about Representative Ben Chandler, Kentucky’s more conservative Democratic congressman? He’s made no comment, probably because it’s a matter he gets no formal vote on. I can respect that, quite frankly. Yarmuth, as a unabashed liberal (well, I guess he’s justed ‘bashed’ now), should be the one taking the moral lead here. Someone in Kentucky should.

The chattering class of the state is all lined up behind Holsinger because they want a Kentuckian as a surgeon general, not because they believe the nation deserves a qualified physician who can and will represent the interests of all Americans. There are plenty of fish in the sea for this nomination.

Here’s what Yarmuth’s spokesperson had to say:

[...]

Rep. John Yarmuth, D-3rd District, is concerned about what Holsinger has said, according to spokesman Stuart Perelmuter.

“But he also finds ample reason to believe that those opinions will not interfere with (Holsinger’s) work (as surgeon general), that as a practicing professional he’s never let that interfere,” Perelmuter said.

[...]

Let’s make a statement about Yarmuth’s position by switching around the circumstances of Holsinger’s past for a moment.

Let’s say that, rather than having led a career in his church dedicated to an anti-gay agenda, Holsinger instead believed and espoused — as many on the religious right still do today — that interracial marriage is against the will of God and is sinful, and let’s say that Holsinger wrote a paper in 1991 in which he used cherry-picked “science” to demonstrate that the offspring of those marriages — mix-raced babies — were more likely to suffer from below average intelligence and to engage in criminal activity as adults. And, thus, Holsinger’s paper in its conclusion recommended that his church take the official stance that persons of different races should not marry.

How would you feel about that, John Yarmuth? Would your spokesperson be saying, “those opinions will not interfere with” Holsinger’s work as surgeon general?

I think not. I think you’d be out there denouncing that nomination.

So, essentially: John Yarmuth is a coward on this one, and I for one won’t ever let him forget it.

What next? Will Courier-Journal turn pages over to Holocaust deniers?

Matt Gunterman June 13th, 2007

It’s unbelievable. Absolutely unbelievable. Louisville Courier-Journal is an absolute love-fest for haters of gays lately. First, the paper publishes an emotive and irrational defense of homophobe Dr. James W. Holsinger’s nomination for surgeon general, and now this.

This blog has a lot of European and East Coast readers, and I’m simply embarrassed to highlight to them that the newspaper of our state’s largest city — the place you’d hope would be some sort of beacon of cosmopolitanism — would legitimize the following views by placing them on its editorial pages. It’s disheartening, really, to think how far we have to go just to get into the mainstream.

How long till we find the articulate white supremacist or anti-Semite defending his or her points of view with the Courier-Journal’s official sanction?

Let me tell you what is going to happen with this editorial: thousands of gay-haters across the commonwealth of Kentucky will grasp onto its contents for as long as they can to justify the continued social marginalization of gays and lesbians.

This Holsinger nomination is bringing out the visceral hatred of gays that lies just beneath the surface of the “elite” of Kentucky. To these “elites,” gays are fine, so long as they know their place and keep to it. But now that these gays might threaten the ascendancy of one of these “elites,” the gay-hating is fully unleashed.

Shame on you, Courier-Journal: you certainly are doing your part to relegate our fair commonwealth to the dregs of 21st-century churlishness. Congratulations.

Left Wants to Amputate Surgeon General Nominee

By J. Matt Barber
Special to The Courier-Journal

The Human Rights Campaign, the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force and a host of other radical homosexual activist and leftist organizations are decrying President Bush’s Surgeon General nominee, Dr. James Holsinger.

Dr. Holsinger, a conservative Methodist, has masters degrees from Asbury Theological Seminary and the University of South Carolina and earned his medical degree from Duke University. Dr. Holsinger previously served as Kentucky’s health secretary and was chancellor of the University of Kentucky’s medical center.

By all accounts, Dr. Holsinger is widely respected by his peers in the medical, academic and state government communities. But, nonetheless, Dr. Holsinger has come under tremendous fire from liberal activists for having the courage to address the compelling medical evidence and multiple studies which underscore the reality that homosexuals can escape the homosexual lifestyle and realign themselves to a biologically and spiritually natural heterosexual “orientation.” The irrefutable reality that thousands of former homosexuals have chosen to leave the “gay” life