Archive for the 'James W. Holsinger' Category

United Methodists Calling For Censure Of Dr. James Holsinger At National Meeting in April.

Jim Pence April 4th, 2008

Whereas, James W. Holsinger MD, was elected to our church’s Judicial Council in May, 2000, and has been president of the Judicial Council since 2004, and
Whereas, the duties of the Judicial Council include “determining the legality of any action taken by any body created by or authorized by the General Conference” and the General Conference has therefore recognized as a matter of critical importance that members of the Judicial Council avoid conflicts of interest, as illustrated by the prohibition on service on other boards and agencies of the church, and
Whereas, following election to the Judicial Council in May 2000, Dr. Holsinger joined the board of trustees of the Good Samaritan Foundation (GSF) of Lexington, Kentucky, in July 2000, knowing that GSF had, three months earlier, in May 2000, become the subject of litigation by the Kentucky Conference of the United Methodist Church, and
Whereas, two former members of the Judicial Council who worked with Holsinger from 2000-2004, Sally C. Askew, Esq., and Sally B. Geis, Ph.D., stated that Holsinger never mentioned having joined an organization that was being sued by a constituent body of the United Methodist Church, nor did he at any time address possible conflicts of interest involved in being a member of the UMC’s Judicial Council while engaged in significant litigation against the UMC, and
Whereas the essence of the lawsuit between the Kentucky Annual Conference and the Good Samaritan Foundation related to church property ownership issues, and the Court found there was an “express trust” on behalf of the United Methodist Church, based on the surrounding facts and circumstances, and safeguarding property trust being a central duty for United Methodist leaders to protect, and a topic of Judicial Council decisions, and
Whereas, the GSF trustees which Dr. Holsinger, member and subsequently chair of the Judicial Council, joined, and of which he became chair in 2003, were in violation of their fiduciary responsibilities as trustees of United Methodist hospital property in the amount of $20 million realized from the sale in 1995 of 330 bed United Methodist Good Samaritan Hospital in Lexington, Kentucky, to a for-profit corporation, and which trustees refused to hand over the proceeds to the rightful owners, the Kentucky Annual Conference (KAC) of the UMC, and
Click here to read entire petition.
Click here to see pdf , go to page 63.

Sen. Harry Reid (D) will stop recess appointment of homophobic Dr. James W. Holsinger

Matt Gunterman November 16th, 2007

Yes. Thank you Majority Leader Sen. Harry Reid (D). Sen. Reid is going to prevent Pres. George W. Bush (R) from appointing Kentucky’s homophobic and obstinate Dr. James W. Holsinger for the nation’s next surgeon general.

From ThinkProgress:

Reid moves to block recess appointments over break.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) put out a statement today saying that he will hold pro forma sessions over Thanksgiving break in order to prevent President Bush from using the congressional vacation to recess appoint controversial nominees. For pro forma sessions, Reid would “call the chamber into nonvoting sessions every three days — thus doing away with an extended recess.”

Myself, I’m going to call Sen. Reid and thank him (202-224-3542).

Homophobic Holsinger will be a recess appointment

Matt Gunterman November 13th, 2007

Wow! What a PROUD, PROUD day it will be for the Commonwealth of Kentucky when Pres. George W. Bush, the least popular and arguably the worst president in the history of the nation, recess appoints Kentucky’s very own homophobic Dr. James W. Holsinger as U.S. Surgeon General.

Because, you know, George W. Bush is such a bad president that even his choices for what should be a benign office like surgeon general end up being radioactive and divisive. Can we find a doctor somewhere in the country — heck, even in Kentucky — who’s not a bigot and a crazy fundamentalist Christian? Is that too much to ask?

From ThinkProgress:

Homophobic Surgeon General Nominee Reveals Bush Plans To Recess Appoint Him

President Bush’s controversial Surgeon General nominee, Dr. James Holsinger, has resigned from the board of trustees of the Asbury Theological Seminary in Wilmore, KY. From a seminary e-mail:

From: Communication Office [at Asbury Seminary]
To: ATS Info, Staff News, Faculty News
Subject: Announcement from the Board of Trustees
November 12, 2007 3:53PM

The Asbury Theological Seminary Board of Trustees met on November 12, 2007. The board discussed the resignation letters submitted by Dr. James Holsinger and Mr. Phillip Connolly. Following this discussion and prayer, the board voted unanimously to receive these resignation letters with regret.

We realize from time to time board members resign before the end of a their term, however we have a deep appreciation for the many years of service, dedication and commitment of Dr. Holsinger and Mr. Connolly. The board of trustees wishes them both all the best in their future endeavors.

The Board of Trustees

Holsinger is resigning before the end of his term. A source in Wilmore tells Bible Belt Blogger that Holsinger is resigning because he expects to be recess appointed as Surgeon General:

Holsinger’s nomination, opposed by several leading Democrats, has stalled in the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee. But Holsinger is telling people the president plans to appoint him to the post anyway once the Congress goes into its holiday recess.

Holsinger has come under intense criticism for his long history of prejudice toward gays and lesbians. He founded a church that “ministers to people who no longer wish to be gay or lesbian” and “opposed a decision to allow a practicing lesbian to be an associate pastor” in the United Methodist Church. In 1991, he also authored a graphic document arguing that gay sex is “intuitively” unnatural and can lead to “lacerations, perforations and deaths.

Last month, ThinkProgress noted that three months after his July hearing, Holsinger has still not responded to a Senate health committee follow-up questionnaire. Without his answers, the committee has not scheduled a vote on his nomination. Looks like the committee might never receive a response from Holsinger now.

By the way, in case you haven’t read it, I strongly recommend taking a look at the piece that Rev. Andrew J. Weaver and Lawrence H. McGauphey contributed here on Holsinger’s questionable actions with the United Methodist Church.

Serious questions continue to be raised about Dr. James W. Holsinger

Matt Gunterman October 22nd, 2007

Even though it appears the nomination of Dr. James W. Holsinger is dead (and let’s hope that’s the case), more troubling information about the man’s past continues to come forward.

Former UK Chancellor Holsinger and $20 million of Church Money
by Rev. Andrew J. Weaver and Lawrence H. McGaughey

Dr. James Holsinger, former Chancellor at the UK medical School, is President Bush’s choice for Surgeon General. He has been a major player in a contentious and controversial seven year lawsuit involving his own church. Before Holsinger is confirmed by the Senate he needs to address serious ethical issues regarding his conduct in the law suit while employed by UK.

The litigation involved the sale in 1995 of a United Methodist Church (UMC) hospital in Lexington, Kentucky, and the disposition of the $20 million in proceeds. The hospital’s trustees refused to hand over the assets to the owner, the UMC in Kentucky. Instead, the self-appointed trustees, calling themselves the Good Samaritan Foundation (GSF) placed the funds under their sole control and withheld the money from the church for five years. The church was forced to engage in a long and costly lawsuit to find out where the money was and to regain its property. Holsinger became a GSF trustee in July 2000, joining in the lawsuit against his own church.

According to several individuals intimately acquainted with the litigation, Holsinger actually became the driving force in the prolongation of the lawsuit. Shortly after GSF lost in court for the second time in 2006, Holsinger stated that the GSF trustees, which he chaired, would persist in its legal battle. In a stunning denunciation of his own church, Holsinger publicly stated his personal belief that the UMC was “only interested in the Foundation’s money, not its cause” [health care for the poor and disadvantaged]. It was only when Holsinger was named as Surgeon General that the litigation came to an abrupt halt. Within a matter of days after his May 24, 2007, nomination, Holsinger resigned from the GSF trustees and the lawsuit, indicating that to continue would be incompatible with an appointment as Surgeon General. Within a mere two weeks, the suit was finally settled — after over seven years!

What might have motivated Holsinger to be a part of long, costly litigation against his own church? Following the money offers insight. From July 1997, through June 2006, the GSF and a corporate subsidiary dispersed $8,430,363 in grants — of which $5,314,670 (63 percent) was given to University of Kentucky (UK) programs in medicine, nursing, dentistry, and public health. This included endowing two academic chairs valued at a million dollars each — one in nursing and the other in public health. These endowed chairs and several million in other gifts were awarded while Holsinger was fundraising for these UK programs in his job as Chancellor of the Chandler Medical Center of UK from 1994 through 2003. The grants continued to flow after he left the position of Chancellor, while he continued as a GSF trustee until May 2007.

The GSF’s contributions to UK medical and its related schools have been so significant that the foundation is listed on the highest tier of honored benefactors to the university, along with major corporations such as Alcoa, DuPont, IBM, and the RJ Reynolds Tobacco Company.

What makes the GSF awards to UK more remarkable is that they were awarded in contradiction to the foundation’s own standards of grant-making. According to the grant policy guidelines of the GSF, “[m]ajor organizations” such as “[h]ospitals, [c]olleges and [u]niversities are not eligible as a general statement,” although exceptions could be made by the trustees. The exception in this case became the rule when it came to UK.

In addition, for more than a decade the return on the investments of the foundation was dismal. In May, 2005, GSF admitted in a letter to making poor return on the assets and to conflicts of interest by some of the trustees. Three GSF trustees had been involved in managing the assets of GSF while serving on the board. The church representatives told the GSF that it was “unconscionable” that after a decade the funds were not being professionally managed by experts who had no personal connection with the board.

The Surgeon General is our chief health educator, overseeing the work of the 6,000-member Public Health Service. It is a position that requires the highest ethical standards and personal conduct. Before Holsinger is confirmed, the Senate must ask serious questions about his ethics, especially regarding a costly lawsuit against his church and money funneled to UK.

Rev. Andrew J. Weaver, Ph.D., is a United Methodist minister and research psychologist who has written extensively on the role of clergy in preventive mental health care. He lives in New York City. He has co-authored 14 books including: Counseling Survivors of Traumatic Events (Abingdon, 2003), Reflections on Grief and the Spiritual Journey (Abingdon, 2005), Counseling Persons with Addictions and Compulsions (Pilgrim, 2007), and Connected Spirits: Friends and Spiritual Journeys (Pilgrim, 2007).

Lawrence H. McGaughey, Esq., is an attorney practicing law in New York City with specialties in real estate, trusts and estates, and not-for-profit organizations. He has represented many United Methodist churches and organizations and is the Chancellor of the New York Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church. Any views stated in this article are personal and are not intended to represent the views of any client.

Dr. James W. Holsinger nomination appears dead

Matt Gunterman October 16th, 2007

You’ll recall that this summer Pres. Bush nominated Kentucky’s very won Dr. James W. Holsinger to be the nation’s next surgeon general. The nomination immediately drew condemnation from progressives because of Holsinger’s rather loopy views on human sexuality. He also ran into some trouble because of his poor record in the area of Veterans health care, too. It appears that Holsinger is now dead in the water. And that’s something to be thankful for.

Surgeon general nominee on hold

By Justin Thompson
Scripps Howard News Service

WASHINGTON - Three months after Dr. James Holsinger answered some sharp questions from senators, his nomination to be the next surgeon general appears to be on life support.

The 68-year-old Kentuckian, whose critics cried foul about a paper he wrote years ago condemning homosexual sex, needs Senate confirmation to become the nation’s 18th surgeon general.

Melissa Wagoner, a spokeswoman for Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., who chairs the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, said members are waiting for the nominee to answer follow-up questions. Wagoner said she could not release the questions while Holsinger continues to work on them.

Craig Orfield, the committee’s communications director, said he knows of no date for a vote.

A spokeswoman for the White House said Holsinger is working on the questions but could not say when he would respond.

[...]

“From the tea leaves that I am reading, there is not a lot of interest in getting a vote,” he said.

His organization has neither opposed nor endorsed Holsinger’s nomination, Farrell said.

He would not speculate on whether Holsinger might remove his name from consideration or if the administration might ask him to do so.

He said he expected that Dr. Steven Galson, who has served as acting surgeon general for the last three months, would continue in that role through the end of the year.

[...]

ome of Holsinger’s opponents said the White House might support him in theory, but in practice, has done little to move him closer to becoming surgeon general.

“They’re not pushing to get this through,” said Becky Dansky, federal legislative director for the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force.

“It’s kind of dead in the water at this point.”

But the Bush administration said it has not reconsidered its endorsement of Holsinger.

“The White House certainly still supports him,” said Emily Lawrimore, a White House spokeswoman.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., of Louisville, who introduced Holsinger to the committee in July, said then that the nomination is “the right prescription to help America confront today’s health challenge.” This week, a McConnell spokesman said that the Louisville Republican continues to support Holsinger.

McConnell’s fellow Kentucky Republican, Sen. Jim Bunning of Southgate, also championed Holsinger at the hearing, but has since remained silent. A spokesman for Bunning said the senator remains steadfast in his support.

Unfortunately for Holsinger, neither McConnell nor Bunning is a member of Kennedy’s committee, and Sen. Michael Enzi, R-Wyo., the committee’s ranking Republican, has not said how he would vote.

[...]

Dansky puts those chances at “slim to none.” Three of the Democrats on the committee - Democrats Barack Obama of Illinois, Hillary Clinton of New York and Chris Dodd of Connecticut - seem unlikely to vote to confirm Holsinger and risk a backlash from gay and lesbian voters against their presidential campaigns, she said. And Kennedy has a record of voting for gay and lesbian rights.

Other committee members, including Sens. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, and Barbara Mikulski, D-Md., have not publicly announced how they would vote, though Brown and Mikulski questioned Holsinger aggressively during the hearing.

Mikulski clashed with him when he was the VA’s chief medical director, accusing him of being apathetic toward what she called the system’s mistreatment of women.

“There is no reason to think he is going to make it out of committee,” Dansky said.

“The votes just aren’t there.”

***

Holsinger: “Who’s more dangerous to the nation’s health, Osama Bin Laden or Dick Cheney’s lesbian daughter? You got me.”

Matt Gunterman July 16th, 2007

This bit of questioning of Dr. James W. Holsinger by Senator Sherrod Brown (D-OH) during the former’s confirmation hearing for U.S. Surgeon General escaped my attention the other day. I can’t say that his response will win any converts to his support. This from the Cincinnati Enquirer’s Malia Rulon:

WASHINGTON - U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown turned to an unusual line of questioning during the Senate confirmation hearing last Thursday of James Holsinger, a former chancellor of the University of Kentucky medical center tapped by President Bush to be the next surgeon general.

Holsinger has drawn fire over a paper he wrote 16 years ago declaring that gay sex was unhealthy and unnatural. That prompted Brown, a Democrat, to ask: “There have been reports that over 50 Arabic translators have been fired from the Pentagon simply because they are gay. Given your past statements on homosexuality, what do you see as a greater threat to the health and safety of Americans: untranslated documents and intercepts from al-Qaida, or gay people?”

Holsinger, not surprisingly, didn’t know quite what to say.

“Well, that’s certainly an interesting question that you have posed, senator. I’ve not had an opportunity to think through, as you might guess, an answer to that question at all,” he said. “I would have grave concern for having the effective translators that we might need in order to be able to provide for the safety for our American people.”

[...]

Updates on Dr. James W. Holsinger confirmation hearings

Matt Gunterman July 12th, 2007

My efforts this morning to live blog the U.S. Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions confirmation hearings for Dr. James W. Holsinger’s nomination to surgeon general got complicated by blips in technology. In the end, I had picture but no sound. All I can report from my observations is that Holsinger looked rather nervous, but who wouldn’t be appearing under the cloud left by the testimony of George W. Bush’s first surgeon general, Dr. Richard Carmona, who essentially said that he had Bush minions watching his every move and vetting his every word.

In the end, Holsinger’s fate in these hearings will come down to whether the focus of the attention is on Holsinger himself or Bush’s persistent placement of ideologues in such positions.

The problem for Holsinger is that his record has demonstrated that he has the capacity to be a strong ideologue and potentially be a great “team player” with all the other Bushies.

Holsinger stated that what he wrote in 1991 does not reflect where he is today. Fine. But the propensity to go to the lengths he did — going so far as to miscontextualize science and medicine — to achieve his ideological goals is frightening. He might have overcome his opinions, but has he overcome this trait of personality and character? I doubt it.

I’m off the rest of the afternoon to write, write, write on book projects. So, I’m leaving you with some materials from the Herald-Leader and Courier-Journal’s coverage:

For updated coverage from the Herald-Leader’s Janet Patton, click here.

Both the Courier-Journal and Herald-Leader editorial pages have chimed in with revised opinions on Holsinger’s nomination.

The consensus: George W. Bush with his far-right ideological agenda is destroying the nation’s faith in even the most benign institutions of government, and it’s a shame that Dr. James W. Holsinger is caught in the middle of that, but that’s life.

From the Courier-Journal:

Double standards

Imagine somebody had testified under oath that Bill Clinton routinely muzzled the surgeon general — regularly blocked him from taking public positions more conservative than those of the administration.

Imagine that a surgeon general swore, on pain of perjury, that the Clinton bunch didn’t just try to suppress one report it didn’t like but regularly (1) told him to attend “political pep rallies,” (2) edited his speeches to remove ideas Bill and Hillary wouldn’t like, and (3) tried to turn major health reports into political documents, then squelched them when they couldn’t.

[...]

Imagine, in sum, discovering that the administration had turned the surgeon general’s office into a public relations outlet and the surgeon general himself into a political and ideological shill.

Well, that’s the story that finally came out, in former Surgeon General Richard Carmona’s testimony to the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee this week. But Dr. Carmona was talking about George W. Bush, the man who appointed him, and not about Bill Clinton.

It’s the Bushies who tried to strong-arm him into being a spokesman for their policies on stem cell research, emergency contraception, sex education, prison health care and global warming.

[...]

From the Herald-Leader:

Surgeon general
Holsinger must show he won’t be puppet

You have to wonder if Dr. James Holsinger felt a certain chill as he listened, as we presume he did, to testimony of former U.S. surgeon generals this week.

Holsinger, who often displayed an admirable, if sometimes excessive, sense of his own rightness and independence as a public health official in Kentucky, today appears before a Senate panel as President Bush’s nominee for surgeon general.

On Tuesday, Dr. Richard Carmona, who left the post last year, testified that the Bush administration was partisan, malicious, vindicative and hostile in its heavy-handed meddling in the work of the office.

[...]

Can Holsinger hold off the political operatives who Carmona said wanted to insert three positive references to the administration on every pageof speeches delivered by the surgeon general?

Would he be willing to turn aside administration instructions to stiff the Special Olympics because it is associated with a family of prominent Democrats?

Holsinger must convince the Senate committee, and himself, that he can really be the nation’s doctor and not just the president’s puppet.

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.”

###

Holsinger confirmation hearing set for July 12

Matt Gunterman June 29th, 2007

Via Think Progress:

The confirmation hearing for Kentucky’s very own Dr. James W. Holsinger, the man who felt compelled to prop up his religious beliefs on a framework of pseudo-science, has been scheduled for July 12.

Place your bets on how this turns out. I say he goes down in flames. Why?

Well, the Democratic base — with all the digressive Supreme Court decisions handed down this week — got reminded how unfortunate Bush’s Christian fundamentalist nominees have been for the nation.

Holsinger’s willingness to inject pseudo-science into his religion doesn’t bode well that he understands the professional limits of faith and its proper influence on government policy that serves a diverse nation.

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.

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.

Kentucky’s very own bigot Dr. James W. Holsinger becomes laughing stock

Matt Gunterman June 15th, 2007

Stephen Colbert of the Colbert Report featured this hilarious commentary on the ludicrous nature of Dr. James W. Holsinger’s nomination to be the nation’s next surgeon general. The audience actually booed at the very mention of the possibility. Humor’s a great way to put things in perspective. Too bad Kentucky’s chattering class — which is lining up behind Holsinger — is too busy worrying about having a Kentuckian as surgeon general, rather than having a qualified doctor who can and will represent all Americans.

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” lifestyle they once chose to enter only serves to further bolster — if not prove entirely — Dr. Holsinger’s advised medical assessment.

Much of the controversy revolves around a comprehensive compilation of medical studies Dr. Holsinger distilled titled, “The Pathophysiology of Male Homosexuality.” In the study, Dr. Holsinger placed scientific substance over political correctness by unapologetically demonstrating the seemingly self evident reality that, from a medical standpoint, homosexual behaviors, such as male-on-male sodomy, are “unnatural” and “unhealthy” and run entirely counter to natural human biological design.

Wrote, Holsinger, “… From the perspective of pathology and pathophysiology, the varied sexual practices of homosexual men have resulted in a diverse and expanded concept of sexually transmitted disease and associated trauma.

“It is absolutely clear that anatomically and physiologically the alimentary (digestive) and reproductive systems in humans are separate organ systems. … Even primitive cultures understand the nature of waste elimination, sexual intercourse and the birth of children. Indeed our own children appear to ‘intuitively’ understand these facts.”

But facts and logic have a way of running counter to the left’s agenda, so we shouldn’t be at all surprised that there is such a liberal gnashing of teeth over Dr. Holsinger’s nomination. He’s clearly struck a chord on the issue of homosexual behavior and the homosexual lifestyle, and that chord rings sour with those who don’t want to hear it.

However, to their bitter discord, that chord does ring true. And when the light of truth, science and reality is shined upon the fantasy world of political correctness in which the left collectively resides, then they quickly scurry for the shadows of self-delusion and send out their most raucous and militant to dampen anything or anyone who might provide illumination.

Matt Barber is one of the “like-minded men” with Concerned Women for America. He is an attorney concentrating in constitutional law and serves as CWA’s policy director for cultural issues.

Homophobe Dr. James Holsinger is not the person to lead the nation’s doctors

Matt Gunterman June 13th, 2007

That’s all there is to it: there are numerous other men and women physicians in this nation who are just as or even more qualified than homophobe Dr. James W. Holsinger to be this nation’s surgeon general, and those other persons do not come with all the anti-gay baggage.

Bush’s nomination of Holsinger to the office of surgeon general parallels that of Harriet Miers to the Supreme Court, a nomination that was ultimately withdrawn. Miers was marginally qualified, but came with a load of partisanship and out-of-the-mainstream views. Holsinger is the same.

The Louisville Courier-Journal has published another disgraceful editorial in defense of Holsinger. Wouldn’t it be refreshing if they had the balls to actually say what needs to be said: ‘it would be an honor for the people of Kentucky to have a surgeon general from their state, but Dr. James W. Holsinger is unfortunately not that person; he is a man who represents what is wrong with this administration and the sort of bigotry that Kentuckians must work to shed.’

I can assure you of one thing, however, these Kentuckians right here are going to fight this nomination.

Former Surgeon General Jocelyn Elders says James W. Holsinger not the right person to be nation’s top doctor

Matt Gunterman June 12th, 2007

Remember the 1990’s? Remember those halcyon days when a Democratic president led a short and successful war in the Balkans to stop a genocide? Only took him six months. Remember when the nation was so prosperous financially and culturally that it could afford to spend countless hours obsessing over the trivial matter of whether that president lied about receiving oral sex? Remember when we had a surgeon general, Dr. Jocelyn Elders, who got fired because she dared suggest that perhaps masturbation was a far safer sexual outlet for children than coitus? The crazy conservatives went foaming at the mouth at that one: Baby Jebus cries when little boys touch themselves!

Well, now the Bush administration has given us as its nominee for surgeon general: Kentucky’s very own Dr. James W. Holsinger — right-wing ideologue, major Republican financial donor, fundamentalist Christian, and anti-gay bigot. If confirmed, Holsinger would be the latest installment of Bush’s agenda to pack the ranks of the United States government with radical conservatives whose sole purpose is to advance the Republican party, and not the American people.

Think Progress has this post on Jocelyn Elders take on the appropriateness of Holsinger’s nomination:


Former Surgeon General has doubts about Holsinger.

Frank Lockwood of Bible Belt Blogger spoke with Dr. Jocelyn Elders, President Clinton’s first Surgeon General, who said that she is not sure that James Holsinger “is the person that we should be confirming” as the next Surgeon General:

LOCKWOOD — Do you think you’d vote to confirm him?

ELDERS — I think there’s some things he’s said that are out there. It would be very difficult for me to feel that this is the person that we should be confirming in this day and time with all the problem we have, related to sexual heath and all the problems we’re getting into. I think as the nation’s chief health educator we need to know what he would do to help America evolve into a sexually healthy nation. We’re a sexually unhealthy nation.

Lexington Herald-Leader takes a step back from endorsement of homophobic Dr. James Holsinger for surgeon general

Matt Gunterman June 12th, 2007

Good for the Herald-Leader.

While the editorial page doesn’t un-endorse Dr. James W. Holsinger for his consistent anti-gay agenda, it does revisit the Holsinger nomination and provide their readers a fuller picture of Holsinger’s career. The H-L went from enthusiastic cheerleader to ambivalent spectator; it essentially concludes that if Holsinger’s nomination fails, it’s likely the result of Holsinger’s nomination being the straw that breaks the camel’s back, so far as sticking yet another radical conservative ideologue in the high ranks of government is concerned.

In the end, Holsinger’s nomination should fail because there are plenty of candidates who are even more qualified and who have no record of intolerance or mistreatment of any group of people.

The real question
Would anti-gay church history shape job?

There’s a lot of heat over the nomination of Dr. James Holsinger to be the next United States Surgeon General. We’d like more light.

We’ve learned a lot about his religious views, but know little about how, if at all, they will affect his decisions as a public health administrator.

Holsinger has come under scrutiny and fire for his record on gay and lesbian issues while an official in the United Methodist Church.

A 1991 paper he wrote for a church committee studying homosexuality argued that gay sex is biologically unnatural and unhealthy.

When the committee seemed to be leaning toward loosening the church’s restrictions on membership for gay people in committed relationships, Holsinger resigned.

In 2000, as a member of the church’s highest court, Holsinger ruled with others that a practicing lesbian could not continue to be a minister and that church membership could be denied to a gay man.

All of these are troubling, and doubly so in someone who might be entrusted, as the surgeon general’s web site says, “with advancing the health of the nation.”

[...]

Holsinger is entering the glare of national exposure as public patience is wearing thin with incompetent, inexperienced Bush-appointed idealogues running amok in government.

That fatigue, combined with presidential candidates eager for air time, promises a combustible environment at Holsinger’s hearings.

Ultimately, he must answer whether, as surgeon general, he would be guided by faith or science.

Homophobic Dr. James Holsinger’s “science” debunked; McConnell offers undying support of homophobe

Matt Gunterman June 12th, 2007

Before we get to the meat of the post here, Frank Lockwood at The Bible Belt Blogger brings news of Senator Mitch McConnell’s undying support for Dr. James Holsinger, George W. Bush’s nominee for surgeon general and certifiable homophobe.

U.S. Sen. Minority Leader Mitch McConnell on Monday gave an endorsement for Kentucky cardiologist Dr. James Holsinger, who was nominated by Bush to become surgeon general.

Holsinger has come under fire from gay rights groups for voting to expel a lesbian pastor from the United Methodist Church and writing in 1991 that gay sex is unnatural and unhealthy.

Also, Holsinger helped found a Methodist congregation that, according to gay rights activists, believes homosexuality is a matter of choice and can be “cured.”

McConnell said Holsinger has had a distinguished career and backed Holsinger’s selection. When asked about Holsinger’s chances of winning Senate confirmation, McConnell replied, “I think it’s pretty early in the process, so it’s very difficult to know where it stands.”

McConnell’s support is no surprise, as he’s stood behind every other failed Bush effort, from the Iraq war to Attorney General Alberto Gonzales.

Box Turtle Bulletin has an excellent break down of the “science” behind Holsinger’s anti-gay agenda.

It appears the dear doctor took a lot of liberty with the context of many of the facts he was citing in his pseudo-scientific exercise, “Pathophysiology of Male Homosexuality.” Below in the introduction and conclusion, but do take a look at the entire post linked above. It’s well worth the read, but the details aren’t easily condensed.

A Closer Look at Dr. James Holsinger’s “Pathophysiology of Male Homosexuality”
Jim Burroway
June 11th, 2007

President Bush’s nomination of Dr. James Holsinger to be the next Surgeon General continues to raise concerns among several leading gay rights advocates. Alarms first went up when we learned that Holsinger co-founded a church which sponsors an ex-gay ministry. That discovery reinforced other well-known facts about his tenure on the United Methodist Judicial Council, where he opposed the 2004 decision to allow Rev. Karen Dammann, a lesbian, to continue serving as a minister. He also backed the defrocking of Rev. Beth Stroud, another lesbian minister, and he supported a Virginia pastor who barred an openly gay man from church membership.

Most of those concerns, by themselves, have little direct bearing on his future role as Surgeon General. We should remember that Dr. C. Everett Koop was also an evangelical Christian, and he was able to aside whatever qualms he may have had to become a outspoken advocate for sanity during the AIDS crisis. Not only that, but Dr. Koop battled powerful forces within the Reagan administration to do this, and he created many enemies among his fellow social conservatives. Dr. Koop showed considerable medical integrity and moral bravery in standing firm against the pervasive stigma which gay men were experiencing at the time.

But there is troubling evidence which suggests that Dr. Holsinger is no C. Everett Koop. Holsinger wrote a 1991 white paper for the United Methodist Church’s Committee to Study Homosexuality titled, “Pathophysiology of Male Homosexuality,” where he tries to give a scientific opinion that gay male relationships are inherently inferior because “when the complementarity of the sexes is breached, injuries and diseases may occur.”

That paper, dressed up as a considered medical opinion backed by a bibliography drawn from professional sources, would likely appear to be rather impressive to the lay reader (as most members of the committee were). But a closer examination of that paper reveals very little of scientific value. Worse, it shows a startling eagerness to pull evidence out of context to provide damning evidence against gay men, while willfully ignoring counter evidence in the same literature which essentially destroys the core of his arguments.

[...]

In other words, to describe gay sexual acts, more often than not he turned to papers which describe injuries sustained through heterosexual activity. And then he used this evidence from heterosexual activity to say that “when the complementarity of the sexes is breached, injuries and diseases may occur as noted above.” But what does this evidence suggest about “complementarity” in heterosexual relationships? Holsinger doesn’t answer.

But worse, Holsinger made the fatal error of ignoring the bonds of affection and devotion that arise in gay and lesbian couples. He reduced the rich complexity of their relationships to pipe fittings and how they interlock with each other. But the interlocking parts that fit together in relationships are those parts that fit sublimely. They have absolutely nothing to do with pipes or connectors or any other analogies drawn from the local Ace Hardware store.

Whatever pretensions Holsinger may have had to presenting a scientific argument, this paper does not rise to that level. In fact, Holsinger deployed many of the same tactics other anti-gay extremists use in writing common anti-gay tracts. The result is not science, but propaganda.

The Human Rights Campaign’s Joe Solmonese, in opposing Holsinger’s nomination, points out that, “it is essential that America’s top doctor value sound science over anti-gay ideology.” This paper shows no evidence that Holsinger holds to such values. What he wrote was no error, nor is it a simple misreading of the medical literature. In fact, it is simply impossible to write what he wrote by accident or in error.

Holsinger wrote this paper as part of a church inquiry where the greater considerations for Truth ought to hold sway. This makes Holsinger’s actions all the more disquieting. If he’s willing to commit an act of false witness on behalf of the church — in the service of his God — what assurances can we have that he will act differently on behalf of the nation?

Homophobic Dr. James Holsinger big donor to GOP and Bush

Matt Gunterman June 10th, 2007

Some interesting excerpts from a piece by Andrew Wolfson in today’s Courier-Journal on Dr. James Holsinger, the Bush administration’s homophobic nominee for surgeon general.

What’s clear is that this nomination must be opposed and ultimately defeated to keep the Bush administration from further inserting out-of-the-mainstream conservative ideologues into every nook and cranny of the American government.

My favorite bit from this piece? The quote from the spokeswoman for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services who says that scientific understanding of sexuality has deepened from 1991 when Holsinger was writing about sex organs as pipe fittings. Deepening: gotta love it.

Holsinger assailed, defended over views on gays
Kentuckian tapped to be surgeon general

Gay-rights activists have denounced the University of Kentucky doctor nominated for U.S. surgeon general as an “anti-gay quack” who they fear would use the office as “a bully pulpit for hatred.”

And two U.S. senators who will judge his nomination — Barack Obama and Christopher Dodd — criticized Dr. James Holsinger’s nomination, citing views he has expressed about gays as a national leader of the United Methodist Church.

[...]

Gay-rights organizations, including the Log Cabin Republicans, have called for the Senate to reject President Bush’s nomination of Holsinger as surgeon general, citing a paper he wrote for the Methodist Church 16 years ago describing male homosexual sex as unnatural and unhealthy.

They also denounced his more recent votes, as a member of the church’s Judicial Council, opposing a decision to allow a lesbian to be a pastor and supporting another pastor who refused to let an openly gay man join the church.

“Why select somebody who follows an ideology that flies in the face of science?” asked Christina Gilgor, executive director of the Kentucky Fairness Alliance.

In a statement, Sen. Obama, of Illinois, said he has “serious reservations about nominating someone who would inject his own anti-gay ideology into critical decisions about the health and well-being of our nation.”

[...]

Holsinger is a registered Republican who over the past 10 years has given about $23,000 to the GOP and its candidates, including $3,000 to President Bush.

[...]

Some scientific experts have criticized Holsinger for the paper he wrote in 1991 as a member of the United Methodist Church’s Committee to Study Homosexuality, in which he equated homosexuality with disease.

Titled “Pathophysiology of Male Homosexuality,” the paper says that male and female sex organs, like pipe fittings, are designed for each other, and when “the complementarity of the sexes is breached, injuries and diseases may occur.”

In an interview, Dr. June Reinisch, director emeritus of the Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex, Gender & Reproduction, said Holsinger’s paper was inaccurate when it was written and “presents a totally distorted view of homosexuality.

“Homosexuality is not about where you place your genitals — it has to do with the love and attraction and interaction between human beings,” she said. “It is quite clear he doesn’t know what he’s talking about.”

Christina Pearson, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, which includes the office of the surgeon general, said the paper was “based on information available at the time” and that “since then, the science has deepened.”

[...]

Yet other Methodists say Holsinger has been involved in decisions by the Judicial Council — the church’s Supreme Court — that have divided the church and its members.

While the United Methodist Church’s official Book of Discipline says it “does not condone the practice of homosexuality” and considers it “incompatible with Christian teaching,” it implores families and the church “not to reject or condemn lesbian and gay members and friends.”

The Rev. Troy Plummer, executive director of the Chicago-based Reconciling Ministries Network of United Methodists, said Holsinger has done just that.

“When he has been called to … offer the hand of Christian fellowship, he has slammed the door in the face of faithful gay and lesbian persons,” said Plummer, whose group promotes sexual diversity in the church. “What, then, might he do as surgeon general?”

[...]

Scandal on Holsinger’s oversight of substandard veterans care breaking

Matt Gunterman June 8th, 2007

From ThinkProgress:

As VA Chief Medical Officer, Holsinger Oversaw ‘Substandard Care’ At Veterans Facilities

James W. Holsinger has repeatedly espoused medically-inaccurate homophobic positions that undermine his credibility to be the next Surgeon General. But his tenure as chief medical director of the Veterans Health Administration under President George H.W. Bush also brings into doubt whether Holsinger can be “America’s doctor.”

A General Accounting Office report released in Nov. 1991 found that under Holsinger’s watch, the veterans health system was plagued by severe “substandard care.” Some examples [AP, 11/20/91]:

– There were multiple cases of “pure inattention.” In “one case a man lost a leg because he wasn’t checked regularly, in another, a bladder-cancer victim died because he went untreated for 45 days.”

– The GAO investigator “found serious problems at every one of six VA hospitals she visited, and that a broader examination of records found 30 VA hospitals had high numbers of patient complications and other indicators of substandard care.”

– The investigator “testified that the most serious problem found at the six medical centers was the lack of supervision of residents and interns, a problem she said had ’severe consequences for patients.’”

Holsinger’s response to the investigation: “Our system is obviously not perfect — no health care system is.”

In one particularly egregious example, “poor medical care” contributed or caused “the deaths of six men at a North Chicago veterans hospital” during 1991. The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) called the large number of wrongful deaths at one facility “unprecedented.” The VA Inspector General found that the “questionable medical practices” at the facilities “included failing to diagnose problems, failing to treat problems quickly and doing unnecessary surgery.” [Chicago Tribune, 4/5/91]

Holsinger tried to downplay the deaths. He said that only one out of five of the cases showed a clear indication that “it was a surgical misadventure.”

Credentials don’t tell the whole story about Dr. James Holsinger

Matt Gunterman June 7th, 2007

Polwatchers blog is reporting that a conservative blogger posted this statement today in regards to the growing furor over Dr. James Holsinger and his consistently homophobic agenda:

And who are we supposed to believe about the health effects of homosexuality anyway: some guy with a list of medical credentials a mile long? Or the medical geniuses over at places like the Fairness Alliance, Soulforce, and the Human Rights Campaign?

As an historian of medicine, I can tell you that the past of the modern American medical profession is littered with people who had all sorts of nice degrees and credentials but who carried out terrible injustices and painful experiments against other human beings. In the United States, these sorts of medical horrors were usually carried out against slaves, blacks, the mentally ill, and very much so homosexuals.

The most extreme example in history of this sort of phenomenon was no doubt the Nazi doctors, like Dr. Josef Mengele, who did a number of medical experiments using twins at Auschwitz. None of the twins came out alive. Or there was Dr. Carl Clauberg, who in his experiments aimed x-rays at people’s sex organs until they were cooked. Or Dr. Herta Oberheuser, who injected toxic chemicals into the bodies of patients to the point of death. Or Dr. Karl Brandt who carried out executions of invalids that he “medically” diagnosed as a burden on the Nazi machine.

Just because a person has an education and credentials doesn’t mean that he or she can’t be driven to dangerous extremes by ideology or religious fervor.

Take for instance Kentucky’s most rabid bigot in elected office: Republican State Senator Richard “Dick” Roeding, who had this to say about homosexuals when the University of Louisville was discussing overing domestic partner benefits to same-sex couples in order to be unfettered in its ability to attract and retain top academic talent:

I don’t want to entice any of those people into our state. Those are the wrong kind of people.

Yes, Dick Roeding is a churlish bigot, but he’s also a churlish bigot with a degree in pharmaceutical chemistry.

Somehow I don’t think Holsinger’s nomination will survive this latest bit of nonsense

Matt Gunterman June 6th, 2007

Will this bit of nonsense from Bush surgeon general nominee and University of Kentucky faculty member James W. Holsinger be the straw that breaks the nominating camel’s back? It’s disappointing — and I believe I’m remembering this correctly — that both the Louisville Courier-Journal and the Lexington Herald-Leader editorial boards endorsed this man’s nomination.

Gay group attacks Holsinger paper
1991 CHURCH REPORT ARGUED MALE SEX UNHEALTHY, UNNATURAL

By Sarah Vos

In 1991, Dr. James W. Holsinger — a University of Kentucky professor who is President Bush’s nominee for U.S. surgeon general — wrote a paper arguing that gay sex is biologically unnatural and unhealthy.

Like male and female pipe fittings, certain male and female body parts are designed for each other, Holsinger wrote in a paper prepared for a United Methodist Church committee studying homosexuality. “When the complementarity of the sexes is breached, injuries and diseases may occur,” Holsinger wrote in the paper, titled Pathophysiology of Male Homosexuality.

The paper was released Monday by the Human Rights Campaign, a national group that advocates for gay and lesbian rights. UK spokeswoman Mary Margaret Colliver confirmed that Holsinger had written the paper. Holsinger declined to comment for this story, as he has not been confirmed by the U.S. Senate.

[...]

I don’t think any of us needs me to point out that, excluding the sex organs, males and females have exactly the same orifices on their bodies, and those female orifices are just as capable of being used for sexual purposes as the male ones.

And, of course, the biggest problem here is that Holsinger, whom Bush wants to make the nation’s chief medical officer, is shown here, as the article points out, pathologizing homosexual practices to make his religious point. Why not just quote some scripture and leave the science to the realms of scientists? The mainstream medical community de-medicalized homosexual behavior decades ago.