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The Year In Homophobia: Ten Of The Worst Anti-LGBT Stories Of 2013

By all accounts, 2013 was a banner year for the gay rights movement: The Supreme Court struck down the worst part of the Defense of Marriage Act, seven new states legalized marriage equality, polls showed Americans backing gay rights in ever-growing numbers, anti-gay crusader Ken Cuccinelli was defeated in his bid to become Virginia’s governor, the Boy Scouts loosened their discriminatory policies, and the “ex-gay” movement began to self-destruct.

But although it’s become an annual tradition to declare the end of the Religious Right, we have seen that equality opponents are only ratcheting up their rhetoric in the face of new challenges and fights next year.

Here we take a look back at some of the worst anti-gay rhetoric and activism of 2013.

10. Class Action Lawsuit Against Homosexuality?

Tea Party Unity founder Rick Scarborough wants to put homosexuality on trial … literally. Scarborough, a right-wing Texas pastor with close ties to Republicans including Ctrl+click or tap to follow link"> Ted Cruz (link is external) and Rick Perry(link is external), said during a Tea Party Unity conference call with anti-gay activist Peter LaBarbera that he hopes there will be a “ Ctrl+click or tap to follow link"> class action lawsuit (link is external) ” brought against homosexuality much like the one brought against tobacco companies.

Such language is nothing new(link is external) from Scarborough, who has also called Ctrl+click or tap to follow link"> AIDS a divine punishment for homosexuality (link is external) and Ctrl+click or tap to follow link"> regularly (link is external) rants(link is external) against “sodomites.”

9. Pat Robertson Lives In Fear Of AIDS Rings

While televangelist Pat Robertson usually isn’t one to shy away from his own vitriolic anti-gay statements, this year there was one deranged and bigoted view(link is external) that he tried desperately to cover up. After we caught Robertson telling his 700 Club co-host that gay people wear special rings that they use to deliberately infect others with HIV/AIDS(link is external), his Christian Broadcasting Network edited the comments out of the version of the show posted online and temporarily got YouTube to remove our video clip of Robertson’s remarks.

Ultimately, Ctrl+click or tap to follow link"> CBN lost its fight (link is external) to censor its own leader, and Robertson continued to spew homophobic rhetoric. For example, he talked about how he wanted to Ctrl+click or tap to follow link"> vomit at the sight of gay couples(link is external), Ctrl+click or tap to follow link">offered (link is external) Ctrl+click or tap to follow link"> horrendous (link is external) Ctrl+click or tap to follow link"> advice (link is external) on how to treat gay friends and family members, and promoted even more anti-gay (link is external) Ctrl+click or tap to follow link"> conspiracy (link is external) Ctrl+click or tap to follow link"> theories(link is external). In spite of it all, Robertson insists that he is “not anti-gay”…since gay people don’t exist(link is external).

8. Virginia GOP Nominates Anti-Gay Ticket, Gets Soundly Defeated

The Virginia GOP’s far-right ticket(link is external) went down in defeat in November, despite Ken Cuccinelli and E.W. Jackson’s best attempts to hide their anti-gay records. As Virginia’s attorney general, Cuccinelli led an all-out crusade(link is external) to block LGBT partnership benefits and anti-discrimination policies; he then tried to spin(link is external) his homophobic rhetoric(link is external) once his views became increasingly unpopular(link is external). His running mate, Jackson, even blatantly lied(link is external) in an attempt to deny his past anti-gay comments(link is external), including his claims that homosexuality is a sickness(link is external) and that gay rights will lead to divine punishment(link is external) of the U.S. military.

7. Always Playing The Victim

When the Senate approved the Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA) last month, Religious Right activists baselessly argued that the legislation would Ctrl+click or tap to follow link"> punish religious businesses(link is external), Ctrl+click or tap to follow link"> protect pedophiles(link is external), “ Ctrl+click or tap to follow link">represent the return of Jim Crow laws(link is external),” Ctrl+click or tap to follow link"> incite a revolution (link is external) and lead to “ Ctrl+click or tap to follow link">bankruptcy, starvation, even death(link is external).” American Family Association spokesman Bryan Fischer warned that this persecution had become such an epidemic that “homosexual mobs” were now assaulting Christians while crying “ Ctrl+click or tap to follow link">Homo-Akbar!(link is external)

Conservatives also created a martyr out of an Air Force sergeant who claimed he was disciplined and reassigned for opposing marriage equality. An Ctrl+click or tap to follow link"> investigation (link is external) deemed his story baseless: it turned out the sergeant himself actually requested to be reassigned.

6. Dangerous Transphobic Smear Campaign

As part of its campaign(link is external) to repeal a California law protecting transgender students, the Pacific Justice Institute Ctrl+click or tap to follow link"> fabricated (link is external) a case of sexual harassment by a transgender girl in a Colorado school. The student who was targeted by the PJI hoax was placed on suicide watch as a result of the baseless smear campaign(link is external), but that didn’t(link is external) stop(link is external) right-wing(link is external) activists(link is external) from citing the case as reason to oppose protections for transgender kids. Gordon Klingenschmitt even Ctrl+click or tap to follow link"> accused (link is external) the transgender student of “visual rape” and demonic possession:

5. Boy Scouts Move Revives Gay-Pedophilia Myth

Before the Boy Scouts of America even decided to lift its ban on openly gay youth (a resolution that passed with over 60 percent support), anti-gay Religious Right activists were claiming that any revisions to the organization’s longstanding ban on openly gay members would(link is external) encourage(link is external) sexual(link is external) abuse(link is external) and(link is external) aid(link is external) sexual(link is external) predators(link is external). Several activists even linked the BSA’s new policy to Satan(link is external) and the End Times(link is external), while others compared(link is external) gay rights advocates to terrorists(link is external)serial killers(link is external) and cannibals(link is external). The head of the Southern Baptist Convention even suggested that openly gay scouts could trigger a nuclear attack by North Korea(link is external).

Alan Keyes worried(link is external) that gay scouts would bully their peers until they succumbed to their “sexual advances” and warned of increased rates of drug abuse and gang violence(link is external), while John Stemberger — who this year launched(link is external) an anti-gay alternative to the BSA — feared(link is external) the change would not only “create a wave of boy-on-boy sexual abuse.” Stemberger was also upset(link is external) that young people think “it’s hip, it’s edgy to be gay and so they’re all saying they’re gay.”

Republican politicians also criticized the policy shift: Gov. Rick Perry likened(link is external) gay rights foes to opponents of slavery; Rep. Louie Gohmert suggested(link is external) the policy change would lead to child abuse; Rep. Steve Palazzo warned(link is external) it would bring about the end of America and former Sen. Rick Santorum said(link is external) it would “murder” scouting.

4. Ex-Gay Movement Gets Even More Desperate

As a growing number of states work to curb harmful and discredited ex-gay therapy for minors, “ex-gay” activists are trying to regroup…despite the closure of a major ex-gay ministry(link is external) and the defection of the movement’s poster boy(link is external). Washington D.C.’s “Ex-Gay Pride Month” rally, which supporters hoped would draw “thousands” of ex-gays, was a complete disaster(link is external), and “Ex-Gay Awareness Month” fared no better(link is external).

Ex-gay activists even demanded that Will Portman, the openly gay son of Sen. Rob Portman (R-OH), be placed into ex-gay therapy (link is external) and become an ex-gay role model(link is external). But the ex-gay movement did offer us at least one of the most disturbing books(link is external) and strangest science experiments (link is external) of the year.

3. Blaming Gay People For Natural Disasters

In the perennial tradition of blaming everything bad that happens on gay people, we learned in 2013 that gay rights caused everything from tornadoes(link is external) to forest fires(link is external) and floods(link is external)… including Noah’s Flood(link is external). After Minnesota legalized same-sex marriage, one radio talk show host even confidently predicted(link is external) that the state would face economic and weather-related punishment.

Self-proclaimed prophet Cindy Jacobs, who linked(link is external) the repeal of Don’t Ask Don’t Tell to freak bird deaths, feared that the Supreme Court marriage rulings would lead to divine wrath(link is external) in the form of natural disasters:

2. Religious Right’s Global Reach

Facing a losing battle at home, anti-gay groups are increasingly looking abroad(link is external) to defend existing anti-gay laws and push for even more extreme measures. Just days after Russia’s parliament passed its infamous ban on “gay propaganda,” the National Organization for Marriage’s Brian Brown traveled to Moscow(link is external) to testify in favor of a new ban on the adoption of Russian orphans by same-sex couples and even single people who live in countries that allow for marriage equality. Brown did so at the invitation(link is external) of the World Congress of Families(link is external), a group that allies with nearly every major Religious Right group in the United States, which is planning to hold its annual conference in Moscow next year.

Brown tried to keep his Russian visit quiet – until we found out about it(link is external) – but plenty of his fellow Religious Right activists have not been so shy in their(link is external) public embrace (link is external) of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s anti-gay crackdown.

American anti-gay activists were also active in pushing anti-gay policies throughout Eastern Europe(link is external)the Caribbean(link is external) and Uganda(link is external), which just passed(link is external) its draconian Anti-Homosexuality Bill. Massachusetts-based pastor Scott Lively helped craft Uganda’s extreme legislation. He also had a hand in Russia’s “gay propaganda” law, which he called(link is external) “one of the proudest achievements of my career.”

1. Religious Right Explodes Over SCOTUS

Perhaps nothing ignited right-wing fury (link is external) this year as much as the Supreme Court’s decisions on Proposition 8 and the Defense of Marriage Act. As soon as the high court struck down a key part of DOMA and declined to revive Prop 8, activists started warning that it is only a matter of time before(link is external) God(link is external) destroys(link is external) America(link is external) (and the world(link is external)) or the country collapses(link is external) on(link is external) its(link is external) own(link is external). One ex-gay leader reacted to the decisions by claiming(link is external) that Justices Kennedy and Kagan and President Obama are all secretly gay.

Republican elected officials also reacted with sometimes unhinged fury. Rep. Tim Huelskamp accused the justices of attacking Jesus Christ and claimed the DOMA opinion would have caused them to flunk out of law school(link is external). Rep. Louie Gohmert chided the justices for their “ignorance(link is external),” while claiming that homosexuality undermines the theory of evolution(link is external).

The two rulings led to fears that gay marriage would lead to anti-Christian persecution(link is external), second class citizenship for Christians(link is external), a ban on opposite-sex unions(link is external) and mass murder(link is external), and also prompted calls for secession(link is external)civil disobedience(link is external), civil war(link is external) and revolution(link is external).

Bryan Fischer Bonus

Don’t worry, we didn’t forget about the American Family Association’s Bryan Fischer, who stands of a class of his own for his near-daily ranting against LGBT people. This year, the Focal Point host added to his anti-gay repertoire by charging(link is external) that gay people not only led Nazi Germany but also are bringing Nazism to America with a Jim Crow-style campaign(link is external) of “ethnic cleansing(link is external)” against Christians.

Not surprisingly, Fischer praised India’s Supreme Court ruling (link is external) outlawing gay sex and fawned over Russian president Vladimir Putin(link is external) for his anti-gay policies. Fischer declared that Hillary Clinton may be “the first lesbian president(link is external)”; blamed gay people for the 2008 financial crisis(link is external); said that NBA teams should not sign openly gay player Jason Collins because he would be “eyeballing(link is external)” his teammates; and warned that the repeal of Don’t Ask Don’t Tell would lead to the reinstatement of the draft(link is external).

Fischer did get a surprise lesson in heterosexual privilege(link is external) this year, although it doesn’t seem that he learned anything from it:


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