Newsweek cover story illustrates gender confusion in American culture
Jeff Robinson
May 16, 2007
Newsweek’s disturbing cover story in its May 21 edition will most certainly muddy the waters further in the ongoing debate over gender identity in America.
A report titled "The Mystery of Gender" seeks to answer the question: "Aside from the obvious, what make us male or female?" The multi-author piece proceeds to downplay biological differences between men and women and, through the use of numerous real-life illustrations, sound bites and statistics from feminist sociologists and allusions to science, touts with a positive spin the increasing number of people who identify themselves as "transgendered" and its significance for gender identity.
The overwhelmingly positive, almost sermonic tone of the article debunks self-evident truths about human sexuality and proclaims a single theme: the traditional idea that gender identity is a biological absolute is out, gender self-determination is in. The sub-headline which adorns the cover is thesis-like: "The new visibility of transgender America is shedding light on the ancient riddle of identity."
Perhaps the most alarming aspect of the article is its subtle insistence on the normalcy of "transgender children;" that is, children whose parents have allowed them to change gender identities because the tykes were dissatisfied with their original biological makeup.
The article illustrates its point with the infinitely troubling narrative of six-year-old kindergartner now named "Jona" Rose: "Rose, from northern California, seems like a girl in nearly every way—she wears dresses, loves pink and purple, and bestowed female names on all her stuffed animals. But "Jona," who was born "Jonah," also has a penis."
The writers tell how "Jona" convinced "her" mom to buy "her" a dress at age four and was "so excited she nearly hyperventilated." "Jona" apparently began wearing dresses to preschool every day at age four and "no one seemed to mind," the article points out.
The narrative continues, "They chose a private kindergarten where Jona wouldn’t have to hide the fact that he was born a boy, but could comfortably dress like a girl and even use the girls’ bathroom," the article says, quoting the child’s father, Joel, as saying "She’s been pretty adamant from the get-go: ‘I’m a girl.’"
In a bewildering exercise of pronoun calisthenics, writers chronicle the story of another child who was born female, but insisted—at 30 months of age—that she be called "him." A therapist later "confirmed the (parents’) instincts to let [their child] guide them" in determining whether the youngster would continue to exist as a male or female. The child’s mother, Colleen Vicente, said, "The most important this is to realize who your child is."
Predictably, Newsweek gives short shrift to traditional views of gender and marginalizes biblical arguments for gender identity by, in one brief paragraph, telling of the struggle of a Florida man who underwent a sex-change operation to become a woman and was opposed by a local Baptist minister. The authors briefly quote the minister—second hand—as saying "Jesus would want him terminated."
Authors offset what they obviously see as a narrow-minded Baptist minister with a longer vignette about a 56-year-old Baptist pastor who underwent a "gender reassignment" procedure in 2003. His wife of 33 years has remained with him and the minister—formerly John, now "Julie"—said, "Actively expressing the feminine in me has helped me grow closer to God."
Accompanying the article is a timeline marking a "history of transgender awareness," and the piece itself asserts that "transgendered reality" is really nothing new.
View Newsweek article.
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Evangelicals, ex-gays voice opposition to expanded hate crimes bill
Tom Strode
April 23, 2007
Congress has initiated a renewed attempt to expand hate crimes protections to homosexuals and transgendered individuals, and opponents have mounted a counter effort they realize will be difficult to sustain on Capitol Hill.
Bills to expand the categories protected under hate crimes laws to include homosexuality and other sexual identities have been introduced in both the Senate and House of Representatives. A subcommittee of the House Judiciary Committee held a hearing on the issue April 17, and a full committee vote is expected soon, reportedly during the week of April 23-27.
While the current hate crimes law protects traits such as race, religion and national origin, the new legislation would grant protection based on lifestyle, say foes of the measure. They also say it would move federal law toward punishing thoughts and beliefs, since the motivation of a person charged with a hate crime would have to be evaluated.
Pro-family organizations, including the Southern Baptist Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission, already have been working to rally opposition to the measures. Exodus International, a ministry that seeks to help people out of homosexuality through the Gospel of Jesus, had about 50 people joining others April 17-18 to explain to Senate and House members and their staffs their opposition.
For Exodus President Alan Chambers, it is a matter of justice.
"[R]eally what we're saying is this legislation is unfair, because it means that I was more valuable as a homosexual than I am today as a former homosexual," Chambers told reporters before he began visiting on Capitol Hill April 17. "You know, this law would give special protection to those who are gay and lesbian, yet it doesn't give any protection to those who are children. That's saying that a gay man is more valuable than a child, is more valuable than a grandmother, is more valuable than the majority of Americans. That's just not fair."
The bill is "primarily being pushed by those in the homosexual activist community, really as a reinforcement that homosexuality is valid, that they need protection, and that's just not the case," said Chambers, who left homosexuality 15 years ago and has been married for more than nine years. "[Homosexuals are] protected as much as I am protected under the Fourteenth Amendment."
The House bill is the Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act, H.R 1592. Rep. John Conyers, D.-Mich., has 137 cosponsors for his bill. The Senate version, S. 1105, has the same title, except the name of Matthew Shepard has been attached to it. Shepard was the young homosexual who was beaten and left for dead tied to a fence in Wyoming in 1998. Sen. Edward Kennedy, D.-Mass., has 42 cosponsors for his proposal.
The House and Senate both have passed versions in separate sessions in the past, but they have yet to agree on a measure to send to the White House. It appears there are enough votes to gain passage in this Congress, especially since Democrats control both houses. The only apparent hope for preventing the legislation from becoming law is a veto by President Bush.
Opponents of new hate crimes legislation do not have a veto commitment from Bush yet, but they are seeking one, Chambers said.
Chambers said even some friends of Exodus in Congress are having a difficult time voting against the measure.
"They don't want to make it sound like they are voting for violence," he said.
"The tide is against us," Chambers said. "I believe that this is a great opportunity for us to share the truth ... about freedom, the truth about this bill and really to reinforce the fact that hate crimes legislation is unnecessary -- for one reason, the FBI uniform crime report has shown that bias-motivated crimes are on the decrease. Crimes against those who are gay, or who are perceived to be gay, have decreased over the last several years. So it seems like in a free and tolerant society where Americans are beginning to learn to treat their neighbor like they'd like to be treated, we're seeing a decrease in some of these crimes. And that's a good thing."
The bills would authorize the U.S. attorney general to provide assistance to state and local officials in the investigation and prosecution of hate crimes, as well as expand the categories to include "sexual orientation" and "gender identity," among others. The legislation says a hate crime is one "motivated by prejudice based on the actual or perceived race, color, religion, national origin, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, or disability of the victim, or is a violation of the state, local, or tribal hate crime laws."
"Sexual orientation" includes homosexuality. "Gender identity" is a "person's innate sense of gender," which may be different than his sex, according to the website of the Human Rights Campaign, which describes itself as the country's largest "lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender" political organization. Transgender is an umbrella term for "people who live all or substantial portions of their lives expressing an innate sense of gender other than their birth sex," according to HRC. The transgender category includes transsexuals and cross-dressers.
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Evangelicals, ex-gays opposing hate crimes bill
Tom Strode
April 23, 2007
Bills to expand the categories protected under hate crimes laws to include homosexuality and other sexual identities have been introduced in both the Senate and House of Representatives. A subcommittee of the House Judiciary Committee held a hearing on the issue April 17, and a full committee vote is expected soon, reportedly during the week of April 23-27.
While the current hate crimes law protects traits such as race, religion and national origin, the new legislation would grant protection based on lifestyle, say foes of the measure. They also say it would move federal law toward punishing thoughts and beliefs, since the motivation of a person charged with a hate crime would have to be evaluated.
Pro-family organizations, including the Southern Baptist Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission, already have been working to rally opposition to the measures. Exodus International, a ministry that seeks to help people out of homosexuality through the Gospel of Jesus, had about 50 people joining others April 17-18 to explain to Senate and House members and their staffs their opposition.
For Exodus President Alan Chambers, it is a matter of justice.
"[R]eally what we're saying is this legislation is unfair, because it means that I was more valuable as a homosexual than I am today as a former homosexual," Chambers told reporters before he began visiting on Capitol Hill April 17. "You know, this law would give special protection to those who are gay and lesbian, yet it doesn't give any protection to those who are children. That's saying that a gay man is more valuable than a child, is more valuable than a grandmother, is more valuable than the majority of Americans. That's just not fair."
The bill is "primarily being pushed by those in the homosexual activist community, really as a reinforcement that homosexuality is valid, that they need protection, and that's just not the case," said Chambers, who left homosexuality 15 years ago and has been married for more than nine years. "[Homosexuals are] protected as much as I am protected under the Fourteenth Amendment."
The House bill is the Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act, H.R 1592. Rep. John Conyers, D.-Mich., has 137 cosponsors for his bill. The Senate version, S. 1105, has the same title, except the name of Matthew Shepard has been attached to it. Shepard was the young homosexual who was beaten and left for dead tied to a fence in Wyoming in 1998. Sen. Edward Kennedy, D.-Mass., has 42 cosponsors for his proposal.
The House and Senate both have passed versions in separate sessions in the past, but they have yet to agree on a measure to send to the White House. It appears there are enough votes to gain passage in this Congress, especially since Democrats control both houses. The only apparent hope for preventing the legislation from becoming law is a veto by President Bush.
Opponents of new hate crimes legislation do not have a veto commitment from Bush yet, but they are seeking one, Chambers said.
Chambers said even some friends of Exodus in Congress are having a difficult time voting against the measure.
"They don't want to make it sound like they are voting for violence," he said.
"The tide is against us," Chambers said. "I believe that this is a great opportunity for us to share the truth ... about freedom, the truth about this bill and really to reinforce the fact that hate crimes legislation is unnecessary -- for one reason, the FBI uniform crime report has shown that bias-motivated crimes are on the decrease. Crimes against those who are gay, or who are perceived to be gay, have decreased over the last several years. So it seems like in a free and tolerant society where Americans are beginning to learn to treat their neighbor like they'd like to be treated, we're seeing a decrease in some of these crimes. And that's a good thing."
The bills would authorize the U.S. attorney general to provide assistance to state and local officials in the investigation and prosecution of hate crimes, as well as expand the categories to include "sexual orientation" and "gender identity," among others. The legislation says a hate crime is one "motivated by prejudice based on the actual or perceived race, color, religion, national origin, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, or disability of the victim, or is a violation of the state, local, or tribal hate crime laws."
"Sexual orientation" includes homosexuality. "Gender identity" is a "person's innate sense of gender," which may be different than his sex, according to the website of the Human Rights Campaign, which describes itself as the country's largest "lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender" political organization. Transgender is an umbrella term for "people who live all or substantial portions of their lives expressing an innate sense of gender other than their birth sex," according to HRC. The transgender category includes transsexuals and cross-dressers.
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Disney opens doors to same-sex ceremonies
Baptist Press
April 10, 2007
Walt Disney Parks & Resorts announced April 6 it now will allow homosexual couples to exchange vows in its public wedding spots that previously were reserved for people with valid marriage licenses.
"Bottom line, our business is all about hospitality," Donn Walker, a spokesman for Disney, told the Orlando Sentinel. "Our commitment at Disney is to welcome all guests in an inclusive environment and to make them feel respected. We think this is consistent with that long-standing policy."
Disney hosts about 1,500 weddings each year, mostly through its Fairy Tale Wedding packages that include a ceremony at one of the parks' marriage pavilions, Disney costumed characters at the reception and a ride in a horse-drawn, glass-enclosed carriage through the Disney property. Such packages can cost tens of thousands of dollars, The Washington Post reported.
"I think for years, Disney has reflected the values of America," Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, said. "Now, I think it could be argued they are trying to shape those values in a very radical way."
Walker told the Sentinel that Disney's policy change was not the result of a campaign by homosexual activists but was spurred by one homosexual couple's request to purchase a wedding package.
"At the end of the day, they're in business to make money," Steve Smith, communications pastor at First Baptist Church in Orlando, told the Sentinel. "This is an untapped market for them, obviously. I'm not entirely surprised that Disney would make a fiduciary decision over a moral one."
With the $28,000 average cost of a Disney wedding, just one homosexual ceremony a week would earn Disney another $1.5 million a year, Bob Witeck of a Washington-based public relations firm catering to homosexuals told the Sentinel.
"It's a savvy business decision," Witeck said.
Because "gay marriage" is not legal in Florida and California, the homosexual events won't be marriage ceremonies but will be commitment ceremonies.
Disney has been considered a pioneer in the push to accept homosexuality in America, leading to an eight-year boycott by the Southern Baptist Convention that ended in 2005. The company began offering partner benefits to employees in 1996 and it has allowed thousands of homosexual tourists to mark Gay Days at its theme parks each spring.
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San Francisco asks Calif. high court to legalize 'gay marriage'
Michael Foust
April 9, 2007
The justices will hear oral arguments later this year or early next year in the case, which could have a significant impact on the rest of the country if marriage is redefined in the nation's most populous state. A California appeals court ruled against "gay marriage" last October.
At issue is a California law passed by voters in 2000 that protects the natural, traditional definition of marriage. Known as Proposition 22, it passed with 61 percent of the vote. The state also has other laws on the books that define marriage as between a man and a woman.
"The marriage exclusion tells lesbians and gay men that they are less worthy than child abusers, or sex offenders, or convicts in prison for murder," the city's attorneys argued in a 98-page legal brief, according to The San Francisco Chronicle. "Because after all, those people do have the right to get married."
Separate legal briefs were filed by a coalition of "gay marriage" advocates, including Lambda Legal, the American Civil Liberties Union and the National Center for Lesbian Rights.
California already recognizes same-sex domestic partnerships, which grant homosexual couples the legal benefits of marriage. The advocacy groups, though, say the law isn't enough.
"We are hopeful that the California Supreme Court will recognize that same-sex couples form committed relationships just like straight couples and shouldn't be barred from the dignity and universal recognition that comes with marriage," ACLU attorney Alex Cleghorn said in a statement. "While domestic partnerships provide families with some legal protections, the marriage ban is a painful reminder that same-sex relationships are considered unworthy of marriage."
Several pro-family groups also are involved in the case. Among those is Liberty Counsel, which is representing Campaign for California Families in asking the high court to uphold the current marriage law.
"The city's argument that marriage discriminates against homosexual relationships," Liberty Counsel President Mathew Staver said in a statement, "misunderstands the purpose of marriage which is to promote stable relationships between men and women, which is the only union where national procreation can occur. It also misunderstands the importance of gender in families. Gender makes a significant difference in the well being of children.
"The city isn't arguing for a minor change in marriage, but for a deconstruction of the institution of marriage. The essence of marriage rooted in our history has always been union of one man and one woman. We have never allowed, for good reason, a myriad of diverse human relationships united under the banner of marriage."
In fact, two state courts last year said procreation and childrearing could be used as legitimate reasons not to legalize "gay marriage." Although the decisions out of New York and Washington aren't binding on California, they nonetheless could have some influence, as courts often read the opinions of other courts.
Washington Supreme Court Justice Barbara A. Madsen, writing for the majority, said the state legislature "was entitled to believe that limiting marriage to opposite-sex couples furthers procreation, [which is] essential to survival of the human race, and furthers the well-being of children by encouraging families where children are reared in homes headed by the children's biological parents."
California has no constitutional marriage amendment. Although one could be placed on the ballot through the petition process, a division among conservatives has prevented any proposed amendment from getting off the ground. The disagreement has focused on how strongly an amendment should be worded.
Massachusetts remains the only state to recognize "gay marriage," although a marriage decision from Maryland's highest court is expected any week.
MASS. 'MARRIAGES' RECORDED -- Massachusetts Democratic Gov. Deval Patrick April 3 ordered state officials to record the marriage licenses of 26 out-of-state homosexual couples that had been blocked by his predecessor, Republican Gov. Mitt Romney.
Romney prevented the licenses from being recorded in the registry of vital records and statistics because, he said, state law prevented any marriage license from being issued to an out-of-state couple if the couple's home state wouldn't recognize it. A state high court subsequently supported Romney's position, although the 26 licenses were issued in May 2004, before the court ruled.
"It's a simple gesture to include the information on the register," Patrick said, according to the Associated Press. "Keeping it out was the gimmick."
But Kris Mineau, president of the Massachusetts Family Institute, disagreed.
"Governor Patrick is placing his personal preference above the law, and that can never be justified especially as the state's highest constitutional officer," Mineau said in a statement.
Despite Patrick's order, the licenses won't be recognized outside of Massachusetts. The state high courts issued a 6-1 decision early last year saying that a 1913 law prevents out-of-state homosexual couples from acquiring a license unless it would be recognized in the couple's home state.
(Michael Foust is associate editor of Baptist Press in Nashville, Tenn.)
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