Enough of this nonsense. Exactly why the "Religious Right" cannot get its  
act together
to effectively oppose homosexuals is no problem to diagnose. Put 100 % of  
the burden
on "traditional values" for the sake of tradition, and the only thing  
beyond that is the
testimony of the Bible on the issue, and very poorly understood, at  that. 
Clearly, the
Religious Right, when it comes to homosexuality, is ridiculously  
incompetent.
 
Maybe even more incompetent than Big Business in this area. As smart as 
business people can be when the subject is making  money is how  stupid
the business community is when the issue is homosexuality.
 
OK. I will have to take care of this on my own. Stay tuned.
Billy
 
--------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
 
 
Baptist Press
 
They know where you work: 'gay marriage' supporters  target employers, 
employees 

Posted on Jun 7, 2011 | by Megan Basham  
WASHINGTON (BP)--Peter Vidmar seemed like the perfect choice to serve as 
the  Chief of Mission for next year's Olympics in London. A corporate 
motivational  speaker and former Olympic champion, Vidmar since 2008 has been 
chairman of USA  Gymnastics. Yet while he was offered and accepted the post, 
come 
summer 2012,  Vidmar will not be the United States Chief of Mission. 

Why? Because in  2008 he donated $2,000 to support California's Proposition 
8, the voter-approved  legislation that defines marriage as between one man 
and one woman.  

Vidmar's case was a controversy that more sputtered than erupted. On  April 
29, the U.S. Olympic Committee (USOC) announced that it had selected  
Vidmar as Chief of Mission. Over the following few days a handful of gay  
websites complained, citing Vidmar's background as an advocate for traditional  
marriage and his membership in the Mormon church. Then on May 5 the Chicago  
Tribune posted an item on its sports blog, Globetrotting, in which only one  
athlete, figure skater Johnny Weir, said he opposed Vidmar's appointment. In 
the  same article Vidmar assured columnist Philip Hersch he would serve and 
support  all the Olympians regardless of their sexuality, and the CEO of the 
USOC, Scott  Blackmun, reaffirmed the committee's choice, saying the USOC 
respected Vidmar's  right to express his religious convictions. 

The next day, on May 6,  Vidmar announced he was resigning so his presence 
would not become a distraction  to the upcoming games and the performances 
of the athletes. 

Others have  reacted differently to homosexual protests. When University of 
Michigan law  students opposed Republican Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio as this 
year's commencement  speaker on the grounds that he "vocally and actively 
supports denying equal  rights to gays and lesbians," the university held 
firm. Except for a group of  students staging a silent walkout, Portman's 
graduation speech came off without  a hitch. 

Likewise, some University of South Carolina students objected  to the 
honorary degree their school was conferring on the president of the  Southern 
Baptist Convention, Bryant Wright, and called him an "advocate for  hate." 
Wright attended the ceremony, collected his diploma, and the event went  on. 
But 
Portman and Wright do not have to depend on corporate invitations for  
their daily bread. We'll watch to see what happens to Vidmar's bookings and  
career, now that he is on the radar of homosexual activist groups.  

Recent events surrounding law firm King and Spalding's decision to  renege 
on its contract to defend the Defense of Marriage Act and drop the United  
States House of Representatives as a client suggest that Vidmar might have a  
hard time. 

One day after King and Spalding withdrew from the case, The  Weekly 
Standard obtained an internal email from the Human Rights Campaign (HRC),  a 
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered (LGBT) activist group that lobbies  
for 
"same-sex marriage." The email revealed that the organization privately  
contacted King and Spalding clients to inform them of the firm's "wrongheaded  
decision" to represent the House. 

Unapologetic, HRC spokesman Fred Sainz  confirmed to The Washington Post 
that the group did indeed contact some of King  and Spalding's Fortune 500 
clientele so they could, in turn, bring pressure to  bear against the 
Atlanta-based firm. Though Sainz would not disclose which  clients his group 
contacted, he did say, "We are an advocacy firm that is  dedicated to improving 
the 
lives of gays and lesbians. It is incumbent on us to  launch a full-throated 
educational campaign so firms know that these kinds of  engagements will 
reflect on the way [their] clients and law school recruits  think of [them]," 
adding, "We did all of this, and we're proud to have done it."  

Maggie Gallagher, founder of the National Organization for Marriage,  says 
this kind of professional intimidation is the same-sex lobby's new modus  
operandi for furthering its agenda. "Rather than try to win over voters, they  
threaten to hurt your business and go to clients and cause a fuss. This 
isn't  confirmed yet, but according to the gay blogs, they succeeded in getting 
 Coca-Cola to pressure King and Spalding," she says. To date, the soft 
drink  giant will neither confirm nor deny that it threatened to take its legal 
 
business elsewhere if the firm did not drop DOMA, but a Coca-Cola spokesman 
did  point out that the company has a long history of support for  
"diversity."

Great as the legal implications of the HRC getting a major  law firm to 
drop a case it finds objectionable are, perhaps even more  significant is the 
case of Scott Eckern, former artistic director and chief  operating officer 
of Sacramento's California Music Theatre. After some  homosexual theater 
professionals noticed his name on the website  antigayblacklist.com that listed 
people who contributed money to support  Proposition 8, they organized a 
boycott. 

Marc Shaiman, the  Tony-award-winning composer of Hairspray, and Jeff 
Whitty, the  Tony-award-winning playwright of Avenue Q, said they would not 
allow 
the theater  to perform any of their future works while Eckern was employed 
there. Homosexual  groups urged Sacramento theatergoers not to patronize 
the venue, which is the  largest nonprofit arts organization in the state and 
the oldest professional  performing arts company in Sacramento. News reports 
included some of Eckern's  colleagues expressing shock, saying that until 
the incident they had no idea of  his beliefs concerning "gay marriage."

"I am disappointed that my  personal convictions have cost me the 
opportunity to do what I love the most,"  Eckern, who had been employed with 
the 
theater for 23 years, said in a prepared  statement. Before resigning, he 
publicly donated $1,000 -- the same amount he  had given to support Prop 8 -- 
to 
HRC. 

What differentiates the  activities of HRC from interest-group boycotts of 
the past is that it isn't the  platform or practice of the companies 
themselves they object to, but the  constitutionally protected political 
expression 
of the companies' employees,  volunteers and clients. Religious freedom is 
at stake. Unlike, say, parent  groups boycotting Abercrombie and Fitch for 
its sexually charged advertising,  the USOC, King and Spalding, and 
California Music Theatre didn't take a stand on  the definition of marriage. To 
the 
extent that the three express any corporate  opinion regarding homosexuality, 
it is positive.

Jennifer Roback Morse,  president of the traditional marriage advocacy 
group The Ruth Institute, says  the ramifications of tactics like HRC's are 
enormous, with homosexual activists  essentially saying they expect businesses 
to police the political beliefs and  political activities of their employees 
and volunteers or face severe  retribution. 

But "gay marriage" has been defeated in every state where  it has appeared 
on the ballot. This would seem to indicate a serious disconnect  between the 
actual power of homosexual groups and their perceived power in the  
business community. Gallagher says there's an easy explanation for the  
discrepancy 
-- the work of major media. 

"These elite networks of power  use the echo chamber of the media to exact 
a price and punish those who disagree  with them," said Gallagher. As an 
example, she offers Doug Manchester, a hotel  developer in San Diego who 
donated money to support Prop 8. "[Gay groups]  organized a protest in front of 
his hotel -- no big deal, about 25 guys in red  shirts. But you get 25 guys in 
red shirts and The New York Times publishes a  major story on it and the 
echo chamber picks it up from there."  

Gallagher says that while the reality is that HRC's bark is worse than  its 
bite, "most regular people don't want to get bitten." Morse echoes her  
sentiments, saying that even though there's little evidence the homosexual 
lobby  has a significant impact on customer behavior, when they begin to drum 
up 
 negative coverage, "they all [the companies] completely fold. All of them. 
 Including people who ought to know better." 

Once a company gives in to  the demands of groups like HRC, says Morse, it 
will only earn itself more  reprisals. She believes that with the corporate 
world increasingly doing what  voters would not -- bowing to activists' 
demands that "same-sex marriage" be  treated as a civil right -- how the 
Christian business community reacts to the  pressure will be especially 
important. 

"It is a fact that we sometimes  have to pay a price for the sake of the 
Gospel," Morse said.
--30--
Megan  Basham is a writer for World News Service, where this story first  
appeared.

-- 
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