Christian Post
 
 
Southern Poverty Law Center's Hate Campaign 
Against Ex-Gays



By _Christopher  Doyle_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/author/christopher-doyle/)  , CP Guest Contributor
February 14, 2013|7:02 am
Dr. Martin Luther King once said, "Darkness cannot  drive out darkness; 
only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only  love can do that." 
The lesson Dr. King taught us when he spoke those words, was  that a righteous 
cause must be fueled by love, truth, and  justice.

The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), which claims to  be "a nonprofit 
civil rights organization dedicated to fighting hate and  bigotry, and to 
seeking justice for the most vulnerable members of society," has  been 
conducting a hate campaign for several years against former homosexual  
leaders, 
therapists, and persons with unwanted same-sex attraction (SSA).
 
The mission of SPLC's hate campaign is three-fold: 1) Character  
Assassination: spreading false and misleading information on their website and  
via 
the media about therapists who offer professional services to individuals  
with unwanted SSA; 2) Fabricate evidence and embellish the facts about the  
so-called "dangers" of sexual orientation change effort (SOCE) therapy; and 3)  
Recruit vulnerable and disgruntled clients to take legal action against  
organizations that offer assistance for those struggling with unwanted SSA in  
hopes to put them out of business.
 
The SPLC's method of character assassination is simple. Repeat a lie loud  
enough and long enough, and people will believe it. The first lie is that 
SOCE  is inherently harmful to persons with unwanted SSA. On their website, an 
article  entitled "10 Anti-Gay Myths Debunked" lists #10 Myth: "Gay people 
can choose to  leave homosexuality." 
"If people are not born gay, as anti-gay activists  claim, then it should 
be possible for individuals to abandon homosexuality. This  view is 
buttressed among religiously motivated anti-gay activists by the idea  that 
homosexual practice is a sin and humans have the free will needed to reject  
sinful 
urges . . . a number of 'ex-gay' religious ministries have sprung up in  
recent years with the aim of teaching gay people to become heterosexuals . . .  
(but) in 2009, for instance, the American Psychological Association adopted 
a  resolution, accompanied by a 138-page report, that repudiated ex-gay  
therapy." 
Let's examine just a few of the SPLC's "facts" about "ex-gay" therapy. The  
SPLC erroneously asserts that licensed mental health practitioners are  
religiously motivated and promote the idea that homosexuality is a sin. In 
fact,  the SPLC
Read more at 
_http://www.christianpost.com/news/southern-poverty-law-centers-hate-campaign-against-ex-gays-90006/#tAXkecteAMHS3pgs.99_
 
(http://www.christianpost.com/news/southern-poverty-law-centers-hate-campaign-against-ex-gays
-90006/#tAXkecteAMHS3pgs.99)  
 
is combining highly educated professional psychotherapists with religious  
ex-gay ministries, and then pronouncing that they are one in the same.  
In truth, they are not the same, and the SPLC knows that. But it is far 
more  compelling for the SPLC to repeat the lie that psychotherapists simply 
tell  clients to "pray away the gay" rather than to distinguish psychological 
services  with religious interventions. The truth is that decades of 
scientific,  peer-reviewed literature attests to that fact that homosexuality 
is 
fluid for  some individuals and that some people can and do change from SSA to 
 heterosexuality. 
To further extend their hate campaign against professional 
psychotherapists,  the SPLC provides an _interactive map_ 
(http://www.splcenter.org/conversion-therapy)  on their website of over seventy 
therapists  who offer SOCE. 
Similar to the map of gun owners that was recently published in  a New York 
newspaper, this "hate" map acts as a black list, putting  professionals 
at-risk for potential violence from those who oppose SOCE. 
Informed readers may remember that on August 15, 2012, a gun man charged  
through the doors of the Washington, D.C. Family Research Council (FRC), 
which  is listed as a "hate group" on the SPLC's website, and shot a security 
guard  after FRC defended Chick-fil-A's comments on traditional marriage. 
In a court hearing on February 6, 2013, it was revealed that in an 
interview  with the FBI after the shooting, the gunman admitted his guilt, and 
said 
he  intended to "kill as many as possible and smear the Chick-Fil-A 
sandwiches in  victims' faces, and kill the guard." The prosecutor said they 
reviewed the  family computer and found that he identified his targets from the 
SPLC's  website. 
Second in their strategy is to fabricate and embellish the so-called  
"dangers" of SOCE. In October 2011, I co-facilitated a group therapy seminar in 
 
which Samuel Wolfe, an attorney with the SPLC, registered and attended. 
During  one of the breaks, our staff casually attempted to get to know Mr. 
Wolfe, who  avoided telling us his motivation for participating. 
After the first day of the seminar, we did a little research and discovered 
 that Mr. Wolfe was indeed an employee of the SPLC. One of our staff 
members  asked Mr. Wolfe why he was attending. Mr. Wolfe claimed that he was 
doing 
 research on so-called "change therapies" and wanted to see if our seminar 
really  harmed persons with SSA. 
We politely informed Mr. Wolfe that we only allowed participants, not  
observers, to attend our healing seminars, refunded his fee, and asked him to  
leave. Last April, _an article_ 
(http://www.advocate.com/politics/commentary/2012/04/13/oped-conversion-therapy-found-me-my-first-boyfriend)
  appeared in 
"The Advocate" written by Mr. Wolfe.  Below is an excerpt: 
"As part of our investigation, I recently attended  a conversion program 
where participants used 'touch therapy,' which involves  being held like a 
baby by another man, with lights dimmed and soft music  playing. The idea is to 
receive the nurturing missed as a child, thereby  becoming more 'whole' and 
automatically shedding 'unwanted same-sex attraction.'  Tragically, some of 
the participants were teens, prodded by their parents and  communities that 
reject them as they are."


While there is no mention of my organization, the processes he describes 
are  similar to a therapeutic activity that we have individuals participate 
in,  teaching about healthy touch and bonding rather than sexualizing one's 
emotional  needs. Nothing about this program was intended to "shed" unwanted 
SSA, as Mr.  Wolfe claims. 
The final strategy used by the SPLC is to recruit vulnerable persons who  
experienced unwanted SSA and use them to put ex-gay organizations out of  
business. In late 2012, the SPLC filed a consumer fraud lawsuit against Jews  
Offering New Alternatives to Healing (JONAH) after recruiting so-called 
"ex-gay  survivors" – former clients of JONAH – who were unsuccessful in 
changing their  sexual orientation. The SPLC claims the "plaintiffs – four 
young 
men and two of  their parents – were lured into JONAH's services through 
deceptive  practices." 
This is standard practice for the SPLC, who in the past has _filed 
complaints_ 
(http://www.splcenter.org/get-informed/news/splc-files-complaint-against-illinois-social-worker-offering-ex-gay-therapy)
  against other counselors 
for simply offering  therapy to clients distressed about their unwanted 
homosexual feelings. They are  a one-hand clapping organization, and it seems 
things have to be their way or  the highway. Organizations like JONAH, who 
operate on shoestring budgets, are no  match against bullies like the SPLC, who 
has between 200-300 million in assets.  It's only a matter of time before 
the SPLC comes after other therapists like  myself (that offer SOCE), and dare 
to blow the whistle on their hateful  practices. 
What the SPLC cannot understand is that we are all free, and no amount of  
bullying will deter me from helping others pursue their dreams, whether gay 
or  straight. I personally have experienced this issue from both sides – I 
once  lived a gay life, and today, I have a wife and children and no longer 
experience  homosexual feelings. Nonetheless, I love all persons who 
experience homosexual  feelings, whether wanted or unwanted. I believe in true 
tolerance, real  diversity, and equality for all.

-- 
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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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