Having seen part of this app at settingcaptivesfree.com ,
my view is that if it does work, OK, all for the good, but
the POV expressed is naive and not exactly intellectually
sophisticated. Of course, for some people all it takes is
knowledge that something works if you have faith in it,
and maybe that is all that they need. The app could hardly
make much difference in policy debates.
 
Regardless, the homosexuals are having a hissy fit about this
and are seeking to intimidate Apple and Google. Best guess
is that Apple and Google will cave without a second thought.
 
I wish this was not the case but would not bet one dime
on some other outcome if someone gave me 1,000,000 to 1 odds.
 
Billy
 
-------------------------------------------------------
 
 
 
Gay groups: Google Plus, iTunes must censor Christian smartphone app to 
cure  homosexuality
 
by _Thaddeus Baklinski_ (http://www.lifesitenews.com/author/tbaklinski/)  
 
    *   Fri Jun 14, 2013



 
June 14, 2013 (_LifeSiteNews.com_ (http://lifesitenews.com/) ) - Homosexual 
lobby groups  are outraged at Google for having _an app that claims to be 
able to cure unwanted same-sex  attraction in 60 days_ 
(https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.suchet.scf.ui&hl=en) , 
available at its Google 
Play online store. 
The self-help app is from the organization called _Setting Captives Free_ 
(http://www.settingcaptivesfree.com/) , which  produces a series of 
interactive courses that deal with addictive behaviors  including sexual 
impurity, 
overeating, substance abuse, gambling, and  smoking. 
The group claims to have helped over half-a-million people overcome 
unwanted  habits. 
The contentious app is called Door of Hope. "You have arrived at the Door 
of  Hope, the 60-day interactive course that will teach you to enjoy a 
newfound  relationship with the Lord and how to find freedom from 
homosexuality. 
It is  possible, and you can learn how," the brief description of the app 
states. 
PinkNews reported that a homosexual group calling itself Gaylesta (The 
LGBTQ  Psychotherapist Association of the Greater San Francisco Bay Area) sent 
a 
 statement to Google condemning the idea of homosexual reparative therapy 
and  calling on Google to pull the app. 
The group's statement reads, “Gaylesta has been outspoken and active in  
exposing the dangers of so called ‘reparative therapy.’ Homosexuality is not 
a  condition or disorder that requires treatment. Striving to treat what is 
not a  disorder is not therapy, it is professionalized homophobia. It is 
dangerous, and  it is a threat to all LGBTQ people," it states. 
"Individuals who have undergone these treatments often have a significantly 
 larger chance of becoming self destructive and suicidal," the statement  
continues. "It is unconscionable to think that a smartphone application could 
be  made available to the general public to help ‘treat’ homosexuality. 
This app  poses a serious public health risk, putting the lives of 
unsuspecting people,  including minors, at risk of harm, by telling them that 
their 
innate sexual  orientation is wrong and needs to be changed. We ask that all 
smartphone  application stores (including Google Play and iTunes) remove these 
applications  from their stores immediately and that they further make it a 
policy to disallow  such applications from being available in the future.” 
Click "like" if you want to _defend  true marriage._ 
(http://www.facebook.com/pages/We-can-defend-marriage/283510724992776)   

The homosexual activist group All Out also condemned the app and started a  
petition demanding that Google remove it from their store. 
Andre Banks, executive director of All Out said it was "ridiculous" that  
Google has made an app available that can cause "terrible harm to lesbian, 
gay,  bi, and trans people, or anyone forced to try to change who they are or 
who they  love." 
“Major health associations including the American Psychiatric Association 
and  the Pan-American Health Organization have condemned so-called gay ‘cures’
 as  dangerous to people’s’ health,” Banks said according to PinkNews. 
“It is absolutely ridiculous we still have to have this conversation in 
2013.  Gay people have always been part of the human experience and they always 
will.  There is not a cure for love, because love is not a disease,” Banks  
concluded. 
However, the former president of the APA is on record for saying that  the 
organization's condemnation of gay ‘cures’ was due to the _APA  having been 
taken over by “ultraliberals” beholden to the “gay rights  movement,”_ 
(http://(http//www.lifesitenews.com/news/former-president-of-apa-says-organizat
ion-controlled-by-gay-rights-movement/)  who refused to allow an open 
debate on reparative therapy for  homosexuality. 
Dr. Nicholas Cummings, who himself introduced the motion to declassify  
homosexuality as a mental illness in 1975, was president of the APA from 1979 
to  1980. 
He said the APA “started changing pretty drastically by the late 1980s." 
“By the mid 1990s, the Leona Tyler Principle [which required that all 
public  positions of the APA be supported by scientific evidence] was 
absolutely  
forgotten, that political stances seemed to override any scientific 
results,"  said Cummings. "Cherry-picking results became the mode. The gay 
rights 
movement  sort of captured the APA.” 
Apple has _reportedly_ 
(http://www.techdigest.tv/2013/05/apple_pull_gay.html)  already  pulled the 
Setting Captives Free app from its App Store for 
iPhone and iPad. 
This marks the third time that Apple has pulled an app because it promoted 
a  traditional Christian view of homosexuality. 
Two years ago _Apple  banned an app created by the international Christian 
ex-gay ministry Exodus  International_ 
(http://www.lifesitenews.com/news/apple-pulls-ex-gay-app-after-complaints-from-gay-activists/)
 . The app provided 
a gateway to the ministry’s news, blog,  podcasts, and other social 
networking and resource materials and was originally  given a 4+ rating by 
Apple, 
meaning that it was found to contain no  objectionable content. Exodus 
International said that the app was not aimed at  “curing” homosexuality, as 
was 
claimed by its critics. 
In November, 2010, Apple pulled an app created for the Manhattan 
Declaration,  a pro-life and pro-family document signed by nearly 500,000 
people. The 
app was  attacked because it opposed same-sex “marriage.” 
More info about the Setting Captives Free courses is available here: 
_http://www.http://www.<WBR>setting_ (http://www.settingcaptivesfree.com/) .

-- 
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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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