From time to time, I have the opportunity to go one-on-one with religious right talking heads. When this happens, I am able to ask them certain questions that I feel the media misses.
Today, I bring you Glenn T. Stanton of Focus on the Family.
Last week, I featured a blog post from Think Progress which accused Stanton of dog whistling a study to denigrate same-sex families. Now the study said nothing about same-sex families and neither did Stanton per se. But the religious right semantics of "children do better with a mother and a father" was clear. Generally when religious right groups feature studies such as these, there are implied negative digs to same-sex family situations. In my post, I also brought up another incident in which he was rebuked by the American Anthropological Association. Needless to say, Stanton wasn't happy about that and wrote about it on his blog:
His piece was a long-winded big piece of nonsense which avoided Think Progress's accusation. I felt the need to write the following back to him:
He did not like that at all and took the time to write me back:
And for the record, I have a copy of his piece "Why Homosexuality Falls Short of the Ideal" in my files. I didn't indicate that to him in my letter but I found it interesting while he denies writing the piece, he defended the existence of "gay bowel syndrome," a term which figured heavily in the piece.
Needless to say that Stanton didn't write me back. And I really don't blame him. He debates me with archaic medical terms and pretends not to remember writing pieces that he clearly did which used junk science. It was a pitiful performance.
Stanton is the perfect face of phony religious right research.
Today, I bring you Glenn T. Stanton of Focus on the Family.
Last week, I featured a blog post from Think Progress which accused Stanton of dog whistling a study to denigrate same-sex families. Now the study said nothing about same-sex families and neither did Stanton per se. But the religious right semantics of "children do better with a mother and a father" was clear. Generally when religious right groups feature studies such as these, there are implied negative digs to same-sex family situations. In my post, I also brought up another incident in which he was rebuked by the American Anthropological Association. Needless to say, Stanton wasn't happy about that and wrote about it on his blog:
Getting falsely accused and innuendo’d by gay bloggers is nothing new, but this has been an interesting week. See here, here, and here. I wasn’t going to respond – the reaction such things deserve. But a friend at National Review Online asked me to respond, so I did.
Here’s my piece on the silly games played regarding this very serious topic.
His piece was a long-winded big piece of nonsense which avoided Think Progress's accusation. I felt the need to write the following back to him:
Oh stop it, Glenn. You weren’t falsely accused. You were called out for being inaccurate. And by the way, I noticed that you didn’t say a word about the rebuke you received from the American Anthropological Association a while back. And while I have your attention, I would like you to address something you wrote a while back called “Why Homosexuality Falls Short of the Ideal.” In that piece, you cited, via third hand, the discredited work of Paul Cameron (I’m sure you have heard of him) and claimed that gays suffer from something called “gay bowel syndrome.” Now you know that term doesn’t exist. It’s things like that which lead us to call you out. Not falsely accuse you, my friend. But call you out for the charlatan that you are.
He did not like that at all and took the time to write me back:
Not sure who I am responding to exactly since there wasn’t a clear name, but I thought you deserved a reply out of personal respect.
I was accused of being dishonest by a number of sites, starting with ThinkProgress. They got it wrong. They made the connection to ss parenting. I didn’t. I was not dishonest. I represented the study honestly and correctly….as well as the larger body of research on how family impacts the educational attainment of children.
And I fully debated the anthropological thing in multi-part exchange with an anthropologist from your fold at Box Turtle a few years ago. I don’t believe he ever proved me wrong, (he would say otherwise, I am sure) nor did he convince me that same-sex or homosexual marriage or parenting has ever been a notable part of the anthropological record of a culture. There is not good record of it. I believe the AAA ‘s statement about gay families is weak and unfounded. I address that in the exchange.
And I don’t have an article entitled “Why Homosexuality Falls Short of the Ideal” to my knowledge. If you can tell me where it published, then I can dig it up and we can talk. But I don’t find anything like that in my archive or memory. And I have never quoted Cameron and will not. How do you know I quoted him “third hand”? I would very much like to see that bread-crumb trail.
If gay bowel syndrome or GRID doesn’t exist, what are these article about:
And I don’t know what I would have written about this, but many of these studies that I found via quick search just now on google scholar indicate the things I know of the malady.
And the term is not used today, and this article from the Wash Blade explains some of the reason why:
And it is not nice to call people names….like charlatan. If you have problem with my research and/or line of reasoning, lets discuss it. But calling names is just cheap.
And of course I had to answer him back:
Oh Glenn, Glenn, Glenn,
you seem to have this need to justify yourself but when you attempt to do such, you only make it worse.
All of those citations about "gay bowel syndrome" were from the late 70s or early to mid 80s. That was before doctors realized that gay bowel syndrome had nothing to do with the bowels, nor did it only affect gay men, or did it fit the definition of a "syndrome."
And that last link you sent merely confirms what I said, particularly this sentence:
An official with the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention said LGV is not "gay bowel syndrome." The rare chlamydia strain has been around since the 1970s, and may have once been considered among the various diseases doctors loosely referred to as "gay bowel syndrome," according to Jessica Frickey, a spokesperson for the federal health agency.
But it's difficult for the CDC to know -let alone track - which diseases used to be included in "gay bowel syndrome" because the term was so informal and has since gone out of use at the CDC, Frickey said.
Now in terms of Cameron, you did cite him - third hand - in your piece "Why Homosexuality Falls Short of the Ideal." In that piece is the following passage:
HIV is the most notable infection associated with homosexual sex and other promiscuous behaviors, but it is important to realize that this is only part of the problem. Professor Thomas Schmidt, in his excellent study of homosexuality, Straight & Narrow?, explains, "Doctors who work with homosexual men are now trained to look regularly for at least 15 common afflictions apart from HIV/AIDS and we could double or triple the number by taking into account less common problems."
In that book, Straight and Narrow, Schmidt cited Paul Cameron in various places. And one more thing. Schmidt is a theologian, not a credible medical researcher.
Didn't you read his book. If you had, you would have known. Or did you read it anyway and cited the information without caring?
Basically Mr. Stanton, I called you a charlatan because I feel that you are one. You and others like yourself have built a nasty house of cards based on junk science, cherry-picked studies, and outright lies against the lgbtq community. If I were you, I would be prepared to be ready for that house to fall because it will sooner or later.
And for the record, I have a copy of his piece "Why Homosexuality Falls Short of the Ideal" in my files. I didn't indicate that to him in my letter but I found it interesting while he denies writing the piece, he defended the existence of "gay bowel syndrome," a term which figured heavily in the piece.
Needless to say that Stanton didn't write me back. And I really don't blame him. He debates me with archaic medical terms and pretends not to remember writing pieces that he clearly did which used junk science. It was a pitiful performance.
Stanton is the perfect face of phony religious right research.
10 comments:
Is this the article you are referring to? http://www.palmettofamily.org/viewarticle.asp?ID=37
"Perfect face?" Well, it's well-scrubbed, and rather podgy, but it does have the overly-groomed metrosexuality first popularized by the Castro clones . . . which standard of "perfection" can also be seen in Ken dolls (last seen out on the town surreptitiously dating G.I. Joe 'action figures.').
Yep, he's a charlatan all right.
Yes. An original edition had stanton listed as the author. As you can see, that part was eliminated in the later edition.
Keep knocking 'em down, Alvin!
Is there some way you could color or otherwise demarcate/separate your posts from those you are replying to?
I found it difficult to follow this discussion and who said what.
Thanks!
I don't understand. He's responding to you via the internet. Thus, he has to know of the internet's existence. Yet, he apparently is unaware how easy it is for you to fact-check the nonsensical things he writes. I find people like that to be very confusing.
Done, anonymous ;p
If you would, why not put his little screed up on scribd. That way we can all read it and pick it apart.
Great expose on Stanton and the bigots. Of course he won't respond, he's been appropriately called out, found wanting and now will tuck his tail between his legs and simper away.
I don't know how to put it on scribd, but by all means, feel free ;p
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