Yesterday, the anti-lgbt hate group Family Research Council exploited the alleged rape of a Maryland high school student in order to smear transgender children. Now the organization is attempting to play a pathetic form of defense for the offending post:
On the risk of sounding egotistical, the "handful of critics" FRC alluded to may have been just little ole me. For one thing, I published a post last night calling out the group for the same reason it cites in the above supposed clarification. For another thing, a quick investigation by myself failed to find any other blog or news source who called out FRC.
The organization's attempt to clarify its post is simply pathetic. Notice how FRC alters its description of the incident.
FRC yesterday:
Headlines about school bathrooms have become pretty commonplace over the last year, but there was nothing common about what happened in Rockville, Maryland. In a horrifying story that's rocking the nation, a young 14-year-old girl was walking down the hallway when two older students in her class allegedly grabbed her, dragged her into the boys' bathroom, and took turns raping her.
FRC today:
In a follow-up to yesterday's Update story on the Rockville High School tragedy, a handful of critics have accused FRC on social media of somehow exploiting the rape to advance our privacy agenda. In their opinion, if anyone saw the 14-year-old girl go into the boys' bathroom, they would have reported it.
What happened to the "grabbing" and "dragging?"
But the central point I was making is that FRC was extremely sleazy in not only exploiting the incident, but how it exploited the incident. And I stand by my point because of FRC's ridiculous statement today:
That's not true because we do know. The district's trans-inclusive policy played NO PART in the incident. Furthermore, there was no reason to introduce the policy into debates about the incident until the Family Research Council attempted to slip it in.
But exploitation, fear, and scapegoating never needs a reason, right FRC?
In a follow-up to yesterday's Update story on the Rockville High School tragedy, a handful of critics have accused FRC on social media of somehow exploiting the rape to advance our privacy agenda. In their opinion, if anyone saw the 14-year-old girl go into the boys' bathroom, they would have reported it. However, one of the defense attorneys told Fox News's Bret Baier last night, "This is a bathroom in the middle of the day, where it doesn't appear that she was screaming or that anybody heard anything going on. And there were other kids that apparently saw her going in..." We may never know what role the district's transgender bathroom policy played in this horrible incident. But we do know one thing: it's just one more obstacle to ensuring the safety of students like this one.
On the risk of sounding egotistical, the "handful of critics" FRC alluded to may have been just little ole me. For one thing, I published a post last night calling out the group for the same reason it cites in the above supposed clarification. For another thing, a quick investigation by myself failed to find any other blog or news source who called out FRC.
The organization's attempt to clarify its post is simply pathetic. Notice how FRC alters its description of the incident.
FRC yesterday:
Headlines about school bathrooms have become pretty commonplace over the last year, but there was nothing common about what happened in Rockville, Maryland. In a horrifying story that's rocking the nation, a young 14-year-old girl was walking down the hallway when two older students in her class allegedly grabbed her, dragged her into the boys' bathroom, and took turns raping her.
FRC today:
In a follow-up to yesterday's Update story on the Rockville High School tragedy, a handful of critics have accused FRC on social media of somehow exploiting the rape to advance our privacy agenda. In their opinion, if anyone saw the 14-year-old girl go into the boys' bathroom, they would have reported it.
What happened to the "grabbing" and "dragging?"
But the central point I was making is that FRC was extremely sleazy in not only exploiting the incident, but how it exploited the incident. And I stand by my point because of FRC's ridiculous statement today:
We may never know what role the district's transgender bathroom policy played in this horrible incident. But we do know one thing: it's just one more obstacle to ensuring the safety of students like this one.
That's not true because we do know. The district's trans-inclusive policy played NO PART in the incident. Furthermore, there was no reason to introduce the policy into debates about the incident until the Family Research Council attempted to slip it in.
But exploitation, fear, and scapegoating never needs a reason, right FRC?
Keep doing what you are doing.
ReplyDeleteGood job.
Thank you, Damien ;p
ReplyDeleteIt's amazing to see these organizations continue to "fight" against something they can't hope to win against. They must know and understand that and yet they refuse to shut up.
ReplyDelete