November 20th, 2009
 

365Gay Agenda Blog

Daigle: Those Who Can, Teach

By Cody Daigle, The Times of Acadiana 06.30.2009 1:35pm EDT

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The Family Research Council has launched a website aimed at removing Kevin Jennings from his appointment as head of the Office of Safe and Drug Free Schools at the Department of Education.

You can check it out here: www.stopjennings.org.

I don’t have to tell you, it’s pretty vicious.

The Family Research Council’s beef with Jennings has a little something to do with (wait for it…) his homosexuality. Jennings is the founder of GLSEN – The Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network, an organization for students, parents and teachers that works to make school environments safer for LGBT students. (GSLEN started the Day of Silence, which has been embraced by schools across the country.)

Here’s FRC’s Pete Sprigg on why Jennings should be ousted:

“Jennings and the organization he founded have been the leaders in promoting a pro-homosexual agenda in America’s schools, beginning in kindergarten. His positions are extreme and narrow-minded, his rhetoric harsh and hate-filled, and his qualifications and ethical standards questionable at best.”

Their campaign goes on to pull out-of-context quotes from Jennings’ memoir, “Mama’s Boy, Preacher’s Son,” to paint him as a drug-using, God-hating, radical queer aiming to turn everyone on the planet gay before Labor Day. (For a nice compare-contrast of the quotes, check out Good As You’s analysis here.

If there’s one line of attack in anti-gay rhetoric that I hate the most, it’s the line that paints gay men and women as a threat to children – in the classroom, in the home, on the street, wherever the homophobes imagine we will be. It’s the line that gets hauled anytime the opposition wants to land a particularly low blow, one that reaches past logic and factual record into a purely emotional, purely personal place.

Threaten the safety of children, and you get a lot of people’s attention.

What I find particularly abhorrent about the FRC attack on Jennings is the idea that, by virtue of his homosexuality, he is unfit to know what’s best for children. Forget that his life’s work has been devoted to the safety of children, to the creation of safe spaces for all students, to the prevention of bullying.

Forget all of that. He’s gay. Which means he’s a danger.

I don’t think we’ve done the best job fighting this particular line of rhetoric. We seem to get wrapped up pretty quickly in other, sexier issues like DADT and marriage equality. And while those are absolutely important issues to deal with, this notion – with all its insidious tentacled reach among those in the Religious Right – demands our attention, demands our anger, demands our action.

Because that notion strikes at the core of what the anti-gay crowd believes about us, what they hang their attacks on: we are fundamentally the opposite of Good.

Good, to them, is heterosexuality. And so for us to be something other than heterosexual means we opt out of all the other Goods as well (this is, of course, a radically reductive view of human nature, but the Religious Right isn’t so good with shades of grey). If we’re gay we must, by extension, reject God, reject Family, reject Morality, reject the Welfare of Children – all of the capital letter Goods that make up Traditional Family Values.

We know the truth of the matter: that those values exist in our lives as well. Most of us practice those values every day and some of us practice those values in front of a classroom of students, like Jennings.

No amount of legislation will reduce the power of that rhetoric in the minds of those who know little to nothing about the reality of our lives. Marriage equality tomorrow will not make this FRC attack on Jennings less successful to their target audience.

What will reduce the power of the rhetoric? An embrace of this current historical moment as a teachable moment.

Because it is. Our lives – our simple, boring, sometimes complicated and average lives – are now, more than ever, our greatest asset in fighting the rhetoric of the FRC. We need to be more than activists. We need to be teachers.

Success legislatively in pursuit of equality is tempered by the problem of social acceptance. It’s an ugly fact, but a fact nonetheless. And we can’t expect the social tides to change simply because the legal ones do. So with one eye on activism, we should train the other on individual advocacy – being out, taking the time to correct someone who uses a gay slur in public, start a blog (seriously, go start one. Tell your story. What could it hurt?), demonstrate in every small way the reality of gay men and women – we can be gay and moral, we can be gay and ethical, we can be gay and good role models, we can be gay and be a good teacher.

You can’t learn what you aren’t taught. So, teachers we must become.


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  • Kevin Little Said: June 30th, 2009 at 7:52 pm
    • I have faith that the “Christian” monsters behind such hate organizations as the FRC will get their divine, karmic comeuppance in the worst way. They claim to follow Jesus, yet they are the very type of self-righteous, judgmental, scripture-thumping hypocrites Jesus condemned loudly and often.

  • Dermot Said: June 30th, 2009 at 7:39 pm
    • I stopped caring about anything the FRC had to say long ago, because any notion of its integrity or credibility is beyond farcical. They are another capitalized world, Homophobia. And categorized as such on Wikipedia.

  • Lenworth Said: June 30th, 2009 at 7:24 pm
    • Deep, teachers we must become. I know other gays who get frustrated when somone hetero asks them a question about there sexuality, or there gayness.

      I know it can be a lil annoying, but usually if somones asking a question, its because they are just innocently trying to learn. Inform your straight friends about us, they love it whether they act like it or not.

  • R & R Said: June 30th, 2009 at 6:35 pm
    • I wonder if the ACLU could find something on their website that might open them up to a nice large law suit? Wouldn’t that be nice.

  • Wayne Madden Said: June 30th, 2009 at 6:34 pm
    • Kevin Jennings has a long history of promoting understanding, respect and celebration of diversity in schools as well as the belief that all persons have a right to be who they are and live their sexuality responsibly. He has fought for schools that are safe for all students, teachers and other school community members regardless of their sexual orientation and/or the sexual orientation of family members.
      When the Family Research Council makes statements such as, “His positions are extreme and narrow-minded, his rhetoric harsh and hate-filled, and his qualifications and ethical standards questionable at best”, they know they are misrepresenting the truth. This is not new for that organization and similar organizations who oppose policies to protect LGBT students and teachers from bullying and violence on the ground that such policies encourage homosexuality. Yet, if they would do real scientific and psychological research– as well as examine the failure of so-called “reparative therapy” such as that undertaken by their brother organization, Focus on the Family– they will know that one does not choose sexual orientation anymore than one can choose race or ethnic heritage.
      Family Research Council is an immoral and dangerous organization, whose political interventions and public rhetoric place youth in danger of harassment, bullying and violence. They are not a pro-family organization, but one that seeks to restrict family rights exclusively on religious grounds– grounds that have also been rejected by the majority of Christians as well as others.
      Kevin Jennings is a man who understands students, student needs and schools. He has a good reputation for studying his positions carefully before taking a stand and backing his opinions with facts and study. This is hardly a man whose qualifications and standards are questionable.

  • cm Said: June 30th, 2009 at 5:36 pm
    • It’s time we, and “others” begin to own “morality” again, and quit giving the right this blanket claim to it. Want real danger? What about the danger that your children turn out to be bigoted uneducated rednecks who are behind the times. There’s a threat to children.

  • dr. bob Said: June 30th, 2009 at 5:07 pm
    • Being OUT AND PROUD, showing our lives, our families, creating informative shows and theatrical presentations, marches (on wash. and everywhere else) becoming very visible everywhere. Coming out of our closets and demanding respect. Wearing and parading the rainbow flag. VISIBILITY NOW. Bumper stickers, like “we are everywhere” .

  • michaelnDallas Said: June 30th, 2009 at 5:01 pm
    • I’ve been paying attention to the news for the last two years and have yet to hear one news report of a homosexual pedophile here in the Dallas/Fort Worth market. Lots of evangelical pastors, going after young girls and male coachs doing the same. disproportionately heterosexual men! Funny how we don’t hear the dangers of Evangelical men as a danger!?

  • Point of Info Said: June 30th, 2009 at 4:30 pm
    • GLSEN didn’t start Day of Silence, though it is one of their programs now.

  • Roger Ramjet Said: June 30th, 2009 at 4:17 pm
    • What will reduce the power of the rhetoric? An embrace of this current historical moment as a teachable moment?????

      PFFFBBBBBTTTTT….

      What they need is a Judicial gavel knocked upside the head.

      Never give up the fight for your rights by conceding to the demands of diminished religous whackos. You’re not going to like the results if you do.

  • LOrion Said: June 30th, 2009 at 4:12 pm
    • Oh, wonderful column Cody. Sharing everywhere. If I have said once I have said a million times, we must get out there and show them our real lives.
      Take Anthony N. and his husband Waymon H from Oakland Park FL where Anthony is on the City Council..winning his seat as a married gay man. The whole town accepts them now! They go to all city functions together!
      We need people with the $$ to keep making Real American Family ads for everywhere.. not asking for anything just showing life as it is.

  • Alex Said: June 30th, 2009 at 3:33 pm
    • I’m not entirely comfortable with the way this article is worded. To me, it sounds like we need to show them how we conform to their own narrow views of what is ‘moral’ and ‘right’ rather than work to redefine these terms and get them away from the religious wingnuts who have for too long determined who and what is moral and good in our society. There are many of us who are perfectly ‘normal’ (whatever the hell that’s supposed to mean) but what about those of us who don’t fit into such narrow confines? What about those of us who refuse to be fit into those narrow definitions? What happened to showing that it’s okay to be different?

  • Victor J Kinzer Said: June 30th, 2009 at 3:24 pm
    • You make several wonderful points, but I think there is a step farther you can take it. We live in a Representative Democracy. It is the nature of our government. The current laws on the table might not all get passed, and even if they do, they don’t automatically make gay marriage and gay adoption legal across the country. By using our lives as teaching moments and fighting to win the hearts and minds of the American populace we also further our own legislative goals because it decreases the likelihood that someone will vote against a candidate just because they support our rights. This is the most important step in winning our rights across the board.

  • Casey Cameron Said: June 30th, 2009 at 3:14 pm
    • I’m starting to like the family research council. The more they talk, the more the anti-gay cult looks stupid, the sooner we have equal rights!

  • R & R Said: June 30th, 2009 at 2:35 pm
    • Question, and a very important one: Will the Obama adminstration cave to this kind of Christian Taliban pressure?

      I know there will be those who will cry “horrors of horros” but wouldn’t it be nice if some hacker, who just happen to be gay, would trash this anti-jennings site?

 
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