Davis: PFOX, Theft, and Tolerance
I had a UPS package stolen off my building’s doorstep a few years ago. Once I got over my annoyance with the UPS guy for leaving it essentially out in the open in the middle of a city block, I had to start laughing.
What the thief or thieves had gotten away with were early versions of some books a friend had asked me to review: Three Buddhist manuscripts.
The mental image of the thieves – for some reason I always pictured three hardened criminals, but in sort of a Bowery Boys style – excitedly ripping open their sudden, ill-gotten bounty only to find page upon closely printed page on the futility of desire kept me giggling for days.
Every now and then I still wonder if one of the Bowery Boys actually picked up the manuscripts and started reading, and if he was at all changed as a result.
I bring it up because an intriguing press release made its way to my in-box today.
PFOX, or “Parents and Friends of ExGays and Gays” has won a case in the District of Columbia’s Superior Court. PFOX sued the National Education Association for “failing to protect ex-gays” in its anti-discrimination policies.
The ruling is that “former homosexuals” must be treated as a sexual orientation under the District’s non-discrimination laws.
In other words, ex-gays are now in the same protected category as gays, lesbians, bisexuals, and the transgendered, at least in the District.
While I certainly don’t think any group should be singled out for discrimination, the language PFOX is using about the case is a little maddening.
Their case, essentially, is that suppressing your natural sexual orientation is in itself an orientation.
If a straight man becomes a monk and takes a vow of celibacy, does he become a new orientation called ex-straight?
Regina Griggs, the executive director of PFOX, claimed, in regard to the case, that “the ex-gay community is the most bullied and maligned group in America, yet they are not protected by sexual orientation non-discrimination laws,”
(I would link you to PFOX’s statistics to back up that statement, but for some reason I couldn’t find that page on their website.)
PFOX is now demanding that the NEA add a member from the Ex-Gay Educators Caucus to its Sexual Orientation Committee. Greg Quinlan, one of the directors of PFOX, expanded on the idea by saying “All sexual orientation laws and programs nationwide should now provide true diversity and equality by including former homosexuals.”
Isn’t that kind of like demanding that every swim team includes at least one housecat?
The language PFOX uses about themselves tests my tolerance limits as well.
Sure, there are basic dishonest rhetorical techniques such as taking totally unsupported, broad assumptions as facts, as in the section heading “Why do gays hate ex-gays so much?”
But what really got me was how much language they’ve taken directly from the LGBT community and tried to turn on its head:
“Former homosexuals are the last invisible minority group in America. The ex-gay movement ensures the safety and inclusion of former homosexuals in all realms of society, and supports the ex-gay community’s equal access to all public venues. Ex-gays and their supporters should not have to be closeted for fear of other’s negative reactions or disapproval. They do not think something is wrong with them because they decided to fulfill their heterosexual potential.”
Or:
“Why would anyone choose to leave homosexuality when there is so much discrimination against the ex-gay community?”
Or this:
“Many ex-gays are afraid to come out of the closet because of the harassment they will receive. The tactics of gay activists are to go after anyone who comes out publicly as ex-gay, force them back into the closet, and then claim that ex-gays don’t exist because there aren’t any out in public.”
I know: It’s hard to read those without whacking yourself in the head with a breadboard. I should have put in a warning.
An exact reversal, of course, doesn’t quite work. As even PFOX’s own site can’t help but acknowledge at points, someone who is gay, bi, lesbian, or trangender is dealing with an innate orientation. Someone who is ex-gay has made a conscious decision to try to suppress unwanted feelings.
But the failings in logic are for another time. I don’t need any fish out of that particular barrel right now.
And I certainly don’t mean to suggest that any group should be singled out for discrimination. If members of PFOX have been bullied or harassed, that’s terrible. It shouldn’t happen.
(That said, reading PFOX’s own site suggests to me that they don’t quite get what discrimination is. Freedom of expression is a wonderful thing worth protecting, but it doesn’t mean that you get to say whatever you want and then nobody ever takes issue with it.)
What interests me about the PFOX site – and what made me think about my thieves and their possible Buddhist conversion – is that they’ve appropriated enough of our language to paint themselves into a corner.
In using our language to demand tolerance, they’ve made the key tactical error of coming out in support of tolerance.
Language like this shows up throughout:
“Gay activists cannot claim sympathy as victims when they victimize their own. We should all be tolerant of each other regardless of our sexual orientation.”
In addition to acknowledging that people in the ex-gay movement are people who are, um, gay, their stolen language says, over and over, that no one can know someone else’s heart and mind, and that’s why we have to respect and accept a wide range of human variation and experience.
Like my doorstep thieves, I can’t help but wonder if they’ll actually start reading what they’ve stolen and accidentally learn something.



It does not surprise me…x-tianity is built on stealing. If you were to study the gnosticism you would find that it was stolen from the pagans. Everything about Jesus was taken from pagan religions plus there is no evidence that he even existed. To many people don’t study the history…they take it for as it is and don’t bother.
As an ex-fetus I demand that right to lifers everywhere fight for my rights.
We need to embrace the ex-gays and partner with PFOX on equality legislation. Think about it – they sued for inclusion in non-discrimination laws ! They are a minority ! So are we ! All of us want equality !! Equality in housing, employment, and, yes, marriage !
This victory for PFOX is a victory for all sexual minorities !!
Whenever I think of ex-gays, I feel sorry for them. Why do they do it? For acceptance? Just to be respected by their peers and community? It’s just so very sad.
If you know an ex-gay person, tell them that you accept them for who they are and have always been: gay.
The ex-gay movement is the epitome of the self-loathing and hatred that people feel towards their own homosexuality (and it explains why so many people attempt/commit suicide during the ex-gay therapy). If only we could give more support to those considering this heinous act, maybe they’d realize there was nothing wrong with them in the first place.
Imitation is the highest form of flattery
I think this is on the verge of plagiarism, using our own language to support themselves. It is truly amazing that they are calling for tolerance and acceptance for themselves yet deny the same for those who actually gave them birth. Yes, gave them birth because if they weren’t gay to begin with, then they could not end up as ex-gay.
Perhaps they should check into the definition of tolerance and then take that as a lesson from Webster!
May Goddess Bless Those Who Learn and Grow!
Blessed Be,
Rev. Draigh Lunara
Wait a minute. They have married these so called ex-gays to straight people and also some ex-gay men to some ex-gay women in the past and present. Why then now call them “still gay but ex-gay”? They want to have their cake and eat it too.
In filing this lawsuit, PFOX is admitting there is no such thing as a gay-person-turned-straight. They are admitting the people they “help” are not actually straight, but something else entirely. I guess we should be thanking PFOX for exposing the long-held lie that gay people can become straight.
These arguements seem to only offer that the ex-gay movement FAILS on another level. Thought the goal was to correct a flaw to return them hetersexuality. But all they are is Ex-gay? I thought they became str8. Who’s discriminating here? Why can’t people just be happy with who they are?
“Gay activists cannot claim sympathy as victims when they victimize their own. We should all be tolerant of each other regardless of our sexual orientation.”
So, they are gay.
No, wait, they’re “ex-gay”, so they’re straight.
And if they’re straight, why do they need protection against discrimination? I mean, they had a few indiscretions with the same sex, but they are really straight because we’re all really straight with just some homosexual tendencies.
Ok, now I’m just confusing myself. Can’t we all just get along?
I wonder members of PFOX ever heard someone call them a “ex-fag” or have they heard anyone around them say “That’s so ex-gay”
The “ex-gays” are and can be a useful tool of the antigays to drag down any and all efforts to ban anti-GLBT discrimination while screaming that “ex-gays” are excluded. To me the “ex-gays” often walk hand in hand with the antigays and often nothing but a “Trojan horse” so to speak to sneak in the antigays. By using “anti-ex gay discrimination” language to hide behind in their efforts to kill antigay discrimination laws, etc. Almost akin many times to “wolves in “sheep’s clothing”.
And let’s see for just how many years those “ex-gays” who don’t try to kill antigay discrimination bans and think they are no longer gay manage to delude and kid themselves before they realize they can’t maintain forever their false facade of “ex-gay” or of “straight”.
LOL
Oh those poor ex-gays, so discriminated against!
One of the things people outside the LGBT community are confused about is that the language that protects people from sexual orientation discrimination protects everyone whether they are gay, lesbian , bi, straight or asexual (or just perceived to be such).
I may be wrong or confusing two stories, but wasn’t the positive part of the ruling here just that. That whatever category these people fall into they are protected from orientation-based discrimination as such. My understanding is that the judge clearly stated that the remainder of their case was meritless, and that they did not have to be included in anything.
As to their language, the entire right wing from Christians to politicians have been trying to paint themselves as oppressed minorities for some time now. While I am not anti-religion (as some on here definitely are), I have long found it jarring to be in some conservative Bible-belt environment and listen to them portray themselves as oppressed by the world. I think outsiders often fail to appreciate that many of these people really feel they are targeted for oppression.
Ms. Ali Davis; re: PFOX
LOL! Once again, right on Ms. Davis! Your witty commentaries on their (our) language is so very funny, it’s almost sad.
Respectfully