Posts Tagged ‘Fred Karger’

APA pulls out of Manchester meeting

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

On the heels of yesterday’s news that staunch advocate for traditional marriage and contributor to California’s Proposition 8 Papa Doug Manchester has been granted a legal separation from his wife Elizabeth ‘Betsy’ Manchester, who filed for divorce in August, we learn the American Psychological Association has cancelled its August meeting at the Manchester Grand Hyatt in San Diego.

The hotel has been under boycott, now in its second year, launched by an alliance of labor and LGBT groups, including Californians Against Hate, Equality California, Courage Campaign, Unite Here and others. Fred Karger, founder of Californians Against Hate, has estimated that the Manchester-owned property is losing a million dollars per month in bookings — a charge Manchester’s representatives limply deny.

Manchester contributed $125,000.00 in seed money to bankroll signature gathering for Prop 8, the ballot proposition that would — with massive infusions of Mormon cash and backing from a number of fanatical anti-gay religious organizations and cults — eliminate the existing right of California gay and lesbian couples to marry.

Here’s the press release from the APA:

Office of Public Affairs
American Psychological Association
(202) 336-5700

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
February 23, 2010

APA Council Votes to Move Its August Meeting Out of the Manchester Hyatt Hotel

(Washington, DC) — The Council of Representatives, the major legislative body of the American Psychological Association, will not meet at the Manchester Hyatt Hotel during the Association’s August 2010 Convention. In response to a donation to the Proposition 8 campaign by the owner of the Manchester Hyatt, Doug Manchester, a number of APA Divisions and members voiced concerns about APA’s use of the hotel during its annual meeting.

“Today’s decision allows Council to make an important statement that it stands in solidarity with the LGBT community and its allies in protest of Mr. Manchester’s political views. Members of our Council will now not be faced with having to choose between their responsibilities as members of Council and their wish to express their opposition to Mr. Manchester’s action by not entering his hotel,” said APA President Dr. Carol Goodheart.

APA is not calling for a general boycott of the Hyatt hotel but will make every effort to provide choices to members or groups who do not want to use the Hyatt hotel. Other lodging and meeting space will be available.

“It is important that we be respectful of the decisions of individuals; those who choose to stay at the Hyatt and those who do not,” said Goodheart.

In addition, APA plans to use the meeting to highlight the Association’s policy statement in support of same-sex marriage and the science that supports that position.

LDS docs heading for California sunshine

Friday, January 15th, 2010

Mormon church documents headed to Prop 8 trial?
(video: Chino Blanco at YouTube)

Over in Mormonland, they must think of the founder of Californians Against Hate as some kind of Great Gay Satan. Lock up the wives and children. Here comes Fred Karger!!

Karger was nominated recently at a popular Mormon blog in a poll for the “Non-Mormon with the biggest impact on Mormonism in 2009.” How was Karger described:

Fred Karger: suing us all the time.

(emphasis: mine)

The Mormon pollsters jacked the poll and handed the win to Comedy Central’s Stephen Colbert.

From Chino Blanco’s YouTube page:

According to Utah’s ABC4: “… some of the LDS Church’s activities could be brought up at the California federal trial on the future of gay marriage.”

“According to our sources, the San Francisco City Attorney has shown interest in and is expected to soon receive hundreds of documents about the LDS Church’s opposition to gay marriage.

“ABC 4 News is also being told that copies of these documents were sent by special courier to the City Attorney’s office and they were sent in just the last few days.

“Again, according to our sources, the San Francisco City Attorney, Dennis Herrera, requested, perhaps, as many as 1,500 copied documents about the LDS Church’s opposition to gay marriage.

The documents reportedly deal with the LDS Church’s earlier efforts to defeat gay marriage movements in other states, efforts going back a number of years.

“Herrera, coincidentally, has been admitted as co-counsel in the California federal case to over-turn the ban on gay marriage.”

(emphasis: mine)

I smell smoking gun. Sweet.

More Mormon meddling

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010

8: The Mormon Proposition, a film by Reed Cown
(video: Minority Films at YouTube)

As we Californians are aware, those Mormons sure do love to meddle in elections. The Salt Lake Tribune this morning reports that, despite the fact that Reed Cowan, the director of 8: The Mormon Proposition, scored the most votes in a recent online poll for “Mormon of the Year,” the Mormon pollsters, instead, decided to hand the award to the more palatable Senator Harry Reid.

From Peggy Fletcher Stack, writing at The Salt Lake Tribune:

The staff of a popular Mormon blog announced Monday it has chosen embattled Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid as the 2009 Mormon of the Year, even as several top Republicans called for his resignation.

During the past year, Reid was the “most visible and influential Mormon politician in the world,” Kent Larsen III, organizer of the annual conference at timesandseasons.org, said in a phone interview. “What most made Harry Reid Mormon of the Year was his overall presence in the news and issues that affect peoples lives.”

It appears the Mormons find an accused racist more palatable than, say, a gay-friendly, Emmy Award winning, documentary filmmaker and journalist like Reed Cowan.

As in previous years, the blog’s 12 staff members made the selection, though they did invite readers to offer their own opinions. This year’s contest attracted nearly 2,000 votes, Larsen said, with the top slot going to Reed Cowen, a filmmaker who documented the LDS Church’s involvement in California’s Proposition 8, which defined marriage as exclusively between a man and a woman. Fox talk show host Glenn Beck and former Utah governor and now U.S. Ambassador to China Jon Huntsman Jr. also fared well with readers.

(emphasis: mine)

The phrase “offer their own opinions” is Mormon-speak for what the rest of us call voting. Regular readers are sure to remember back in 2008, when the Salt Lake City-based Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints showed up in the Golden State with a money-wagon, fresh from a trip to Fort Knox, and offered their opinion on the existing right of gay and lesbian Californians to marry.

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Over on another Mormon blog — bycommonconsent.com, Comedy Central’s Stephen Colbert scored the honor of being the “non-Mormon with the biggest impact on Mormonism.” The founder of Californians Against Hate, Fred Karger, who had been neck and neck with — in fact the last time I checked slightly ahead — Colbert, was removed as a candidate from the amateurishly-coded online poll.

Must not upset the LDS Elders or the rest of those meddling Mormons.

NOM’s Catholic connection

Monday, December 21st, 2009

On 16 December 2009, the New York Times Magazine ran a piece on the Chairman of the National Organization for Marriage, Robert P George. The Times piece lauded George as the intellectual force behind the Manhattan Declaration, a document signed by scores of radical religious right leaders and Catholic bishops. The Manhattan Declaration was nothing less than a demand for an American theocracy that opposed both women’s and LGBT rights, including marriage equality. Unless that demand was met, the document implied civil disobedience would follow.

Two months later, at a Washington press conference to present the group’s “Manhattan Declaration,” George stepped aside to let Cardinal Rigali sum up just what made the statement, and much of George’s work, distinctive. These principles did not belong to the Christian faith alone, the cardinal declared; they rested on a foundation of universal reason. “They are principles that can be known and honored by men and women of good will even apart from divine revelation,” Rigali said. “They are principles of right reason and natural law.”

Even marriage between a man and a woman, Rigali continued, was grounded not just in religion and tradition but in logic. “The true great goods of marriage — the unitive and the procreative goods — are inextricably bound together such that the complementarity of husband and wife is of the very essence of marital communion,” the cardinal continued, ascending into philosophical abstractions surely lost on most in the room. “Sexual relations outside the marital bond are contrary not only to the will of God but to the good of man. Indeed, they are contrary to the will of God precisely because they are against the good of man.”

George looked on with arms crossed and lips sealed. But he was obviously pleased. To anyone who knew George’s work, the cardinal’s words sounded very much as if George had written them, and when I asked him about it later, he acknowledged providing assistance. Rigali’s remarks were a summation of the distinctive moral philosophy that is the foundation of George’s power.

(emphasis: mine)

The New York Times piece continues:

“If there really is a vast right-wing conspiracy,” the conservative Catholic journal Crisis concluded a few years ago, “its leaders probably meet in George’s kitchen.”

The Times acknowledged that George, for twenty years, “has operated largely out of public view at the intersection of academia, religion and politics. In the past 12 months, however, he has stepped into a more prominent role.”

We’ve seen faint traces of that prominent role in action as the mysteriously-funded and obstinately-secretive National Organization for Marriage, fronted by Maggie Gallagher and Brian Brown, have rushed into state after state, frequently defying local election laws, to stem the gathering storm of marriage equality.

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The American Principles Project

Deep in the NYT piece is this paragraph:

George instead is plunging deeper into partisan politics. Alarmed at signs that the Republican Party was moving away from cultural issues, he recently founded a new group called the American Principles Project, which aims to build a grass-roots movement around his ideas. “His new venture will make him a major political player,” the conservative writer Fred Barnes predicted in The Weekly Standard. Among the group’s first endeavors has been to call for the ouster of Kevin Jennings, an Obama education official who previously founded the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network. Jennings, George says, wants to “use our elementary schools in defiance of the wishes of parents, to use our elementary schools to teach pro-sexual-liberationist, pro-homosexualist propaganda.”

(emphasis: mine)

The name, American Principles Project, sounded vaguely familiar.

Back on 22 October 2009, in a post called NOM sues Maine over donor reporting, I wrote:

According to the Bangor Daily News, the National Organization for Marriage (NOM) and a second group, the Washington, DC-based American Principles in Action (AIPA), are suing the State of Maine over its campaign contribution disclosure laws

Further investigation revealed:

The organization’s website provides little background or history, but their first blog entry is dated last May. In the complaint, the group is described as: “Plaintiff APIA is a nonprofit 26 U.S.C. §501(c)(4) organization dedicated to promoting equality of opportunity and ordered liberty.”

In the complaint, APIA states, under penalty of perjury, that it “does not have as its major purpose the promotion or defeat of any Maine referendum or ballot question,” but in the next paragraph announces its intention to to create a series of videos “relating to same-sex marriage in Maine” and place them on its website.

In that post, I included the script of the malicious, anti-gay ads that APIA wanted to run in Maine.

The first ad was called Bigot:

Girl: Mommy, are you a bigot?

Mother: What?

Girl: At school, we learned that people who are against gay marriage are bigots.

Mother: No, dear. I believe that homosexuals should be treated fairly–but I also believe that marriage should be just for one man and one woman. That doesn’t make me a bigot.

Girl: What about Reverend Jones and Father Diego? Are they bigots?

Mother: Did you learn that at school too?

Girl nods

VO: Think that gay marriage won’t affect your family? Think again.

Vote Yes Graphic

The second ad was called The New Curriculum:

School Administrator (talking to an off-camera mic/reporter–as he talks, we see images of teachers in classrooms reading from blurred-out books, GLSEN-style posters, etc.): No, we’re very proud of the new curriculum. It’s all about teaching kids to embrace different lifestyles and explore their own sexuality.

Switching from images of sex ed classrooms to little boy on a bench in a darkened school hallway. We can see an adult male (not his face, we’re looking from the perspective of the child and the view never includes his head) come out of an office, take the boy’s hand, lead him into the office, and close the door. Freeze on the closed door, which has a sign that says, “Counseling Session: Do Not Disturb”

Reporter (VO) : Yes, but is it appropriate for kindergartners to be receiving counseling about whether they might be gay?

School Admin (VO): Sure, we’ve had a few complaints, but there’s not much parents can do. It’s the law, after all.

VO: Think gay marriage won’t affect your family? Think again.

Vote Yes Graphic

An article at Robert George’s American Principles Project reveals that American Principles in Action is, in fact, the “sister organization” of American Principles Project.

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NOM and the Catholics

Much has been written about NOM’s connections with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, the Mormons, including about the presence of Mormon author Orson Scott Card on NOM’s Board of Directors. Card called for civil insurrection if Prop 8 was defeated in California.

The Mormon’s apparent absence in Maine left many NOM critics perplexed — despite some late infusions of cash — and at the same time stunned by the aggressive anti-gay tactics of the Catholic Church first in Maine and later in Washington DC.

Given Robert P George’s collusion with the Catholic bishops, revealed in the New York Times article, a number of other connections begin to make more sense.

San Diego attorney Charles LiMandri contributed $10,000.00 to the National Organization For Marriage California – Yes On 8 on 28 January 2008 — and another $27,000.00 to ProtectMarriage.com. Limandri is affiliated with the Catholic, anti-gay Thomas More Center, served as NOM’s general counsel during the Prop 8 campaign, and sued to fight California’s campaign disclosure laws.

NOM would later employ the same tactic in Maine, with George’s American Principles in Action joining NOM — the organization he chairs, suing to thwart Maine’s campaign disclosure laws.

LiMandri also filed suit on behalf of four San Diego firefighters (1, 2, 3) over a brief ride in San Diego’s 2007 gay pride parade. The National Organization for Marriage sponsored the firefighters defense website.

When NOM cast off the former Miss California, Carrie Prejean, who was featured in a NOM television commercial, Charles LiMandri served as Prejean’s attorney when she sued pageant officials.

Writing at The Huffington Post, Fred Karger of Californians Against Hate noted the shift from Mormon to Catholic backing in the fight against marriage equality:

The Catholic Church has become much more visible as the Mormons have backed off. Maine Bishop Richard J. Malone and his sidekick, Marc Mutty, ran and heavily funded the recent campaign in Maine to take away same-sex marriage in that state. The Roman Catholic Dioceses of Portland (ME) even set up a Political Action Committee (PAC), and gave and raised $553,000 to pass Question #1. That’s a lot of money, especially when they recently closed 5 churches in Maine.

Now, last week in Washington D.C., the Catholic Church there threatened to stop feeding the homeless if the City Council passes a same-sex marriage bill. Yes, the Catholic Church will stop feeding the hungry!

Fourteen Roman Catholic bishops and archbishops signed NOM Chairman Robert George’s Manhattan Declaration. George has apparently succeeded in uniting the Catholics and the forces of the radical religious right.

The conservative Catholic journal Crisis may have been prophetically correct when it suggested, according to The New York Times, that the leaders of this vast conspiracy might have met in George’s kitchen.

Prop 8 documentary in the news

Sunday, December 20th, 2009

Proposition 8 Documentary To Debut At Sundance
(video: ChinoBlanco at YouTube)

Immediately after it was announced that Reed Cowan’s film detailing the Mormon’s meddling in California’s Proposition 8 would premiere at the prestigious Sundance Film Festival, a website was thrown up calling for a boycott.

Nancy Van Valkenburg, writing at The Standard, filed this report:

At 2 p.m. Thursday, the 2010 Sundance Film Festival announced that former Utah newsman Reed Cowan would bring his new documentary to the elite festival.

By 5 p.m. Thursday, Cowan learned religious and anti-gay activists were organizing, discussing online whether they should gather at Park City to show their angry opposition to the screening.

Cowan’s film is “8: The Mormon Proposition.” It is described on the Internet Movie Database, www.imdb.com, as “a scorching indictment of the Mormon Church’s historic involvement in the promotion and passage of California’s Proposition 8,” the proposition that banned same-sex marriage in California.

“I know that it’s going to be protested,” Cowan said in an e-mail interview from his home base in Florida.

Funny how these gay-hating, Utah Mormons — who marched into California in 2008, bankrolled a ballot initiative to wipe out the existing right of gay and lesbian couples to marry, won by a slim margin, and got all prissy about post election calls to boycott Mormon and other businesses that backed Prop 8 — immediately resort to launching a boycott over a film critical of the church’s involvement.

Reed Cowan, the film’s director, said, “The chickens are coming home to roost. What happened in California began in Salt Lake City. And now we’re bringing it home.”

Fred Karger of Californians Against Hate, who figures prominently in Cowan’s film, writing at The Huffington Post, said of the film:

8: The Mormon Proposition will explain once and for all just how the Mormon Church operates, and how they have led the fight against marriage equality all across the United States since Utah became the first state to ban same-sex marriage in 1995. 29 states have followed Utah’s lead, and the Mormon Church has made sure of that.

The film also goes into great depth about how the Mormon Church has destroyed so many lives and families in its desire to impose its will on others.

Karger promises the film “will knock your socks off.”

According to the summary at The Internet Movie Database:

Through never-before seen documents, recordings & insider-interviews, 8: THE MORMON PROPOSITION, exposes the efforts of the Mormon Church and its members to halt nearly every piece of LGBT legislation on the desks of lawmakers from Hawaii to New York. 8: THE MORMON PROPOSITION makes these efforts a matter of record and challenges viewers to demand more of government officials in requiring religions more transparency in their efforts to influence public policy.

Little wonder they’re getting a bit fidgety in Salt Lake City, Utah.

+++++++

Here’s a copy of the Sundance announcement:

PRESS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Steven Greenstreet (801) 580-3103
EMAIL: Press@mormonproposition.com

8: THE MORMON PROPOSITION SET FOR WORLD PREMIERE AT THE 2010 SUNDANCE FILM FESTIVAL IN PARK CITY, UTAH.

Miami, Florida – DAVID v. GOLIATH PRODUCTIONS announced this week that their new and highly anticipated documentary, 8: THE MORMON PROPOSITION, a film by Reed Cowan & narrated by Oscar-winning writer of MILK, Dustin Lance Black, will debut its world premiere at the world renowned SUNDANCE FILM FESTIVAL in January 2010.

Reed Cowan saying today, “I’ve had a chance to talk to our film’s narrator, Oscar winner Dustin Lance Black about our SUNDANCE acceptance and he is thrilled. Our Executive Producer Bruce Bastian is thrilled and our other Producers, Steven Greenstreet, Emily Pearson and Chris Volz are also…over the moon. Additionally, our production staff which includes Richard Samuels and Brian Bayerl of Greendoor Productions and Jess Elwood our animator are also thrilled.

Months ago, in an interview with THE ADVOCATE magazine, SUNDANCE’s John Cooper said: “I think we’re going to see a lot more hard-hitting political documentaries. Prop. 8 was sort of a wake-up call. I can see that fire in the belly to finish this thing off, to get to the next phase in American life.”

Everyone involved with 8: THE MORMON PROPOSITION is honored to be a part of what Mr. Cooper was talking about. 8:TMP is indeed the hardest-hitting political documentary to be released in years. It is to Mormons and their anti-gay allies what Fahrenheit 9-11 was to the Bush Administration.

That’s why our team will have a ground presence in Park City and Salt Lake City the likes of which has never been seen before through our SLC manager Jacob Whipple. For that, we’ll be enlisting the help of thousands of people…details to come.

This is an important film. Our team believes it strikes at the heart of one of our country’s highest held values—separation of church and state. And mostly, this film is important because it honors in a very respectful and dignified way, those who felt the sting of prop. 8 and other legislation like it. This is their story. And with the invitation from SUNDANCE, it will now be the world’s to experience.

8:TMP TRAILER VIEWABLE AT:
www.mormonproposition.com