Dobson: Shooting the Media Messenger

Haggard%20Marraige.gif Amid allegations that Ted Haggard, president of the National Association of Evangelicals, had a three-year relationship with a gay male prostitute, James Dobson did what he has taken to doing frequently since the media began investigating reports of increasing voter disenchantment with the GOP even among the most conservative voters - and that is to blame the media for trying to keep so-called “values voters” from the polls next week.

"It is unconscionable that the legitimate news media would report a rumor like this based on nothing but one man's accusation. Ted Haggard is a friend of mine and it appears someone is trying to damage his reputation as a way of influencing the outcome of Tuesday's election -- especially the vote on Colorado's marriage-protection amendment -- which Ted strongly supports.”

Ever since the Mark Foley scandal broke, Dobson has been on a mission to blame every piece of news that might harm Republican turn-out at the polls as part of a conspiracy by the liberal media:

"What Mark Foley did was unconscionable. It was terrible," Dobson said. "... Thankfully he's gone. But tell me -- now that he's gone, why is it still with us? Why are they still talking about it? Why are they trying to blame somebody for it? It is because they are using that to suppress the values voters."

Dobson hammered away at this supposed conspiracy again just the other day on this radio program, according to FOF’s own “CitizenLink” news service

It is imperative, he said, for conservatives to be alert to what's at stake. Dobson asked [Gary] Bauer whether he's ever seen the media more biased and more determined to suppress conservative turnout. "I thought I had seen it all," Bauer said. "This has been unbelievable. It's not even camouflaged. Big, liberal media has been engaging in an all-out war on the Christian vote -- to suppress that vote, to discourage faith-based voters, to make them think through distorted polls that the election is already over."

Haggard was named in a TIME magazine cover story as one of the most influential evangelicals in the U.S. He was recently on the big screen in the highly acclaimed indie documentary “Jesus Camp” although he complained about the way he was “portrayed in the movie.” The film’s directors responded to Haggard’s complaints: saying

Perhaps Pastor Ted regrets how he comes off in the film and is expressing it by criticizing us, Becky, and the children in the film. What he calls “negative” and not “normative” we see as simply true and accurate.

Watch the clip here of Haggard in "Jesus Camp" joking

“I think I know what you did last night. If you give me a thousand dollars, I won’t tell your wife.”

UPDATE: A spokesperson for Haggard's church has acknowledged that "some of the accusations were true."

The acting senior pastor at New Life, Ross Parsley, told KKTV-TV of Colorado Springs that Haggard admitted that some of the accusations were true. "I just know that there has been some admission of indiscretion, not admission to all of the material that has been discussed but there is an admission of some guilt," Parsley told the station. He did not elaborate, and a telephone number for Parsley could not be found late Thursday.

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Right Wing Bickers over Voter Turnout

Anticipating a Republican loss in November, right-wing activists are already trying to establish who to blame. James Dobson, who cast aside his stated disillusionment with the GOP to commit to working to maintain its majority, has suggested that liberals or the liberal media are using bad news to “suppress” the turnout of those he calls “values voters,” but his comrade Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, is blaming conservative media.

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At Church Political Rally, Dobson Cites Conspiracy of Bad News to 'Suppress the Values Voters'

Focus on the Family founder James Dobson continued his campaign to ensure that conservative Christians ignore Republican failures and scandals and turn out to vote next month, holding his third “Stand for the Family” rally in Nashville, Tennessee, where the race to replace retiring Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist is neck and neck. Previous rallies were held in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Dobson in TennesseeThe rally in Nashville, held at the same church that hosted “Justice Sunday II” last year, informed the audience that there is “a nationwide effort to suppress their vote,” according to Baptist Press News, and Dobson said that “they” were behind it:

"What Mark Foley did was unconscionable. It was terrible," Dobson said. "... Thankfully he's gone. But tell me -- now that he's gone, why is it still with us? Why are they still talking about it? Why are they trying to blame somebody for it? It is because they are using that to suppress the values voters."

Dobson said he was told that additional news about "outed gay" Republicans may come out in coming weeks.

"They're dribbling this bad news out so that eventually the values voters will get to the place that they say, 'A pox on both your houses. I'm staying home.' Folks, we cannot afford to do that," Dobson said.

Who are “they”? Southern Baptist leader Richard Land blamed the “liberal media,” which he said “has abandoned any semblance of objectivity ... to launch an all-out attack on values voters and on the candidates of values voters to seek to suppress our vote.” (In any event, Dobson's attempt to pin poor poll results for Republicans on "outed gays" does not accord with voter trends, as shown in a recent Center for American Values survey.)

As a motivating factor, Dobson also claimed to have inside information that two Supreme Court justices may retire soon:

"I am told by people who know far more about it than I do that there are probably two ... Supreme Court justices who are hanging on until there is a more liberal Senate so that their seat will not be taken by somebody who is conservative," Dobson said. "It's a 5-4 [pro-choice] court right now. One more new justice -- if they are conservative -- will put Roe v. Wade in jeopardy."

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Global AIDS Czar Called “Fox in Charge of the Henhouse”

Reacting to the swearing-in of openly gay Mark Dybul as the nation's new Global AIDS Coordinator by Condeleeza Rice, some from the powerful religious right-wing base of the Republican party expressed “disgust” with the administration’s pick and with comments Rice made at the swearing in ceremony.

Peter Sprigg, vice president for policy at the Family Research Council, says the secretary's comments were "profoundly offensive" and fly in the face of the Bush administration's endorsement of a federal marriage protection amendment, though that backing be [sic] less than enthusiastic.

"We have to face the fact that putting a homosexual in charge of AIDS policy is a bit like putting the fox in charge of the henhouse," says Sprigg. "But even beyond that, the deferential treatment that was given not only to him but his partner and his partner's family by the Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is very distressing."

Rice.bmp What were the “disgusting" comments by Rice? 


“I am truly honored and delighted to have the opportunity to swear in Mark Dybul as our next Global AIDS Coordinator,” Rice said. “I am pleased to do that in the presence of Mark’s parents, Claire and Richard, his partner, Jason, and his mother-in-law, Marilyn,” she said.

“You have a wonderful family to support you, Mark, and I know that’s always important to us. Welcome,” Rice said.

The Family Research Council is now demanding an explanation from Rice about why she used the term “mother-in-law.” Suggesting it somehow adds insult to injury, FRC wants to know specifically why Rice used the term in front of the First Lady.  

If Laura Bush was offended in any way it was hard to tell.  


In remarks following the swearing-in, Laura Bush noted that Dybul will oversee President Bush’s $15 billion Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, or PEPFAR, a widely acclaimed program backed by AIDS activists and approved by Congress as part of an aggressive U.S. effort to fight AIDS in developing countries.

“I know you’ll bring great skill and enthusiasm to the fight against AIDS,” Laura Bush said. “Congratulations, ambassador.”

The Bush-nominated Dybul was confirmed by unanimous Senate vote on Aug. 3.  The swearing-in ceremony which produced the nation’s third openly gay ambassador was held in the Benjamin Franklin room at the State Department where Dybul reportedly placed his hand on a Bible held by his domestic partner, Jason Claire.

What’s Foley got to do with it?


Sprigg says in light of the Foley scandal, "it's inexplicable that a conservative administration would do such things."

The religious right have clearly seized upon the Foley scandal as carte blanche to say in the mainstream media what they usually reserve for their own audiences. And that is what they really think about gay Americans - dropping the pretense of using more innocuous sounding anti-gay code phrases such as “preserving traditional marriage” or marriage is “between one man and one woman.”   

And in yet one more example of right-wing’s willingness to scapegoat and demonize gay Americans, they have now turned their misguided homophobic rhetoric upon gay Republicans.


As the USA Today report notes, the Rice statement comes in the midst of news stories dealing with the Mark Foley scandal, many of which have talked about the number of homosexual staffers on the Republican payroll. Some pro-family people are starting to wonder if this homosexual influence within the GOP may account for the party's lack of action on social conservative issues. FRC's Tony Perkins says that among the questions that need to be asked are: "Has the social agenda of the GOP been stalled by homosexual members or staffers?"

In a typical display of right wing message discipline, today yet another FRC spokesperson said:


"The big-tent strategy could ultimately spell doom for the Republican Party," said Tom McClusky, chief lobbyist for the Family Research Council, a Christian advocacy group. "All a big-tent strategy seems to be doing is attracting a bunch of clowns."

The Agape Press story concludes:  


[T]he USA Today account of the swearing-in ceremony concedes that the Foley investigation may be exposing what it calls a "politically awkward" fact of life in the world of national politics. That is, some leaders in the Republican Party "practice a more tolerant brand of politics" in office hiring than others in the party have conveyed on the campaign trail.

Politically awkward.  Ya’ think??

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Republican Gays are Closeted Dems! Oh, That Explains It.

Cliff Kincaid of right-wing financed Accuracy in Media is determined to push his Mark Foley-scandal “explanations” as far as they will go – as long as it is nowhere near the truth.

When the scandal first broke, Kincaid said Republicans had only themselves to blame for being so darn gullible for allowing gays into the GOP in the first place:


House leaders permitted homosexuals to infiltrate and manipulate the party apparatus while they publicly postured as friends of family values and traditional marriage.

But since then, Kincaid has advanced beyond that sort of rudimentary blame-game in favor of a much more elaborate conspiracy theory:  gay Republicans are really undercover Democratic operatives!!  Who knew?  

The complex nature of the "dirty trick" against the Republicans over the Mark Foley scandal is beginning to emerge. It doesn't involve a George Soros-funded group or emails that had been in the possession of the media or shopped around by Democratic operatives. Instead, the GOP has played a trick on itself. The party brought so-called gay Republicans into positions of power in Congress only to realize that the confidential information they held about a secret gay network was political dynamite that could backfire.

 

If you are getting the idea that gay Republicans may be closeted Democrats, then you are beginning to understand how the Mark Foley scandal could have been a Democratic Party dirty trick. 

So if the gay Republicans are not really Republicans, what are they? One veteran observer of this network told AIM that the Foley scandal should make it crystal clear that the gay Republicans are in reality "liberal activists" who want to use the party to advance the same homosexual agenda embraced by the Democrats.

In Kincaid’s view, the GOP has been infiltrated by “liberal activists” posing as gay Republicans in an intricate and convoluted plan to advance the Democratic Party’s agenda which, thanks to the Foley scandal, Kincaid alone has now managed to uncover.   

Should the November elections go the way more pollsters and pundits are predicting – resulting in previously unexpected losses for Republicans – no doubt Kincaid and his compadres will find it easier to continue blaming gays instead of dealing with the truth about the Grand Old Party.  

They are losing voters the honest way. Voters are tired of 1) being manipulated with talk of “values” 2) Bush’s popularity is way down 3) public and even congressional support for the war in Iraq continues to slip and 4) influence buying scandals in Washington are all a lot more powerful than the “secret gay network” that exists only in the fertile imagination of a right-wing in denial.

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Traditional Values Coalition Defends Anti-Gay Foley Comments

Group stands by claim that congressman’s actions were indicative of “recruitment” by “homosexual movement,” against criticism by Post columnist.

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Right Continues to Demonize Gays Over Foley Scandal

Peter LaBarbera, Family Research Council, Pat Buchanan, and others blame gays and Democrats

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GOPhobia

The Traditional Values Coalition weighs in on the Mark Foley scandal and predictably blames the Democrats and the media for the whole thing.  Relying in part on WorldNetDaily, which is never a good idea, TVC claims that Democrats sat on the story until it would do the most damage and blames the media for failing to thoroughly investigate allegations regarding Foley’s sexuality.

After fruitlessly blaming everyone but the GOP, TVC gets back to its real agenda: demonizing gays

Liberal Republicans constantly talk about the Republican Party being a "big tent open to everybody."

As radical homosexuals have been welcomed into "the big tent," it has become a less welcoming place for religious conservatives and a dark and dangerous place for children.

Today Republicans need to take a long and hard look at what they have done by welcoming homosexuals into the GOP. Republicans need to make a simple choice between the innocent children and radical homosexuals who prey on them.

Washington insiders are reacting to this whole Foley scandal as though they are surprised by what the end results of what homosexual behavior can produce.

THIS IS NO SURPRISE. Predatory behavior is one of the end results of homosexuality. Plain and simple.

At one point, Lou Sheldon tries to put forth a slightly more practical reason for the GOP to get all the gays out of the party:  their presence is scarring children for life

 “We hope and pray that the Republican leadership will truly recognize that when it comes to homosexuality, political correctness fails—and it fails children, too. The Republican Party needs to gain the high moral ground so that children will feel welcome to become Republicans when they are young adults.”

If one had to guess, it is probably safe to assume that the barely-tolerated presence of gays in the party has less of an impact on whether or not young adults become Republicans than does the GOP’s embrace of hatemongers like Sheldon and his ilk. 

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Influential Arlington Group and Others Call on 'Values Voters' to Look Past Foley

AFA’s Don Wildmon says sitting out election is “precisely what the liberals” have “orchestrated.” Dobson, citing Supreme Court, says this election may turn country’s direction, “maybe forever.” FRC’s Perkins and Ohio “Patriot Pastor” Russell Johnson predict strong turnout anyway.

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A Secret Network of Republican Homosexuals on Capitol Hill?

Cliff Kincaid, of the right-wing media watchdog organization Accuracy in Media, has joined the group of right-wing elites trying to blame the Mark Foley scandal on an imagined gay cabal within the Republican Party. The following is from a column Kincaid published today:

As I contended during an interview on the public television program NOW, the Republicans have only themselves to blame for this scandal. House leaders permitted homosexuals to infiltrate and manipulate the party apparatus while they publicly postured as friends of family values and traditional marriage. The facade is now in ruins. The press can’t be blamed for seizing on a real and legitimate story.

The Foley-Hastert scandal, according to Kincaid, is the result of the House Republican leadership’s subservience to a dedicated and crafty network of gay Republicans “working behind-the-scenes to sabotage a conservative pro-family agenda in the Congress.” Kincaid suggests that Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert’s refusal to resign might be evidence that this alleged secret network of closeted Republicans reaches into the highest positions of leadership:

For the sake of honest and open government, not to mention protection of the children, the secret Capitol Hill homosexual network must be exposed and dismantled. But only Republican leaders can do that. Their failure to do so suggests that the network may go higher and deeper—and have more power—than even the New York Times article indicated.

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