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Why Hamtramck's
"sexual orientation" and "gender identity" ordinance a
threat to religious freedom, free speech, and women's privacy
rights.
In the 2004 election, 55 percent of Hamtramck
voters voted in favor of a Marriage Protection Amendment to our
state constitution, helping preserve one-man, one-woman marriage
for future generations of children.
But in June 2008, by a 6-to-1 vote of its
politically correct city council, Hamtramck is now among the
handful of cities in Michigan whose local ordinances – in
conflict with federal and state law – treat homosexual behavior
and cross-dressing as the moral, social, and legal equivalents
of immutable characteristics such as race, color, and sex.
Obviously, many Hamtramck residents reject that
comparison -- based on religious, medical, and philosophical
concerns.
For example, a compassionate society that
rationally discourages smoking because of the clearly identified
health consequences should not irrationally enact laws giving
special protection to homosexual behavior that has been
scientifically associated with a dramatically higher incidence
of domestic violence, mental illness, substance abuse, eating
disorders, life-threatening disease -- AIDS, cancer, and
hepatitis -- and premature death by up to 20 years.
The Vatican expressed similar concerns in a 1992
letter to Bishops of the Catholic Church – authored by
then-Cardinal Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict XVI – regarding
legislation to “Tmake
discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation illegal,”
which according to Ratzinger, “may in fact have a negative
impact on the family and society.”
“Even
when the practice of homosexuality may seriously threaten the
lives and well-being of a large number of people, its advocates
remain undeterred and refuse to consider the magnitude of the
risks involved,” Cardinal Ratzinger wrote. “’Sexual
orientation’ does not constitute a quality comparable to race,
ethnic background, etc., in respect to non-discrimination.
Unlike these, homosexual orientation is an objective disorder
and evokes moral concern.”
“Including ‘homosexual orientation’ among the
considerations on the basis of which it is illegal to
discriminate,” Ratzinger wrote, “can easily lead to regarding
homosexuality as a positive source of human rights…(and)…to the
legislative protection and promotion of homosexuality."
The American Family Association of Michigan
strongly agrees. However, the
practical effects of such legislation extend beyond medical or
religious concerns.
Proving to have exactly the opposite
effect of their supposed intent, so-called “sexual orientation”
ordinances have a track record of being used to discriminate
against individuals and organizations who don’t support
homosexual activists’ political agenda.
Detective Richard Stern, a fifteen-year veteran and president of
the Ann Arbor police officers union, was fired after the
chairman of the city's “rights commission” formally accused him
of violating that city’s “sexual orientation” ordinance.
Stern’s offense? On behalf of his union, in a public forum for
police chief candidates, he “was accused of saying that
one of the candidates had a gay-rights agenda,” according to
Between the Lines, a Detroit homosexual advocacy
newsmagazine.
“Stern’s comments were clearly in violation of a human
rights ordinance that includes sexual orientation,” the
newsmagazine commented, making clear that homosexual activists
believe so-called “sexual orientation” ordinances outweigh our
Constitutionally-guaranteed free speech rights.
Stern’s union
disagreed, charging in a lawsuit that he was "illegally and
discriminatorily" discharged by the city.
Also in Ann Arbor, the city council – once again
specifically citing its discriminatory “sexual orientation”
ordinance -- banned donations to the United Way through city
employees’ payroll deduction plan. Why? Because the United Way
financially supported local Boy Scout troops, which
appropriately refuse to allow adult males who engage in
homosexual behavior to take 13-year old boys on overnight
camping trips.
"A council majority believes its own
anti-discrimination ordinance prohibits it from supporting Boy
Scouts in any fashion, including using staff time and city
computers for payroll deductions that go through the United Way
to the Boy Scouts," the Ann Arbor News reported.
In an Ann Arbor News commentary supporting
the city council’s action, the American Civil Liberties Union of
Michigan said the Boy Scouts’ stand made them comparable to
“white supremacist groups.”
Similarly, the homosexual activist group Triangle
Foundation threatened to sue the city of Detroit, demanding that
city officials cut all funding of local Boy Scout troops, deny
the Scouts access to public parks and facilities, and prohibit
sponsorship of Scout activities by the police and fire
departments, the Detroit News reported. The Scouts’
refusal to allow openly homosexual Scoutmasters, Triangle
charged, “is in direct violation of the City Charter and Human
Rights Ordinance…(that) expressly forbid discrimination based on
sexual orientation.”
In Philadelphia, under authority of its “sexual
orientation” ordinance, the city is currently evicting the local
Boy Scout council from offices it has occupied in a city park
for nearly 80 years.
In Chicago, Cook County officials refused to hire
the Salvation Army to deliver services to low-income residents,
saying “the county's ordinance banning employment discrimination
against gays and lesbians bars it from contracting with the
Salvation Army,” a traditional Christian denomination whose
religious doctrine teaches that homosexual behavior is a sin.
Under Massachusetts’ “sexual orientation” law,
Catholic Charities was given an ultimatum: either agree to
process adoptions of children to homosexual couples in violation
of the church’s moral opposition to such adoptions, or abandon
its century-old adoption referral service altogether. To its
credit, Catholic Charities chose the latter.
The “sexual orientation” language now included in
the Hamtramck ordinance is disturbing even beyond its proven
discriminatory effects in other cities.
The
Oakland Press reported in March 2005: “Bill
Scharffe, director of bylaw and policy services for the Michigan
Association of School Boards, advises local districts not to
include the term ‘sexual orientation’ in their anti-harassment
policies. ‘Schools need to be very careful with that,’ he said,
noting that neither federal nor state civil rights laws consider
people of a particular sexual orientation a protected class. He
added that literal interpretation of ‘sexual orientation’ could
include people who gravitate toward any sort of sexual activity,
including that with animals, children and corpses.”
Not content
with adding the discriminatory “sexual orientation” language to
city law, homosexual activists and their political allies
succeeded in adding the words “gender identity” as well.
Simply put, “gender identity” refers to
delusional men who claim to believe they’re really
females stuck in a man’s body and insist on wearing a dress and
high heels to work.
This "gender identity" language is so radical in
its potential effects that even openly homosexual Congressman
Barney Frank, D-Mass., refuses to include it in his federal "gay
rights" legislation.
Rep.
Frank said: "There are workplace situations -- communal showers,
for example -- when the demands of the transgender community fly
in the face of conventional norms and therefore would not pass
in any Congress. I've talked with transgender activists and
what they want -- and what we will be forced to defend -- is for
people with penises who identify as women to be able to shower
with other women."
Don’t
take Barney’s word for it? Consider the case of “Naomi Snyder,”
a Lansing man who applied through the mail – using a female name
– for membership at a women’s health club. His membership
approved, he showed up in person, and being obviously a man, was
refused entry to the women’s locker room and shower. According
to Between the Lines, the Michigan ACLU threatened to sue
for “discrimination,” but Lansing voters in a 1996 ballot vote
had wisely rejected adding “sexual orientation” or “gender
identity” to their local civil rights ordinance; thus, there was
no legal basis for the threatened suit. But in Hamtramck, now,
there would be.
Thankfully, Hamtramck residents who want to
protect the privacy of women and girls and prevent
discrimination against people of faith and community groups such
as the Boy Scouts, the Salvation Army, Catholic Charities, and
the United Way can by law conduct a petition drive to force this
issue onto the ballot for a vote of the people. On behalf of
our supporters who reside in the city, the American Family
Association of Michigan stands ready to assist in any way we
can.
Sexual
Orientation are Protected in Michigan
Civil
Rights Guarantees in Michigan
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