On the anniversary of Stonewall, remember we must still fight
Another guest post by Danielle Truszkovsky, marking the beginning of a week-long in-depth look at the NOM.
Originally published in the South Florida Blade.
Although we are in another wonderful month of gay pride celebrations, it is important to remember that our community is in the midst of an active battle for equal civil rights. The National Organization for Marriage (NOM)—the group behind the nation-wide anti-gay movement—has recently expanded its efforts and ad campaigns to ensure that millions of gay Americans are denied the same basic rights as every other US citizen. Since we are fighting for our rights and the rights of our families, it makes sense that we should know as much as possible about our primary adversary.
On their website, NOM states they have a 501(c)(4) nonprofit status, which means that the group is a “Social Welfare Organization” without restrictions on lobbying expenditures. When I searched for the organization using Guidestar (the leading nonprofit research database), however, no such 501(c)(4) shows up. Instead the National Organization for MarriageInc shows up with a 501(c)(12) status which is for “Local Benevolent Life Insurance Associations, Mutual Irrigation and Telephone Companies, and Like Co.” It seems this organization is intentionally misrepresenting itself.
It is also suspicious that this group, which has a seemingly limitless supply of cash, is operating out of a tiny one-room office (located at 20 Nassau Street, suite 242, in Princeton, NJ). I visited this office numerous times, but never found a single person working there.
Also strange is that this office was previously inhabited by a right-wing organization called the Witherspoon Institute, which according to the Opus Dei Awareness Network (ODAN) is an “Opus Dei-affiliated foundation.” Opus Dei is the secretive sect within the Catholic Church, with direct ties to the Vatican, that reportedly has billions of dollars in assets. They were made famous by the villain in “The Da Vinci Code,” who was a devout member of Opus Dei, albeit an uncharacteristically murderous one.
It’s not surprising, however, that an Opus Dei “Numerary” is one of the founding members of NOM. ODAN states, “Numerary members pledge to remain celibate and generally live in Opus Dei houses. They commit their entire salaries to Opus Dei, submit incoming and outgoing mail to their directors, and practice various forms of corporal mortification, including use of the cilice, a spiked chain worn around the thigh, and use of the discipline, a knotted rope for whipping.”
NOM has more than one tie to a controversial religious sect. Another founding member of the group was Matthew Holland, who is a professor at Brigham Young University. His father is a member of the Quorum of 12 Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. This “Quorum” represents the governing body of the LDS church. The Mormon and Opus Dei connection comes together beautifully in NOM’s “Gathering Storm” ad campaign, and it appears that at least 3 of the “actors” in the commercial are Mormons and at least 1 is a member of Opus Dei.
Although NOM portrays itself as a group of average Americans, the reality is quite different. (Most Americans do not whip themselves with knotted ropes or stab their own legs with spiked chains.) And since the Board of NOM has such close ties to religious organizations with billions of dollars in assets, it is only logical to question where NOM’s funding is coming from and if it being reported accurately.
On March 25, 2009 Californians Against Hate requested copies of NOM’s IRS 990 tax return forms. Federal law requires non-profits release this information within 30 days. It is nearly 90 days after the initial request and still NOM has failed to release their tax forms and are currently accruing IRS fines of $20 per day until their financials are released to the public. What are they trying to hide?
Although NOM is continuing to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on ad campaigns across the country, no one knows where this money is coming from. They are the only national organization working to deny gay Americans equal rights and their operating practices are suspect. Considering the Board’s obvious ties to the Mormon Church and Opus Dei—is it possible that the only nationalized effort against gay civil rights is merely a front group for controversial religious organizations in an attempt to force their religious ideology on the American public?
This June let’s remember that although we may have many differences within our own community, we are all fighting for a common goal: equal rights. If members of the Mormon Church and Opus Dei can come together in a “marriage” of sorts in a collaborative effort to deny gay Americans equal rights, then certainly we as a community can work together to ensure that we win this fight for equality.
Weekend Video Roundup: Why We Fight (Idaho Edition)
Interview with Lieutenant Colonel Victor J. Fehrenbach on local Idaho TV 7:
Boise Pride, courtesy local Idaho FOX 12:
Boise Proud Concert (Part One):
Boise Proud Concert (Part Two):
Enjoy!
Have a great weekend.
Boise Pride, courtesy local Idaho FOX 12:
Boise Proud Concert (Part One):
Boise Proud Concert (Part Two):
Enjoy!
Have a great weekend.
NEWS RELEASE: Where's the Money, Maggie?

Wednesday, June 24, 2009 Contact: Fred Karger 619-592-2008
Where’s the Money, Maggie?

Maggie Gallagher’s National Organization for Marriage (NOM) Refuses to Turn Over Its Federal Financial Records as Required by Law.
Californians Against Hate began requesting your 990s (IRS non-profit tax filings) over three months ago, Maggie. You have not responded as required by law. We visited your national office in Princeton, N.J. twice to view the Form 990s, and sent our requests there by certified mail.

Someone at that address signed the US Postal Service receipt on April 25, 2009 (see copy below). You then had 30 days to comply with our request, but you still have not sent us your federal tax filings for 2007 and 2008.

We have also been to your “office” in Manassas, VA, and no forms there either, Maggie. It looks to be the home of your Treasurer, Neil Corkery. The Corkerys are apparently traveling around the world, and again, the forms are not available for public inspection as required by federal law.
What are you hiding, Maggie? Tell Us the Truth!
Is it all the involvement by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormon Church) in creating and funding the National Organization for Marriage, Inc.? That is exactly what the California Fair Political Practices Commission is investigating (Case # 08/735) right now.
As you are probably aware, the IRS fine for noncompliance is $20.00 per day for every day that you do not turn over your records up to a total of $10,000. For the 92 days so far, you owe the United States Treasury $1,840. While that won’t put much of a dent in the national debt, it is what you owe the government so far in fines. Frankly, Maggie, we are tired of waiting, and are exploring other actions to force the release of your filings.
Is NOM Even a Legal Entity?
In another very interesting development, we received a letter from the IRS last week in response to the request that we filed with them on May 6, 2009 for your Form 990s. The IRS said that, “we have no record of any organization by the name (National Organization for Marriage, Inc.) or address ( 20 Nassau Street, Ste. 242, Princeton, N.J 08542). Now, can you explain that?? They do have a record of your Educational Fund, the 501(c)3, but that apparently was just established last year. NOM, Inc. was established in May 2007 to get Prop 8 on the ballot, so there should be 2 annual filings available on NOM, Inc.
Here’s the copy of the IRS letter:

Maggie, why don’t you do the right thing and release your 2007 and 2008 form 990’s? Just what is in there about your funding and expenditures that you don’t want people to see?
A recent Washington Post story had this to say about the Mormon Church’s involvement in the same-sex marriage battles in six Northeastern States.
Mormon officials have tried to stay out of the controversy that followed the California vote, when the church's prominent role in the marriage fight became clear. A spokeswoman in Salt Lake City declined to say whether the church is involved in debates going on in states such as New Jersey and New York, except to say that leaders remain intent on preserving the "divine institution" of marriage between man and woman. The faith holds that traditional marriage "transcends this world" and is necessary for "the fullness of joy in the next life."
Well, Maggie it’s not so divine for you to stonewall your financial records.
That Admission by the Mormon Church
Raises Many More Questions
Raises Many More Questions
Who is paying for your multi million dollar TV campaign? Who is funding your $500,000 New York State PAC? Your California PAC? Who is paying for all the direct mail robo-calls and millions of direct connect calls in New York alone? Where did you get the $6 million that you admit to spending as reported this week in your hometown newspaper, The Journal News: LoHud.com ?
How much are you and your executive director Brian Brown getting paid? Is the Mormon Church paying you directly or through another one of your other organizations like the Institute for Marriage and Public Policy?
Is the Mormon Church producing all of your slick new commercials? Your controversial and often maligned A Gathering Storm commercial that was made using actors pretending to be real people was chock full of Mormon actors, mostly from Arizona. Most of the bad actors on your audition tapes appear to be Mormon as well. We have that documented.
Just how much money is the Mormon Church spending now to fight same-sex marriage in at least 7 states? Mormon families spent close to $30 million in California to pass Proposition 8 last year. The Mormon Church has likely spent tens of millions of dollars directly throughout the country on all their efforts to stop gay marriage since they hired the world’s largest PR firm, Hill and Knowlton, in 1988. It even appears that the Mormon Church, through its Public Affairs Committee, was monitoring same-sex marriage activities and involved in Canada as well.
We know that the Mormon Church has not been truthful about all of its involvement in opposing same-sex marriage for 20 years. We have seen ample evidence of this in the Church documents that we received.
When we filed our complaint with the California Fair Political Practices Commission last November, Mormon Church officials first said they spent “zero dollars on Prop 8.” Then 3 months after the election, they finally admitted to have made $190,000 in non-monetary contributions. Nearly all of that was supposedly spent the week before the election.
They later changed their story again, saying that the $117,000 reported in Salt Lake City staff time ($96,000) and facilities’ usage ($20,500) was not actually spent just on election day as they had reported to the California Secretary of State. According to Church spokesman Scott Trotter, the staff time included work between August and November. Well, then shouldn’t there have been other expenditures in August or even July and September? Come on Maggie, tell the truth!
The Mormon Church announced its active participation to pass Proposition 8 in the now famous letter read from Thomas S. Monson, President of the Church. This rare act took place on June 29, 2008, and was read to every Mormon in the Western United States. President Monson called on all Mormons to give of “your time and your means to pass Proposition 8.”
Well, it worked. As we now know, the Mormon Church took over every aspect of the Yes on 8 campaign, and was largely responsible for its passage.
Please, Maggie, tell America the truth for once about where your millions of dollars are coming from. We are a country of laws, and we have the right to know.
Danielle TRUSZKOVSKY: Deception, Denial and Opus Dei
Are religious groups illegally funding anti-gay political battles in America?
Guest post by Danielle Truszkovsky, marking the beginning of a week-long in-depth look at the NOM.
Originally published in the South Florida Blade.
On April 17, 2009 I made a trip from Florida to Princeton, NJ, for the sole purpose of visiting 20 Nassau Street. One of the organizations in this building, formerly in Suite 242, is the Witherspoon Institute, an “independent research center” that works to uphold Republican policies; the same suite, 242, is also home to the National Organization for Marriage, which spearheaded the multi-million dollar homophobic “Yes on 8” campaign in California.
It was no surprise to discover a Republican-affiliated organization is tied to the National Organization for Marriage. However—according to the Opus Dei Awareness Network (ODAN), the Witherspoon Institute is an “Opus Dei-affiliated organization.”
Opus Dei is the controversial sect within the Roman Catholic Church that gained notoriety in the best-selling novel and blockbuster film, The Da Vinci Code. The term Opus Dei is Latin for, “work of God.” A 2006 Time Magazine article reported that there are approximately 85,500 members of the group worldwide with a “mere 3,000 in the US,” yet it is estimated that Opus assets are roughly $344 million dollars within the US—and $2.8 billion globally.
Religious organizations, or any “non-profit” organizations, are not legally allowed to engage in political lobbying, or they lose their tax-exempt status. Presuming this really is is an “Opus Dei-affiliated” foundation, why is it tied to the same office as an anti-gay political lobbying group? What influence, if any, does Opus Dei have on NOM and/or its Board Members? And where are they sending their money? How interesting that all these organizations, worth millions and millions of dollars, are tied to this one little office in New Jersey…suite 242.
When I started researching NOM several months ago, I found an interesting commonality: a man named Luis Tellez is on the Board of NOM, serves as President of the Witherspoon Institute, and also holds the title of “Numerary” in Opus Dei. According to ODAN, “Numerary members pledge to remain celibate and generally live in Opus Dei houses. They commit their entire salaries to Opus Dei, submit incoming and outgoing mail to their directors, and practice various forms of corporal mortification...”
Tellez agreed to a phone interview, and he vehemently denies ODAN’s claims that the political “research center” Witherspoon Institute is affiliated with Opus Dei. He says, “Opus Dei doesn’t work that way.” So I asked about the similar address for Witherspoon and NOM. Tellez said that Witherspoon “rented the space on a month-to-month basis,” and when they were ready to vacate, he recommended to NOM that they look into renting the office.
He also denies any correlation between Opus Dei and NOM. He went on to say that his work with Opus Dei is “personal” and “takes place in the evenings and on weekends.” But as he devotes his life’s work (and much of his salary) to Opus Dei, how is it possible then that this work only occurs on nights and weekends?
There is another interesting connection which should be noted. Inspection of the Witherspoon’s IRS tax form 990 filed in June 2007 reveals grants made to the Institute for Marriage and Public Policy (IMAPP). Margaret “Maggie” Gallagher is the President of the IMAPP. She, along with Tellez, are also both on the Board of NOM, with Gallagher serving as President.
Tellez said, “It is likely that Witherspoon may have written a check to the Institute for Marriage and Public Policy to cover professional services rendered by Maggie Gallagher... we are very proud to have been able to enlist her professional work in the formulation of ‘Marriage and the Public Good: Ten Principles…’” These “principles” make up the document that Sen. Sam Brownback (R-KS) used as the basis to push for the 2006 U.S. Constitutional Amendment banning gay marriage. And guess what? According to Rolling Stone magazine, Brownback converted to Catholicism through Opus Dei in 2002.
It is difficult to tell if Opus Dei is illegally donating funds because churches don't have to file IRS 990s. Even then, it is possible that they didn't donate directly, and instead just pressured their congregations to do so. The paper trail is virtually impossible to follow.
In the meantime, NOM will continue to assault the American public with the same old homophobic arguments, including their famously ominous “there’s a storm gathering” commercial campaign, featuring Damon Owens as the voice of the “rainbow coalition,” speaking against civil rights for gay Americans. Interestingly enough, Owens is a member of Opus Dei.
It is dangerous when religious organizations use their tremendous resources and spiritual influence to create one-sided research, presented as facts which are packaged into multi-million dollar ad campaigns . Ideally, the best solution would be to require all churches to be completely transparent with their financial records; however, minimally, an investigation should be made in this case to determine to what degree Opus Dei has participated in lobbying and also into NOM to determine how much they may have benefited from these efforts.
Guest post by Danielle Truszkovsky, marking the beginning of a week-long in-depth look at the NOM.
Originally published in the South Florida Blade.
On April 17, 2009 I made a trip from Florida to Princeton, NJ, for the sole purpose of visiting 20 Nassau Street. One of the organizations in this building, formerly in Suite 242, is the Witherspoon Institute, an “independent research center” that works to uphold Republican policies; the same suite, 242, is also home to the National Organization for Marriage, which spearheaded the multi-million dollar homophobic “Yes on 8” campaign in California.
It was no surprise to discover a Republican-affiliated organization is tied to the National Organization for Marriage. However—according to the Opus Dei Awareness Network (ODAN), the Witherspoon Institute is an “Opus Dei-affiliated organization.”
Opus Dei is the controversial sect within the Roman Catholic Church that gained notoriety in the best-selling novel and blockbuster film, The Da Vinci Code. The term Opus Dei is Latin for, “work of God.” A 2006 Time Magazine article reported that there are approximately 85,500 members of the group worldwide with a “mere 3,000 in the US,” yet it is estimated that Opus assets are roughly $344 million dollars within the US—and $2.8 billion globally.
Religious organizations, or any “non-profit” organizations, are not legally allowed to engage in political lobbying, or they lose their tax-exempt status. Presuming this really is is an “Opus Dei-affiliated” foundation, why is it tied to the same office as an anti-gay political lobbying group? What influence, if any, does Opus Dei have on NOM and/or its Board Members? And where are they sending their money? How interesting that all these organizations, worth millions and millions of dollars, are tied to this one little office in New Jersey…suite 242.
When I started researching NOM several months ago, I found an interesting commonality: a man named Luis Tellez is on the Board of NOM, serves as President of the Witherspoon Institute, and also holds the title of “Numerary” in Opus Dei. According to ODAN, “Numerary members pledge to remain celibate and generally live in Opus Dei houses. They commit their entire salaries to Opus Dei, submit incoming and outgoing mail to their directors, and practice various forms of corporal mortification...”
Tellez agreed to a phone interview, and he vehemently denies ODAN’s claims that the political “research center” Witherspoon Institute is affiliated with Opus Dei. He says, “Opus Dei doesn’t work that way.” So I asked about the similar address for Witherspoon and NOM. Tellez said that Witherspoon “rented the space on a month-to-month basis,” and when they were ready to vacate, he recommended to NOM that they look into renting the office.
He also denies any correlation between Opus Dei and NOM. He went on to say that his work with Opus Dei is “personal” and “takes place in the evenings and on weekends.” But as he devotes his life’s work (and much of his salary) to Opus Dei, how is it possible then that this work only occurs on nights and weekends?
There is another interesting connection which should be noted. Inspection of the Witherspoon’s IRS tax form 990 filed in June 2007 reveals grants made to the Institute for Marriage and Public Policy (IMAPP). Margaret “Maggie” Gallagher is the President of the IMAPP. She, along with Tellez, are also both on the Board of NOM, with Gallagher serving as President.
Tellez said, “It is likely that Witherspoon may have written a check to the Institute for Marriage and Public Policy to cover professional services rendered by Maggie Gallagher... we are very proud to have been able to enlist her professional work in the formulation of ‘Marriage and the Public Good: Ten Principles…’” These “principles” make up the document that Sen. Sam Brownback (R-KS) used as the basis to push for the 2006 U.S. Constitutional Amendment banning gay marriage. And guess what? According to Rolling Stone magazine, Brownback converted to Catholicism through Opus Dei in 2002.
It is difficult to tell if Opus Dei is illegally donating funds because churches don't have to file IRS 990s. Even then, it is possible that they didn't donate directly, and instead just pressured their congregations to do so. The paper trail is virtually impossible to follow.
In the meantime, NOM will continue to assault the American public with the same old homophobic arguments, including their famously ominous “there’s a storm gathering” commercial campaign, featuring Damon Owens as the voice of the “rainbow coalition,” speaking against civil rights for gay Americans. Interestingly enough, Owens is a member of Opus Dei.
It is dangerous when religious organizations use their tremendous resources and spiritual influence to create one-sided research, presented as facts which are packaged into multi-million dollar ad campaigns . Ideally, the best solution would be to require all churches to be completely transparent with their financial records; however, minimally, an investigation should be made in this case to determine to what degree Opus Dei has participated in lobbying and also into NOM to determine how much they may have benefited from these efforts.
NOM Chairman Robert P. George: "Utah will be whipped into line."
"Just as the nation could not endure half slave and half free but eventually had to go all one way or all the other, we will not be able to get by with a situation in which some couples are married in one state, not married when they move to or travel through the next, and married again when they reach a third. |
That sounds about right, Prof. George.
Remind me again, what were we arguing about?
I'm six years late, but I've just read George's WSJ Op-Ed from 2003, and I'm now very curious as to how he justifies his continuing role in this contest? His own accounts (both from his BYU Forum lecture and in that WSJ article) leave me convinced that he knows it's over. In which case, what is it that he's hoping to accomplish at this point through NOM's political fundraising and spending, considering that the political objective is one that he himself describes as a lost cause?
Idaho Local TV Report Asks: What Is A Family?
Excerpt from transcript of Danielle Grant's Local News 8 report:
Towleroad mentioned the story a fortnight ago, but with this fresh and very worthy video report courtesy of Eastern Idaho's #1 News Source, well, a second look might be in order.The definition of family is under scrutiny.
This comes after a local same-sex couple was denied a family pool pass at Lava Hot Springs.
The two claim the staff at the swimming pool facility told them they didn't fit the description of a family and couldn't get the reduced rate.
The executive director of the Lava Hot Springs Foundation says they define parents as adults who are legally in charge of dependent children or who are married to the adult who's in charge of the kids.
Since the state of Idaho doesn't recognize same-sex marriages, the American Falls couple didn't get the $20 pass.
Local News 8 talked with both parties about it and the two ladies say they're frustrated the facility would belittle them. While the Lava Hot Springs foundation says they were just following its policy.
Sunshine, blue skies and getting wet in the water!
It was a day full of family and fun.
But the family of five says their fun was cut short in the ticket line.
"We're a family. We live together. This is our family and she said, ‘No it doesn't work that way.' A family is a mom, dad and children. I was like are you kidding me?" said Amber Koger, who got turned away.
The executive director for the Lava Hot Springs, Mark Lowe, says to get the discount parents must be legally obligated to the children or married to someone who is.
And more than 100,000 people splash in the pools during the summer season and he says this has always been the policy.
"Not everybody accepts our lifestyle and that's fine we deal with that everyday but don't put our family down in front of the kids," said Jeri Underwood, frustrated with the situation.
Because, in all of the back-and-forth about "marriage" ... it's a useful reminder that this is ultimately about "family" ... a concept so basic and universal that even some of us from the Mormon Corridor are able to grasp that - when it comes to family - "It's about Time!"
And maybe it's about time I post a shameless plug for my YouTube channel. With a few more subscribers, it'll soon be the #1 "political news" channel in Taiwan.
Anyway, enough of my self-serving non sequiturs ... who would've thunk - even just a few years ago - that a press release like this would be issued from Lava Hot Springs, Idaho?

As Idaho booster Misty writes, "Idaho might not be the kind of place you fantasize about when you think vacation, but you might be pleasantly surprised ... Load up the car with snacks, friends, or your partner and kids and hit the road."
And sure as shootin', after this latest kerfuffle, you just might well be (properly welcomed and surprised). So, good on Lava Hot Springs, and here's to progress and to pleasant surprises in future (rather than that other kind that Jeri and Amber and their kids had to deal with so recently).
National Organization for Marriage, Inc.
Who/what is the NOM? Apparently, the NOM is the National Organization for Marriage, Inc.
Who knew?

C'mon, kids. The NOM is now pumping money into Maine to fight marriage equality and we don't even have a handle on who they are. What gives? And what will it take to force this outfit to provide the level of disclosure that we're owed under both the spirit and the letter of our campaign finance laws?
Meet your anti-gay adversaries
Sure, I'd love to meet them, but where are they?
I am this close to going all David Parker on this crew, but I also don't want to be flying out to Princeton, NJ just to find an empty office.
Time to give Neil Corkery, Brian Brown and David Bauer a call re the disposition of the IRS filings for these:
National Organization for Marriage, Inc. (EIN: 26-0240498)
a 501(c)(4) formed January 2008
c/o Neil Corkery
9502 Nelson Ln
Manassas, VA 20110-4310
National Organization for Marriage Education Fund (EIN: 11-3818465)
a 501(c)(3) formed July 2008
c/o Neil Corkery
9502 Nelson Ln
Manassas, VA 20110-4310
National Organization for Marriage California PAC (EIN: 26-4205819)
a 501(c)(4) formed February 2009
c/o David Bauer
2150 River Plaza Dr Ste 150
Sacramento, CA 95833-4131
National Organization for Marriage PAC New York (EIN: 27-0394565)
a 501(c)(4) formed June 2009
c/o Brian S. Brown
20 Nassau Street Suite 242
Princeton, NJ 08542
Also, worth noting:
Institute for Marriage and Public Policy (EIN: 20-0240184)
c/o Neil Corkery
PO Box 1231
Manassas, VA 20108
-and-
8280 Grennsboro Dr 7th Floor
McLean, VA 22102
The John Adams Center for the Study of Faith, Philosophy and Public Affairs (EIN: 27 0151485)
a 501(c)(3) formed August 2009
c/o Ralph C. Hancock
2075 N Canyon Rd
Provo, UT 84604-5832
In the meantime, check out Keith Eddings report about NY, NOM, LDS, FPPC, IRS and CAH:
Foe of N.Y.'s same-sex marriage probed
Who knew?

C'mon, kids. The NOM is now pumping money into Maine to fight marriage equality and we don't even have a handle on who they are. What gives? And what will it take to force this outfit to provide the level of disclosure that we're owed under both the spirit and the letter of our campaign finance laws?
Meet your anti-gay adversaries
Sure, I'd love to meet them, but where are they?
I am this close to going all David Parker on this crew, but I also don't want to be flying out to Princeton, NJ just to find an empty office.
Time to give Neil Corkery, Brian Brown and David Bauer a call re the disposition of the IRS filings for these:
National Organization for Marriage, Inc. (EIN: 26-0240498)
a 501(c)(4) formed January 2008
c/o Neil Corkery
9502 Nelson Ln
Manassas, VA 20110-4310
National Organization for Marriage Education Fund (EIN: 11-3818465)
a 501(c)(3) formed July 2008
c/o Neil Corkery
9502 Nelson Ln
Manassas, VA 20110-4310
National Organization for Marriage California PAC (EIN: 26-4205819)
a 501(c)(4) formed February 2009
c/o David Bauer
2150 River Plaza Dr Ste 150
Sacramento, CA 95833-4131
National Organization for Marriage PAC New York (EIN: 27-0394565)
a 501(c)(4) formed June 2009
c/o Brian S. Brown
20 Nassau Street Suite 242
Princeton, NJ 08542
Also, worth noting:
Institute for Marriage and Public Policy (EIN: 20-0240184)
c/o Neil Corkery
PO Box 1231
Manassas, VA 20108
-and-
8280 Grennsboro Dr 7th Floor
McLean, VA 22102
The John Adams Center for the Study of Faith, Philosophy and Public Affairs (EIN: 27 0151485)
a 501(c)(3) formed August 2009
c/o Ralph C. Hancock
2075 N Canyon Rd
Provo, UT 84604-5832
In the meantime, check out Keith Eddings report about NY, NOM, LDS, FPPC, IRS and CAH:
Foe of N.Y.'s same-sex marriage probed
White House Looks to Include Same-Sex Unions in Census Count
h/t Lavender Newswire
Not my normal beat, but I'm in the mood for a bit of good news ...
First, check this out from Mercury News:
Census study of gay married couples finds similarities to husband-and-wife couples

Looking at the numbers above, it seems pretty obvious that gay and straight married couples share more in common than either group might care to admit.
Then, check this out from The Wall Street Journal:
JUNE 19, 2009
White House Looks to Include Same-Sex Unions in Census Count
By JAKE SHERMAN
WASHINGTON -- The White House said Thursday it was seeking ways to include same-sex marriages, unions and partnerships in 2010 Census data, the second time in a week the administration has signaled a policy change of interest to the gay community.
...
The gay community strongly supported President Barack Obama during the 2008 election. But some gay activists say they have been frustrated by what they see as his slow approach to rolling back discriminatory policies.
White House spokesman Ben LaBolt said "the administration continues to make progress on the president's longstanding commitment to promoting equality for [lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender] Americans."
...
The Census Bureau has long collected data on same-sex marriages when people chose to report it. White House officials said the previous administration interpreted the federal Defense of Marriage Act as prohibiting the release of the data. The Obama administration has abandoned that interpretation.
...
An accurate statistical snapshot of legally married same-sex couples may be elusive. Before the White House's plan emerged, Howard Hogan, associate director for demographic programs at the Census Bureau, said data from its 2007 American Community Survey showed more than 340,000 same-sex couples as being in marriages. But according to data from Massachusetts, the only state that permitted gay marriages in 2007, about 11,000 marriage licenses were issued for same-sex couples.
The Obama administration was under pressure to change the Census policy. Rep. Mike Quigley (D., Ill.) sent a letter Tuesday to Mr. Obama, urging him to order the bureau to release same-sex marriage data as part of its standard tabulation of the 2010 Census.
Democratic Reps. Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin, Steve Israel of New York and 51 other lawmakers wrote to White House Budget Director Peter Orszag last month, asking him to work with the bureau's parent agency, the Commerce Department, to reconsider the policy. Mr. Israel said the broad support for his letter shows that Congress has a real "appetite" for movement on this issue.
The original plan for handling these marriages in the 2010 Census was controversial among some statisticians and gay activists. Following procedures employed in 2000, the bureau had planned to use a computer program that recategorized spouses in same-sex marriages as unmarried partners. For the 1990 count, the bureau simply altered the gender designation of one partner.
Some members of the 2010 Census Advisory Committee, composed of private statisticians and members of nonprofit groups, said they think that the bureau has handled same-sex marriages irresponsibly. Ed Spar, a member of the committee and the executive director of the Council of Professional Associations on Federal Statistics, said altering data like the bureau has done with same-sex marriages "does not make any sense."
Read the full article here.
My comment:
Of course this is great news, but to the extent that a policy "doesn't make sense" (which this one obviously didn't), interest in seeing a better policy put in place is certainly not limited to the gay community.
Speaking as a straight American, life-long Democrat, and enthusiastic Obama supporter, I truly hope that this administration does not intend to waste a lot of its time congratulating itself in the press every single time similar policy corrections are made. I mean, this one was a no-brainer, right? So just fix it.
There'll be plenty of appreciation and admiration to go around once DADT and DOMA are gone.
In the meantime, please don't go framing every single positive policy change as a sop to concerned LGBT constituents. Such an approach is too divisive, time-consuming and transparently self-serving. Unfortunately, the way Obama is dragging his feet in this area, it's starting to look like maybe that's the plan, and that would be a real shame. Most of this stuff is about basic fairness and equality under the law and could get dealt with fairly expeditiously with the right leadership.
Not my normal beat, but I'm in the mood for a bit of good news ...
First, check this out from Mercury News:
Census study of gay married couples finds similarities to husband-and-wife couples

Looking at the numbers above, it seems pretty obvious that gay and straight married couples share more in common than either group might care to admit.
Then, check this out from The Wall Street Journal:
JUNE 19, 2009
White House Looks to Include Same-Sex Unions in Census Count
By JAKE SHERMAN
WASHINGTON -- The White House said Thursday it was seeking ways to include same-sex marriages, unions and partnerships in 2010 Census data, the second time in a week the administration has signaled a policy change of interest to the gay community.
...
The gay community strongly supported President Barack Obama during the 2008 election. But some gay activists say they have been frustrated by what they see as his slow approach to rolling back discriminatory policies.
White House spokesman Ben LaBolt said "the administration continues to make progress on the president's longstanding commitment to promoting equality for [lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender] Americans."
...
The Census Bureau has long collected data on same-sex marriages when people chose to report it. White House officials said the previous administration interpreted the federal Defense of Marriage Act as prohibiting the release of the data. The Obama administration has abandoned that interpretation.
...
An accurate statistical snapshot of legally married same-sex couples may be elusive. Before the White House's plan emerged, Howard Hogan, associate director for demographic programs at the Census Bureau, said data from its 2007 American Community Survey showed more than 340,000 same-sex couples as being in marriages. But according to data from Massachusetts, the only state that permitted gay marriages in 2007, about 11,000 marriage licenses were issued for same-sex couples.
The Obama administration was under pressure to change the Census policy. Rep. Mike Quigley (D., Ill.) sent a letter Tuesday to Mr. Obama, urging him to order the bureau to release same-sex marriage data as part of its standard tabulation of the 2010 Census.
Democratic Reps. Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin, Steve Israel of New York and 51 other lawmakers wrote to White House Budget Director Peter Orszag last month, asking him to work with the bureau's parent agency, the Commerce Department, to reconsider the policy. Mr. Israel said the broad support for his letter shows that Congress has a real "appetite" for movement on this issue.
The original plan for handling these marriages in the 2010 Census was controversial among some statisticians and gay activists. Following procedures employed in 2000, the bureau had planned to use a computer program that recategorized spouses in same-sex marriages as unmarried partners. For the 1990 count, the bureau simply altered the gender designation of one partner.
Some members of the 2010 Census Advisory Committee, composed of private statisticians and members of nonprofit groups, said they think that the bureau has handled same-sex marriages irresponsibly. Ed Spar, a member of the committee and the executive director of the Council of Professional Associations on Federal Statistics, said altering data like the bureau has done with same-sex marriages "does not make any sense."
Read the full article here.
My comment:
Of course this is great news, but to the extent that a policy "doesn't make sense" (which this one obviously didn't), interest in seeing a better policy put in place is certainly not limited to the gay community.
Speaking as a straight American, life-long Democrat, and enthusiastic Obama supporter, I truly hope that this administration does not intend to waste a lot of its time congratulating itself in the press every single time similar policy corrections are made. I mean, this one was a no-brainer, right? So just fix it.
There'll be plenty of appreciation and admiration to go around once DADT and DOMA are gone.
In the meantime, please don't go framing every single positive policy change as a sop to concerned LGBT constituents. Such an approach is too divisive, time-consuming and transparently self-serving. Unfortunately, the way Obama is dragging his feet in this area, it's starting to look like maybe that's the plan, and that would be a real shame. Most of this stuff is about basic fairness and equality under the law and could get dealt with fairly expeditiously with the right leadership.
Two Websites (NOM California & GAYS DEFEND MARRIAGE) ... One Shared Administrative Contact: David Benkof
Next time I get back to Brooklyn, I was planning on taking half a day to drop by the NOM office over in Princeton, NJ so I could make an in-person request to see their IRS filings. If they were to refuse, I was thinking I could go all David Parker on them.
Anyway, thing is, I wasn't sure of their office address, so I ran a WHOIS lookup to get it, and that's when I noticed the email they'd listed for their admin and tech contact: webbsgarbage@yahoo.com
Click this link and see for yourself:
www.networksolutions.com/whois-search/nomcalifornia.org
Now, click this link and see if you notice anything familiar on the page:
www.networksolutions.com/whois-search/gaysdefendmarriage.com
Not only do both domains share the same admin/tech email, but apparently webbsgarbage@yahoo.com belongs to David Benkof.
What does it all mean?
No idea, except that maybe Maggie and David's bunker has always been even smaller than I'd imagined.
Certainly, there's not much going on in the way of discussion over at Benkof's resurrected Gays Defend Marriage, where a familiar ragtag outfit of anti-gay weirdos drops by from time-to-time on patrol between their various outposts at NOM Blog, The Opine Editorials, and Beetle Blogger.
As Hendrik Hertzberg predicted, "Like a polluted swamp, anti-gay bigotry is likely to get thicker and more toxic as it dries up." Thing is, as long as a little water remains, you can still take the airboat out and have some fun buzzing the surface, but at this point, it looks like maybe the time has finally come to park it and pull on the puddle jumpers.
But before I start exaggerating reports of NOM's demise, can you believe this latest news? Maggie and Brian are launching NOM PAC New York.
NOM's P.R. notes, "Since its inception in July 2007, the NOM has raised more than $6 million in its efforts to defend marriage ..."
Yeah, and how much of that $6 million has been properly reported? Except for the $1.8 million spent on the Prop 8 campaign by NOM, we have no idea where NOM's funds are coming from or how they're being spent.
*Update* Just noticed that Maggie Gallagher lists webbsgarbage@yahoo.com as her email for these domains:
http://www.networksolutions.com/whois-search/marriagedebate.com
http://www.networksolutions.com/whois-search/iMAPP.org
Silliness.
What's the story, David?
*David responds by email:
In May of 2008, Maggie Gallagher did me a favor and helped me get my Web site set up. (I don't know anything about the techy part of it.) I don't, however, have any affiliation with NOM California or otherwise, and given my outspoken opposition to Prop. 8 I doubt they would want me to have one. I do however support much of their efforts.
Well, that settles that.
Time to get back to our regularly-scheduled program.
Anyway, thing is, I wasn't sure of their office address, so I ran a WHOIS lookup to get it, and that's when I noticed the email they'd listed for their admin and tech contact: webbsgarbage@yahoo.com
Click this link and see for yourself:
www.networksolutions.com/whois-search/nomcalifornia.org
Now, click this link and see if you notice anything familiar on the page:
www.networksolutions.com/whois-search/gaysdefendmarriage.com
Not only do both domains share the same admin/tech email, but apparently webbsgarbage@yahoo.com belongs to David Benkof.
What does it all mean?
No idea, except that maybe Maggie and David's bunker has always been even smaller than I'd imagined.
Certainly, there's not much going on in the way of discussion over at Benkof's resurrected Gays Defend Marriage, where a familiar ragtag outfit of anti-gay weirdos drops by from time-to-time on patrol between their various outposts at NOM Blog, The Opine Editorials, and Beetle Blogger.
As Hendrik Hertzberg predicted, "Like a polluted swamp, anti-gay bigotry is likely to get thicker and more toxic as it dries up." Thing is, as long as a little water remains, you can still take the airboat out and have some fun buzzing the surface, but at this point, it looks like maybe the time has finally come to park it and pull on the puddle jumpers.
But before I start exaggerating reports of NOM's demise, can you believe this latest news? Maggie and Brian are launching NOM PAC New York.
NOM's P.R. notes, "Since its inception in July 2007, the NOM has raised more than $6 million in its efforts to defend marriage ..."
Yeah, and how much of that $6 million has been properly reported? Except for the $1.8 million spent on the Prop 8 campaign by NOM, we have no idea where NOM's funds are coming from or how they're being spent.
*Update* Just noticed that Maggie Gallagher lists webbsgarbage@yahoo.com as her email for these domains:
http://www.networksolutions.com/whois-search/marriagedebate.com
http://www.networksolutions.com/whois-search/iMAPP.org
Silliness.
What's the story, David?
*David responds by email:
In May of 2008, Maggie Gallagher did me a favor and helped me get my Web site set up. (I don't know anything about the techy part of it.) I don't, however, have any affiliation with NOM California or otherwise, and given my outspoken opposition to Prop. 8 I doubt they would want me to have one. I do however support much of their efforts.
Well, that settles that.
Time to get back to our regularly-scheduled program.
Schadenfreude II: Lightning Strikes New Mormon (LDS) Temple
I'm telling you, Brother W. Scott Simpson, we're not the only ones upset by that ridiculous motion to dismiss that you helped write:
Schadenfreude: Official Mormon (LDS) Twitter Channel Gets Jacked
It wasn't "hacked" it was "jacked" ... sorry, Joe, but somebody on the inside knew the password and decided it was time for a little fun.
Blowback:
Scallywags.
Reprobates.
It wasn't me.
Osiris!
Hilarity ensues.
Mormon-owned KSL weighs in with this from Joe Cannon: "It's a problem, yeah, I'd say it's a big problem that Twitter has, yeah."
Blowback:
Scallywags.
Reprobates.
It wasn't me.
Osiris!
Hilarity ensues.
Mormon-owned KSL weighs in with this from Joe Cannon: "It's a problem, yeah, I'd say it's a big problem that Twitter has, yeah."
Calling New Jersey: NOM Needs Another House Call
Californians Against Hate have twice had their representatives go by the Princeton, New Jersey offices of the National Organization for Marriage to get copies of NOM's IRS 990 reports, to no avail.
NOM is required by federal law to have these available for public view. FWIW, in addition to having reps drop by, two certified letters have already been sent to the NOM office from CAH:

To no avail.
Under IRS rules, failure to respond brings fines of $20 per day up to $10,000 per committee until the financial disclosures are made public.
In other words ... Peanuts.
And as fun as this was ...
... what we need now is for those of you living in or near Princeton, NJ to drop in and personally request to see the Form 990s that should rightfully be available for you to see:
National Organization for Marriage
20 Nassau Street, Suite 242
Princeton, NJ 08542
Phone: (609) 688-0450
Fax: (888) 894-3604
Months have passed without any movement on this from the IRS, so it's time to step it up. As fun as it's been to mock NOM, unless we figure out a way to enforce their adherence to the same rules that the rest of us live and work by every day in this contest, they will - win or lose - be having a last laugh at our expense ... unless we somehow succeed in our quest to be shown the Form 990s that we all have every right to see.
NOM is required by federal law to have these available for public view. FWIW, in addition to having reps drop by, two certified letters have already been sent to the NOM office from CAH:

To no avail.
Under IRS rules, failure to respond brings fines of $20 per day up to $10,000 per committee until the financial disclosures are made public.
In other words ... Peanuts.
And as fun as this was ...
... what we need now is for those of you living in or near Princeton, NJ to drop in and personally request to see the Form 990s that should rightfully be available for you to see:
National Organization for Marriage
20 Nassau Street, Suite 242
Princeton, NJ 08542
Phone: (609) 688-0450
Fax: (888) 894-3604
Months have passed without any movement on this from the IRS, so it's time to step it up. As fun as it's been to mock NOM, unless we figure out a way to enforce their adherence to the same rules that the rest of us live and work by every day in this contest, they will - win or lose - be having a last laugh at our expense ... unless we somehow succeed in our quest to be shown the Form 990s that we all have every right to see.
Stand 4 Marriage rally in Albany: FLOP

Stand for Marriage Rally
East Steps, Capitol (Albany, NY)
Tuesday, June 9, 2009
Participants at Tuesday’s rally encouraged state senators to vote “no” on same-sex marriage legislation.
The rally began at 10:30 AM and featured speakers:
• New York State Senator Reverend Ruben Diaz (D – Bronx)
• Mr. Michael Long, Chairman, New York State Conservative Party
• Tony Perkins, President, Family Research Council
• Bishop Harry Jackson, Jr., Executive Director, High Impact Leadership Coalition
• Maggie Gallagher, President, National Organization for Marriage
• Bishop Joseph Mattera, Presiding Bishop of Christ Covenant Coalition
• Rev. George Grace, Senior Pastor, First Bible Baptist Church, Rochester
• Rev. Duane Motley, Executive Director, New Yorkers for Constitutional Freedoms
• Other pro-family leaders and state legislators
It was HUGE!!! Take a look:
A huge flop.
The bigot brigade is claiming 2,000 turned out.
It was hundreds.
Not to mention that Maggie/NOM and Tony/FRC had both issued PR's announcing a press conference to be held after the rally, and then ... nada, crickets, nothing more than the brief snippet of Duane Motley speaking that ran on a single local newscast. Pathetic.
Be sure to check out this worthy report from Blabbeando.
Learn how you can support the effort to achieve marriage equality in New York at MarriageNY.com.
Further resources at Empire State Pride Agenda's marriage site.
This Week in Utah: Cleve Jones and a gay bashing
Jennifer Dobner's AP report in the WaPo: Gay rights activist calls for march on Washington
JoSelle Vanderhooft interviews Cleve Jones for QSaltLake here.
Deseret News reports:
Cleve Jones in Salt Lake City: Thank you, Mormons!
Cleve Jones Announces LGBT March on Washington DC for October 11:
Meanwhile, ABC4 reports on a gay bashing in Ogden:
By the way, check out this Facebook event page: Pray and Fast New York
It's ostensibly an appeal to New Yorkers, but funny thing is, all I see are the names of Mormons from Utah and California on that page (e.g., Angela Rockwood, Emily Dyer). So, even if you're not from New York, please feel free to drop by and leave a snarky comment (leaving a comment is the only interaction allowed on that page - after several NOM Facebook debacles, they've gotten smart and hidden the guest list this time around).
JoSelle Vanderhooft interviews Cleve Jones for QSaltLake here.
Deseret News reports:
Bursts of torrential rain did little to dampen the spirits of those gathered to cheer Jones, who served as the parade's grand marshal; local political figures; and the dozens of floats that made up this year's procession — a highlight of the three-day Utah Pride Festival at Washington Square that drew more than 20,000 attendees. After the parade, Jones told a festival crowd that it is time to reprise a 1979 march for gay rights on the nation's capital and demand full equality. He said the march, planned for Oct. 11, will coincide with National Coming Out Day.Cleve Jones sits down with Utah's Fox13:
"We seek nothing more and nothing less than equal protection under the law in all matters governed by civil law in all 50 states," Jones said. "It is time to march again."
"I've got a message for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints," he said. "Thank you. Thank you for uniting us. Thank you for galvanizing us," he said, referring to the efforts of the church and its members to win passage last year of California's Proposition 8, which overturned a court ruling legalizing gay marriage.
Cleve Jones in Salt Lake City: Thank you, Mormons!
Cleve Jones Announces LGBT March on Washington DC for October 11:
Meanwhile, ABC4 reports on a gay bashing in Ogden:
By the way, check out this Facebook event page: Pray and Fast New York
It's ostensibly an appeal to New Yorkers, but funny thing is, all I see are the names of Mormons from Utah and California on that page (e.g., Angela Rockwood, Emily Dyer). So, even if you're not from New York, please feel free to drop by and leave a snarky comment (leaving a comment is the only interaction allowed on that page - after several NOM Facebook debacles, they've gotten smart and hidden the guest list this time around).
Karen Ocamb interviews Ted Olson: All of us have the right to due process and equal protection
Originally published at Frontiers.
Republished here without permission.
Many in the LGBT community were stunned at the news that Ted Olson, a famous conservative and the former solicitor general under President George W. Bush, was joining forces with equally famous liberal attorney David Boies to bring a marriage-equality case in federal court.
Olson was asked to represent two same-sex couples by openly gay political consultant Chad Griffin, who formed a new group—American Foundation for Equal Rights—to support the endeavor.
The case, filed May 26 in the U.S. District Court in San Francisco, asks the federal courts to strike down Proposition 8 as a violation of the federal equal protection and due process clauses of the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution; and it asks for an injunction against enforcement of Prop. 8.
“We’re going to court because people shouldn’t have to surrender their fundamental rights to a popular plebiscite,” Olson told reporters at a May 27 news conference. “People should not have to beg to be treated equally or wait for decades for popular approval to be treated equally.”
“Mr. Olson and I are from different ends of the political spectrum,” said Boies, Olson’s rival in Bush v. Gore in 2000. “But we are fighting this case together because Proposition 8 clearly and fundamentally violates the freedoms guaranteed to all of us by the Constitution. Every American has a right to full equality under the law. Same-sex couples are entitled to the same marriage rights as straight couples. Any alternative is separate and unequal and relegates gays and lesbians to a second-class status.”
Asked about what LGBT legal groups consider the “ill-timing” of the case, with its serious consequences if they lose, Olson said they have thoroughly studied the case, they’re constitutional experts who know what they’re doing, and they don’t intend to fail the same-sex couples.
“We are not going to say to them, ‘Why don’t you wait for another 10 years or 15 years?’ We can’t say that to them. We think they’re right, we think their constitutional rights are being denied, and we’re going to help them achieve that equality.”
Noting his association with the conservative Federalist Society, Frontiers in L.A. asked Olson about his motives in taking the case.
“I don't think I’ve ever been part of any organization that was anti-gay or felt that a group was not entitled to equal rights,” Olson said. He is with the Los Angeles-based law firm of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP, which has a strong LGBT group. “I hope people don’t suspect my motives; I feel very strongly that this is the right position—the right position for America. I hope people will believe me.”
Boies said Olson was “warm” and “committed in his heart and soul to equality.”
In a follow-up interview with Frontiers, Olson said he never supported or endorsed the federal marriage amendment or Colorado Amendment 2, as some have suggested. Olson also said he would not discuss how the case is being funded, only that both law firms are contributing. He said they think they have the five necessary Supreme Court votes based on the outcome of 2003’s Lawrence v. Texas, which struck down anti-sodomy laws.
When Frontiers noted that one blogger said that “Ted Freaking Olson is now better on marriage equality than Barack Obama,” Olson laughed.
“Well, I think that’s good,” Olson said. “To be serious for a moment, one of the reasons why David Boies—for whom I have the most enormous respect—and I are working together on this is to send that kind of a signal: That it isn’t a political thing. It is not a Republican or Democratic or liberal or conservative thing; it’s an American thing. And it’s equality, and I think … what we were both hoping to do is that we would make it easier for other people, including politicians, to get out of the corner and come out and say, ‘This is the right thing to do. And if David Boies and Ted Olson can come together to do it, then we can too. What’s our excuse for not taking a position?’ And I hope we can have that kind of an effect.”
Asked if he thinks sexual orientation is innate or a choice, Olson said he had not really thought about it, but his clients and co-workers say it is a matter of genetics. “What I think fundamentally is that an individual’s sexual orientation should not be the standard by which rights are given or withheld. And however that sexual orientation comes about is irrelevant from that standpoint. We shouldn’t go examining that sort of thing and making that the standard—the gate by which people pass through in order to have the freedom of speech or the freedom of religion or the freedom to marry.”
Olson looks at gays as individuals, not as a minority. “I have a difficult time bunching people up in groups and passing out rights or privileges according to groups. The Constitution speaks of the rights of individuals—all of us have these individual rights to due process and equal protection. And whether a person is alone or a part of a community, that individual is entitled to our constitutional protections.”
Asked why he took the case, Olson said, “I’ve always been of the view that we don’t discriminate against people on the basis of their sexual orientation. We all have friends and family—I don’t have a family member who’s gay—but we all have friends and co-workers and neighbors and so forth [who are gay], and they are citizens and they are our friends and they should be treated equally. And we have an obligation to stand up for them.”
Follow AFER on Facebook here.
Enjoy:
Republished here without permission.
Many in the LGBT community were stunned at the news that Ted Olson, a famous conservative and the former solicitor general under President George W. Bush, was joining forces with equally famous liberal attorney David Boies to bring a marriage-equality case in federal court.
Olson was asked to represent two same-sex couples by openly gay political consultant Chad Griffin, who formed a new group—American Foundation for Equal Rights—to support the endeavor.
The case, filed May 26 in the U.S. District Court in San Francisco, asks the federal courts to strike down Proposition 8 as a violation of the federal equal protection and due process clauses of the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution; and it asks for an injunction against enforcement of Prop. 8.
“We’re going to court because people shouldn’t have to surrender their fundamental rights to a popular plebiscite,” Olson told reporters at a May 27 news conference. “People should not have to beg to be treated equally or wait for decades for popular approval to be treated equally.”
“Mr. Olson and I are from different ends of the political spectrum,” said Boies, Olson’s rival in Bush v. Gore in 2000. “But we are fighting this case together because Proposition 8 clearly and fundamentally violates the freedoms guaranteed to all of us by the Constitution. Every American has a right to full equality under the law. Same-sex couples are entitled to the same marriage rights as straight couples. Any alternative is separate and unequal and relegates gays and lesbians to a second-class status.”
Asked about what LGBT legal groups consider the “ill-timing” of the case, with its serious consequences if they lose, Olson said they have thoroughly studied the case, they’re constitutional experts who know what they’re doing, and they don’t intend to fail the same-sex couples.
“We are not going to say to them, ‘Why don’t you wait for another 10 years or 15 years?’ We can’t say that to them. We think they’re right, we think their constitutional rights are being denied, and we’re going to help them achieve that equality.”
Noting his association with the conservative Federalist Society, Frontiers in L.A. asked Olson about his motives in taking the case.
“I don't think I’ve ever been part of any organization that was anti-gay or felt that a group was not entitled to equal rights,” Olson said. He is with the Los Angeles-based law firm of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP, which has a strong LGBT group. “I hope people don’t suspect my motives; I feel very strongly that this is the right position—the right position for America. I hope people will believe me.”
Boies said Olson was “warm” and “committed in his heart and soul to equality.”
In a follow-up interview with Frontiers, Olson said he never supported or endorsed the federal marriage amendment or Colorado Amendment 2, as some have suggested. Olson also said he would not discuss how the case is being funded, only that both law firms are contributing. He said they think they have the five necessary Supreme Court votes based on the outcome of 2003’s Lawrence v. Texas, which struck down anti-sodomy laws.
When Frontiers noted that one blogger said that “Ted Freaking Olson is now better on marriage equality than Barack Obama,” Olson laughed.
“Well, I think that’s good,” Olson said. “To be serious for a moment, one of the reasons why David Boies—for whom I have the most enormous respect—and I are working together on this is to send that kind of a signal: That it isn’t a political thing. It is not a Republican or Democratic or liberal or conservative thing; it’s an American thing. And it’s equality, and I think … what we were both hoping to do is that we would make it easier for other people, including politicians, to get out of the corner and come out and say, ‘This is the right thing to do. And if David Boies and Ted Olson can come together to do it, then we can too. What’s our excuse for not taking a position?’ And I hope we can have that kind of an effect.”
Asked if he thinks sexual orientation is innate or a choice, Olson said he had not really thought about it, but his clients and co-workers say it is a matter of genetics. “What I think fundamentally is that an individual’s sexual orientation should not be the standard by which rights are given or withheld. And however that sexual orientation comes about is irrelevant from that standpoint. We shouldn’t go examining that sort of thing and making that the standard—the gate by which people pass through in order to have the freedom of speech or the freedom of religion or the freedom to marry.”
Olson looks at gays as individuals, not as a minority. “I have a difficult time bunching people up in groups and passing out rights or privileges according to groups. The Constitution speaks of the rights of individuals—all of us have these individual rights to due process and equal protection. And whether a person is alone or a part of a community, that individual is entitled to our constitutional protections.”
Asked why he took the case, Olson said, “I’ve always been of the view that we don’t discriminate against people on the basis of their sexual orientation. We all have friends and family—I don’t have a family member who’s gay—but we all have friends and co-workers and neighbors and so forth [who are gay], and they are citizens and they are our friends and they should be treated equally. And we have an obligation to stand up for them.”
Follow AFER on Facebook here.
Enjoy:
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Mormons, Marriage, Miscellanies
- Survey: Exploration of Experiences of and Resources for Same-sex Attracted Latter Day Saints
- Let Fred In, CNN
- Fred Karger to be First to File for President With the Federal Election Commission
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- 2010′s twenty most talked-about tenuously-Mormon superstars
- Fred Karger: It Gets Better
- DAMU, I Thank You
- The Mormons invite "Big Love" writer Dustin Lance Black & Friends to MoTab X-mas Concert
- Jimmy Carter: Is the country ready for Fred Karger?
- My name is Jean Bodie and I’m an Ex Mormon.
- "Disciples" explores three exmormon lives
- Hi, my name is Sarah and I’m an Ex Mormon.
- Fred Karger joins Marc Ambinder to talk GOP debates, DADT, and shaking things up
- “Hi, my name is Mike and I’m an Ex Mormon.”
- Fred's Iowa Ad: Independence Day
- “Hi, my name is Peter Danzig, and I’m an Ex Mormon.”
- “Hi, my name is Michelle and I’m an Ex Mormon.”
- “Hi, my name is Mary Danzig and I’m an Ex Mormon.”
- Suicide Prevention Outreach and Candlelight Vigil at Mesa Mormon Temple
- Tyrell Wolfgang Owens fails to set a good Mormon example
- Why are Mormons so successful?
- Why are Mormons so rich?
- Why are Mormons so attractive?
- Why are Mormons so secretive?
- Why are Mormons so good-looking?
- Why are Mormons so happy?
- Why are Mormons so stupid?
- Why are Mormons so hot?
- Why are Mormons so nice?
- Why are Mormons so weird?
- Meet the Republican who got California and Maine to investigate NOM and the Mormon church and now intends to debate Mitt Romney on national TV
- Mollie Ziegler Hemingway wants to pin a murder on Prop 8 backlash. Don't let her.
- Hi, my name is Robert, and I’m an ex-Mormon.
- Hi, I’m Sarah and I’m a Mormon.
- Chino Blanco has relocated to Main Street Plaza
- “If I see Harry Reid in the temple, I’m going to hit him.”
- Protest planned for San Diego leg of Mitt Romney's book tour
- What is it with Utah and standing ovations? Cardinal George got one, too.
- Utah House Majority Leader Kevin Garn Gets His Standing Ovation
- BYU Management Society to award NOM director Orson Scott Card
- And the Brodie goes to ...
- Attention! Spawn of Brodie: You have until 2/22 to vote for 2009 Brodie award nominees
- Critically-acclaimed author Walter Kirn named X-Mormon of the Year 2009
- Mormon pollster Gary Lawrence: I'm the idiot who wrote "Six Consequences"
- Sundance exposure leads to Buttars meltdown
- Main Street Plaza now accepting nominations for 2009 X-Mormon of the Year
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- Gentile of the Year 2009 Award: Freep this Poll for Fred Karger!
- Vote Now for Mormon of the Year!
- LDS Church issues statement on Rex Rammell
- Idaho gubernatorial candidate Rex Rammell announces Mormon-only male-only campaign rallies
- Ben McAdams, Utah's newest state senator: "I plan to be a visible ally for gay and transgendered Utahns."
- 8: THE MORMON PROPOSITION will premiere at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival
- Chris Buttars and Christine Johnson to Co-Sponsor Utah Gay Rights Bill?
- Thanksgiving Video Wall: Jimmy Kimmel, Chris Buttars, Sutherland Institute, Gayle Ruzicka, new EQCA ad, No on 1 docYoumentary
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- Mormon leadership comes out in support of (some) basic rights for (some) LGBT Utahns.
- Mormon Pollster Gary Lawrence: We Want Negative Buzz
- Transitory Psychosis: The debate that Yes on 1 doesn't want you to see!
- Fresh Vids: Moritz/Jones family, WGME debate, Gov. Baldacci, UMaine GOTV
- Maine Business Coalition Speaks Out For Marriage Equality
- Yes on 1 just called Monique Hoeflinger a liar. I hope they're ready to back up that accusation.
- Maine's Yes on 1 crew are a bunch of jerks
- 3 out of 4 ain't bad (unless you're NOM)
- D.T. in D.C.: Federal gov’t must investigate NOM’s finances
- ProtectMarriage.com v. Bowen
- 8: The Mormon Proposition (Pre-Sundance Update)
- A faithful, earnest, calm Mormon testifies against Prop 8 in church
- Swiftboating Same-Sex Marriage in Maine
- AAPC Video: Frank Schubert and Jeff Flint Discussing Prop 8 Tactics and Techniques
- Utah Reacts to Obama's Speech to US Students
- Dustin Lance Black Testimony for Harvey Milk Day
- National Organization for Marriage (NOM) 2007 Tax Return (Form 990)
- Weekend Video Roundup: BYU-Hawaii, Utah Gov. Herbert, SLC ordinance, ELCA
- Hey, NOM, you don't find your new H Street DC office a bit ... crowded?
- "No on 1" Protect Maine Equality | Meet Ron Schwizer and Doug Kimmel
- A "Perfect Storm" of Bad PR for the LDS (Mormon) Church
- Wedding Anniversary Sparks Gay Marriage Debate
- AP: Gay marriage fight, "kiss-ins" smack Mormon image
- Letter to Maine Election Officials: Watch Out for Money Laundering by NOM & Others
- SaveLiam.org : Help bring Liam McCarty home to his father
- California CD-10 Open Election: David Harmer and GOP violate election code
- Gorillas in the Mist: Mormon Main Street Plaza Surveillance Video
- Seven-Year-Old Utah Boy Makes His Getaway From Church
- LDS Main Street Plaza Kiss Surveillance Video
- Mormon-owned KSL.com: We strive to be a family-friendly site, unless the topic is gay
- Trapped in a Mormon Gulag, The Sequel
- KSL commenters weigh in on The Nationwide Kiss-In
- Ted Olson: A conservative for gay rights
- Weekend Video Roundup: Kiss and Make Up (Utah Edition)
- Mormon Gulag Money Trail: Utah Sen. Chris Buttars has Some Finances to Explain
- Useful info about organizing a Kiss-In in your area on August 15th
- August 15: The Great Nationwide Kiss-In (Facebook)
- Elegy for a Lesbian Anarchist
- LDS law professor Nate Oman: Why Conservatives Should Support Gay Marriage
- Pew Forum: A Portrait of Mormons in the U.S.
- Ron Prentice Speaks, July 2009 Edition
- Blabbeando: Must-See Interview with Ruben Diaz, Jr.
- Mormon Prophet Thomas S. Monson meets with President Obama
- Idaho Spoil Sports: Male wrestling team banned from wearing bikinis
- Why Ted Olson and I are working to overturn California's Proposition 8
- Utah NOW: The Fallout of Prop 8
- Knock, Knock, Anybody NOM?
- Calling all Gilbert, AZ friends: How many Mormon actors in NOM's "Gathering Storm" ad?
- Nobody Knows: The Untold Story of Interracial Mormon Marriages
- Danielle TRUSZKOVSKY: Meet your anti-gay adversaries
- Weekend Video Roundup: Why We Fight (Idaho Edition)
- NEWS RELEASE: Where's the Money, Maggie?
- Danielle TRUSZKOVSKY: Deception, Denial and Opus Dei
- NOM Chairman Robert P. George: "Utah will be whipped into line."
- Idaho Local TV Report Asks: What Is A Family?
- National Organization for Marriage, Inc.
- White House Looks to Include Same-Sex Unions in Census Count
- Schadenfreude II: Lightning Strikes New Mormon (LDS) Temple
- Schadenfreude: Official Mormon (LDS) Twitter Channel Gets Jacked
- Calling New Jersey: NOM Needs Another House Call
- Stand 4 Marriage rally in Albany: FLOP
- This Week in Utah: Cleve Jones and a gay bashing
- Karen Ocamb interviews Ted Olson: All of us have the right to due process and equal protection
- 8: The Mormon Proposition (Interview w/ director Reed Cowan)
- PBS: Mormons and Prop 8
- BYU-Idaho dissolves student political parties
- The New York Marriage Fund
- New York Marriage Equality: Astroturfing - Courtesy of the Same Ten (Mormon) People
- Thank you, Governor Lynch. Thank you, Amelia.
- Pastor may have lost post over Prop 8
- NOM and Cornerstone Policy Research Present: "I'm Confused"
- About that CPR-A Cornerstone Policy Research New Hampshire "Poll"
- Heroes vs Zeroes: another NOM FAIL, this time on CNN
- The LDS Church, Proposition 8, and the Federal Law of Charities
- Pres. Obama's Mother Baptized by Proxy in Mormon Temple
- Outrage: The Movie
- Note to my Mormon friends at UFI, NOM and the Digital Network Army (DNA)
- Marie Osmond Talks About Her Daughter's Civil Rights
- "No Offense" but the latest NOM ad barely rates a mention
- How many Mormon actors in NOM's "Gathering Storm" ad?
- Check out NOM's Stand4Marriage Rally facebook page
- Preeminence vs Partisanship - Utah Gov. Huntsman: Equal rights are important. NOM? Not so much.
- Monrovia City Council Election Results: Shaw in, but is Kirby out?
- William Duncan of Utah is in Maine this week to Testify against LD 1020
- Mormon Sci-Fi Author Orson Scott Card Joins National Organization for Marriage Board
- Mormon Scion Matthew S. Holland Quits the NOM Board
- Stephen Colbert May or May Not Get a Call from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints about his new Ad
- Utah Tea Party Roundup
- Mormons for Marriage at Sunstone West
- Glenn Beck is still Mormon. Glenn Beck is still Insane.
- The Making of a National Organization for Marriage (NOM) TV Ad
- The Quorum of the Twelve Apostates
- No Protest Planned for LDS (Mormon) General Conference
- Glenn Beck is Mormon. Glenn Beck is Insane.
- Marriage equality rally in Montpelier, Vermont
- BAR: All sides pledge speedy Prop 8 federal case
- Robert P. George makes a funny
- Nate Silver's model predicts statistically favorable environment for marriage equality in 50% of US states by 2012
- The Mormon Church is Fighting Civil Unions in Hawaii (HB444)
- Mormongate II
- MormonTV: LDS manipulation of Social Media and the hyperpolarization of America
- HBO vs. LDS: The Mormons strike back
- Truth and Consequences: Mitt Romney, Proposition 8, and Public Reason
- Latest ARIS (American Religious Identification Survey) Stats
- American Religious Identification Survey: From 1990-2008, Mormon church in America grew 0.0% ... Mormons still 1.4% of US population
- 8: The Mormon Proposition
- LA Times has photos of "America Forever" at SF Prop 8 hearing
- "America Forever" traveled to SF from Utah to attend Prop 8 hearing.
- Buttars-Palooza!
- Ottawa, ON - Manning Networking Conference & Exhibition 2009 - March 14, 9am -12pm: Frank Schubert & Jaime Watt
- Live Video - CA Supreme Court Hearings - March 5, 9am-12noon
- FOX13 - Nov. 4th, 2008 segment about Prop 8 and the LDS church
- FOX13 - Nov. 4th, 2008 segment about Prop 8 and one LDS family
- Frank Schubert and Jeff Flint: Mormon leaders were members of the Yes on 8 campaign executive committee
- 30 Years on ... from 'The Times of Harvey Milk' to Dustin Lance Black
- Utah NOW Feb. 6 Program: Common Ground
- Chris Buttars YouTube Dump
- Mormons at the Door: Can social conservatives assimilate the LDS into their movement?
- Gayle Ruzicka and Karen Merkley persuade Utah legislature to block another Common Ground bill
- Utah State Senator Chris Buttars: Gays are "probably the greatest threat to America going down I know of."
- Utah GOP renews attack on marriage, family
- Utah lawmakers kill two more gay-rights bills
- Salt Lake County OKs adult-designees' benefits
- Utah lawmakers kill a third gay-rights bill
- Gayle Ruzicka is acquainted with the folks who ran that "America Forever" ad
- "America Forever" broke Utah law with their ad: Tell Dept. of Commerce Dir. Francine Giani to DO HER JOB ... fgiani@utah.gov
- New KSL/Deseret News Poll: 47% of Utahns support civil unions, 80% approve of civil union-supporting governor
- Utah Gothic: Gayle Ruzicka would rather be right than do right
- SL Trib's Winters: 'Hateful' ad heats up rhetoric on gay rights
- SL Trib's Walsh: America Forever, may you get cash
- America Forever's Sandra Rodrigues: "Stop Same Sex Marriage: It Endorses Masturbation."
- 1999: America Forever and Utah Eagle Forum together at Utah Senate committee hearing (PDF)
- 2004: America Forever and Utah Eagle Forum together at Utah House committee meeting (PDF)
- 2005: America Forever and Utah Eagle Forum together at Utah Senate committee hearing (PDF)
- 2006: America Forever and Utah Eagle Forum together at Utah House committee hearing (PDF)
- 2006 Deseret News report: How the Eagle Forum-America Forever Two-Step Works ... Rodrigues charges in, Ruzicka claims "neutrality"
- Is the Utah Eagle Forum funding America Forever?
- I don't believe America Forever paid for this ad. Someone else did.
- Article on Matthew Hilton and his role in the Weaver case
- Mathew Hilton has served as legal counsel for both America Forever and the Utah Eagle Forum
- Utah Eagle Forum (Gayle Ruzicka) shares same attorney (Matthew Hilton) with America Forever
- America Forever Foundation makes a new friend
- America Forever founder: "Homosexuality" sounds like "chocolate cake and ice cream."
- Salt Lake Crawler live blogs the America Forever protest at Utah's capitol.
- "America Forever Foundation" Places Full-Page Ad in SL Tribune
- Utah's very own Phelps family: the America Forever Foundation
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Posted without comment: Polygamy 'Awareness Day' at the Utah State Capitol
- Mr. Karger Goes to Utah: 'Californians Against Hate' Bring Boycott and Mormongate to Salt Lake City
- B.A.R.: Prop 8 foes slow to pick up on Mormon involvement
- Rebecca Walsh of The Salt Lake Tribune: Guv, church play gay politics
- Good News: Boycott against Utah car dealer may already be over before it's begun
- Sutherland Institute hosts meeting of ‘Sacred Ground Initiative'
- Utah Gov. Huntsman: Republican, Mormon, supports the Common Ground Initiative and Civil Unions
- Utah's governor endorses civil unions
- Utahns, LDS Church spent more on Prop. 8 than previously known
- Gayle Ruzicka: There is no common ground - We oppose all attempts to secure equal rights for gay Utahns
- SACRED GROUND Meeting Recap: Excellent write-up (and discussion) re a recent Utah event (Sutherland Institute vs. Common Ground Initiative)
- Don Eaton, Mormon spokesman: "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints put zero money into [Prop 8]."
- Ding Dong DOMA will soon be dead
- BYU Law Prof. Lynn Wardle: Gayle Ruzicka, Chris Buttars and LaVar Christensen are delusional
- Bay Area Reporter: The Mormon factor in marriage fight (as usual, B.A.R. did its homework)
- Mormongate
- See the ad that ran in the SL Trib and Deseret News from Equality Utah
- Andrew Sullivan: Calling Mormon Bluff ... Equality Utah's ad campaign rocks!
- If you've been harassed by Prop 8 supporters, please let Sarah Troupis know about it: stroupis@bopplaw.com
- Prop 8 fallout: For Utah, it's real, and it's already happening
- LAT: Mormon church reports spending $180,000 on Proposition 8
- First of Six Common Ground Initiatives Fails During Second Day of Legislative Session
- Walsh: End LDS-legislator huddle (Rebecca takes notice of the theocracy)
- Utah Politics Explained: LDS Church OK with alternative liquor law = passage assured (nope, no theocracy here)
- Maine: The Republican Project puts marriage equality in its sights
- Maine: a blog run by some of the crew behind The Republican Project
- It's been fun, but now it's time for Chino to take a break.
- Prop 8 inspires new army of Utah activists
- Poll: Utahns back some gay rights, but not weddings or adoptions
- Jeff Flint is still a dork
- Next stop: Maine
- Prop 8 - Did Mormons Go Too Far?
- Proposition 8 boycott cited in decision to nix annual visit to Park City
- Sundance: Why Journalists Are Staying Home
- ABC Nightline runs Mormon puff piece, deletes comments
- Ted Haggard talks marriage equality
- NPR: The group invited to dine with two top Mormon officials included Politico, ABC News, The Associated Press and me.
- Nightline: Mormons Open Doors to Discuss Religion
- 8 MAPS
- bigots want to be able to put a white sheet over their heads while they engage in their campaigns of hate
- Listen in: The author of "Trapped in a Mormon Gulag" discusses Utah Boys Ranch on KRCL.org @ 6 PM MST on Friday, Jan 9th
- Richard J. Neuhaus, RIP
- Richard John Neuhaus: Is Mormonism Christian?
- Yahoo! News: Calif. gay marriage foes want donors anonymous
- SL Tribune: Calif. gay marriage foes want donors anonymous
- AP: Calif. gay marriage foes want donors anonymous
- Prop 8 Supports File Lawsuit: Remove Public Access to Donor Records
- Yes on 8 Campaign: Proposition 8 Proponents Challenge Campaign Finance Reporting Rules That Have Resulted in Rampant Harassment of Prop 8 Supporters
- NRO to James Bopp, Jr.: "Psst! James! We're Supposed to Be for Secret Ballots!"
- James Bopp, Jr.: "Putting the names ... on the Internet ... has caused serious problems."
- WND: Lawsuit seeks safeguards from gay 'harassment'
- Prop 8 Supporters Want to Hide Their Donations
- Prop. 8 donors sue to take names off of list after harassment, threats
- Prop 8 Supporters (Not Gays) Are The True Victims Of Prop 8?
- Prop. 8 supporters want donors anonymous
- ProtectMarriage gets all sneaky
- Poor, Poor Catholics! Poor Poor Mormons!! Boo Hoo
- Same-Sex Marriage Foes Afraid to Stand by their Donations
- Fred Karger on the PropH8 crybabies
- Proposition 8 Donors Challenge Campaign Finance Laws
- Well they've already altered one law, why not another?
- Proposition 8 contributors ask California court to hide their shame
- Calif. gay marriage foes want donors anonymous
- Gay marriage foes want campaign contributions anonymous, citing 'harassment'
- Anti-Gay Donors Spooked
- Protect Marriage, NOM & Mormon Church Looks for Sympathy in Federal Law Suit
- Prop. 8 supporters file fed suit challenging campaign donor disclosure laws
- "Disclosure is unconstitutional", or, the next step toward corporate theocracy in California
- Yes on 8 Sues to Destroy Campaign Finance Laws
- ProtectMarriage.com Files Suit to Hide Identities of Campaign Donors
- Prop. 8 supporters file challenge to campaign donor laws
- Protectmarriage.com sues to hide its campaign donor records
- Trapped in a Mormon Gulag
- O Captain! My Captain! Rise up and hear the bells ...
- Salt Lake Tribune: Sundance to screen a leaner, quieter festival
- Documentary Short Film: A Mormon and Shoshone Experience
- For the first time in eons, this week hundreds of beds in Park City are empty.
- LAT - Bob Barr, author of the Defense of Marriage Act: DOMA is now indefensible
- The Online Lunchpail: Right-wing lawmaker ran gulag
- one utah: Trapped in a Mormon Gulag
- LAT: Park City hotel bookings are down 15-25%, room prices slashed during this year's Sundance festival
- Latter-Day Protest? Proposition 8 and Sports
- While everyone who voted for Prop 8 may have succeeded within the narrow confines of their particular belief system, they have failed utterly as Americans.
- Trapped In A Mormon Gulag
- Fenella Cannell (London School of Economics): The Christianity of Anthropology (PDF) ... (of course, it's all about Mormons)
- Focus on the Family: Mitt Romney Admits Mormons Are Not Christian
- Dobson Caves to Evangelicals Who Call Glenn Beck a Cultist
- Rewind to January 2008: Focus on the Family claims: "Mitt Romney has 'acknowledged Mormonism is not a Christian faith'."
- Polygamy should be understood not primarily as a marital practice but as a kinship system
- CESNUR + Marriott Library + U. of Utah + Salt Lake City Mayor's Office to jointly host a conference? That's nuts. Google "CESNUR"
- Edge of Sports: Latter Day Protest? Proposition 8 and Sports
- OpEdNews: Latter Day Protest? Proposition 8 and Sports
- SL Tribune: Park City activist claims censorship by newspapers
- ParkRecord: Salt Lake City papers hike price of ad against Prop 8
- MT: Glenn Beck and Dobson's group respond to Web site ban
- American Chronicle: Dobson Throws Glenn Beck Under the Bus
- U.S. News & World Report: Focus on the Family Pulls Interview With Mormon Glenn Beck
- TWO: Focus on the Family at Odds with Christians over Mormon Promo
- Christianity Today: Focus on the Family Pulls Interview over Beck's Mormon Faith
- Colo. Springs Gazette: Focus Action axes Glenn Beck story after evangelicals complain
- SL Tribune: Focus on the Family pulls interview over Beck's Mormon faith
- Mormon Mothers Speak Out for their Gay and Lesbian Children
- SL Tribune: Then as now
- Mike Connell and Proposition 8
- SL Tribune: 27,000 letters urge LDS leader to back rights of gay Utahns
- Legacies (1996)
- D.N.A.
- SL Tribune: Christian soldiers
- We will not go away
- 1988 - 1998: Chronology Of Mormon Involvement In Same-Sex Marriage Politics (PDF)
- June 23, 2008: $19,715 donation of legal services to Prop 8 from the LDS church (PDF)
- SL Tribune: A reminder from 1963 - Protests affect LDS
- SL Tribune: One more reason Jacob Whipple rocks - SLC's first LGBT community Town Hall
- The Newsweek Poll / No More Excuses
- Prop 8 Q&A with Mormon Pollster Gary Lawrence
- Mormon Tabernacle Choir and BYU Performing Arts Tour Schedules
- Richard Cizik Resigns from the National Association of Evangelicals
- Kenji Yoshino - Prop. 8: Which Way Now?
- Proposition 8: BYU Students look back at an emotional issue
- No Mob Veto ad = Lying for the Lord
- Jon Powell calls for boycott of LDS performances over same-sex marriage debate
- No More Excuses, Utah: Anastasia Niedrich (PDF)
- Why I'm (still) mad at the Mormon church: a timeline courtesy of Stop The Mormons
- Latter-Day Army: Details of Mormons & Prop 8
- Why we're mad at the Mormon church
- LDS Newsroom: Prop 8 Backlash Is “An Outrage That Must Stop,” Group Says in Support of Church
- Mormon Homophobia: Up Close and Personal
- The invention of "quantifiably safe rhetoric": Richard Wirthlin and Ronald Reagan ...
- 2004: A Blinding Flash(back) of the Obvious
- Mesa Arizona LDS Temple Vigil
- Why no pie for Robin Wirthlin?
- NYT's editorial board endorses investigation of LDS reporting of Mormon involvement in Prop 8's passage
- Meet Our Families Day
- NY Times: Gay Marriage and a Moral Minority
- Liberty Sunday: Defending Our Freedom Against Multiple Generations of Wirthlins
- WaPo: The Obamas do more to elevate the American family than any pro-marriage initiative
- Mormons: Good at 'Going Forth' ... Not-So-Good When it Comes to the Back-and-Forth of our Democratic Process
- Mormon micro-targeting effort + FPPC investigation of the LDS church = $78 million remedy
- We Can Be Heroes: Dustin Lance Black
- Julian Ayrs dishes the dirt on Richard Raddon
- Bay Area Reporter: Connecting the Dots - The Wirthlins, The Mormons, Prop 22 and Prop 8
- NY Times: Inquiry Set on Mormon Aid for California Marriage Vote
- NY Times: We trust the court will not be intimidated (by Yes on 8 thugs).
- WaPo: Mormons' Uneasy Victory
- Prop 8 Donor Mike Nicholes: Bring 'Em On
- Proposition 8, The Mormon Coming Out Party
- New Yorker: Eight is Enough
- Probe into LDS Church's Prop 8 donations going forward
- Gary Lawrence: Familiarity breeds contempt (for Mormons)
- Salt Lake Tribune: Prop 8 involvement a P.R. fiasco for LDS Church
- Jan Shipps Speaks: It's a perfect PR storm for the LDS church
- KSL5: Gary Lawrence: Familiarity breeds contempt for people like me who campaign to strip their own children of their civil rights
- Pro-Liberty, Not Anti-Mormon
- The Eagle Foundation
- Two campaigns, two videos
- Dry Kindling: A Political Profile of American Mormons (PDF)
- Yes on 8 Campaign Manager Supports Marriage Equality for Smokers
- NYC Mormon Church Protest
- Bill Marriott: "Neither I, nor the company, contributed to the campaign to pass Proposition 8."
- Bill Marriott: The Facts About Marriott and California's Proposition 8
- National Protest Against Prop 8
- Mormon Anti-Gay Game Plan 1997-2008 (PDF)
- No matter how hard you try.
- Huffington Post: Obama Wins. And So Does Fear, Hate and Prop 8
- Sonja Eddings Brown is Rather Unpleasant
- A Prop 8 Roundtable with Sonja Eddings Brown, Marvin Perkins and Jon Stewart
- What should we ban next?
- Executive Director of SF Catholic Charities donates to the No on 8 campaign
- KSL TV5 coverage of My Favorite Mormons: Steve & Barbara Young
- Salt Lake Tribune: Glen Greener is Prop 8 ghost from Utah's weird political past
- LA Times: Debunking the myths used to promote the ban on same-sex marriage
- Walsh: LDS stand on Prop. 8 oozes irony
- LA Times: Mormons and Proposition 8
- My Favorite Mormons: Steve and Barbara Young
- AP: Former 49er Steve Young voting No on Prop. 8
- SF Chronicle: Steve Young lines up against Mormon church on Prop. 8
- Halloween Treat: My Favorite Mormons Steve & Barbara Young Publicly Oppose Proposition 8 (video)
- You are invited to a Proposition 8 Election Night Party!
- Secret Million-Dollar Mormon Donor to Prop 8 Revealed
- NPR: Andrew Callahan discusses the Mormon Church and Proposition 8 (mp3 audio)
- Ward Connerly, the affirmative action foe, takes a stand in support of same-sex marriage
- Andrew Sullivan: Marvin Perkins - homophobic Mormon and faux "community activist" - is an honest-to-goodness "Yes on 8" shill
- TNR: The anti-gay marriage crusaders in California have decided to put a very nice face on a very close-minded idea.
- Prop 8 Campaign Lies About Broad African American Opposition to Writing Discrimination into our Constitution
- Just in Time for Halloween: Spook the Neighbors with your 'Yes on 8 Zombie' Routine !!
- Lawrence Lessig: 8 minutes on Prop 8 (video)
- A big gay Mormon wedding
- Evangelical Proposition 8 Supporters are Nuts
- Enough with the Emails from Mormon McVeigh Wannabes
- Show Itzhak Perlman and his daughter the respect they deserve.
- Mormons face flak for backing Prop. 8
- A Mormon View from California
- Yes on 8 Bus Tour: Impressions at an Exhibition
- The Wirthlins are Mormon. Why am I not surprised?
- Short on cash, the Prop 8 campaign tries extortion.
- Thou Shalt Not Lie: Sign the letter to LDS President Monson
- Andrew Sullivan: The Mormon Money Behind Proposition 8
- From the desk of Frank Schubert, Yes on 8 Campaign Manager
- AP: Prop. 8 Campaign Seeks to Extort Funds from California Businesses
- Charles Barkley speaks out on marriage equality
- Mormon involvement in the Prop 8 contest is contrary to Mormon principles
- Latest Public Policy Institute Poll: Most California voters still oppose Prop 8
- Andrew Sullivan: The Mormon Church vs Civil Marriage Equality (Sullivan uses the Romney CT quote that I dug up)
- Andrew Sullivan: Mormons For Civil Rights
- Mormons Continue to Dominate California’s Yes on Prop 8 Campaign. New Total: $19.15 Million
- Huffington Post: Do Mormons Deserve Equal Protection Under the Law?
- Utah and Idaho Mormons heed the Yes on 8 campaign's rescue call
- Lavender Liberal: Ask yourself this question ...
- WhatIsProp8.com contact info: Jenny Lynne Pricer @ 310-487-1820 or jennylynne.pricer@whatisprop8.com
- The Church of Latter Day Spammers
- Sonja Eddings Brown: News Media At A Loss For Words (as if, Sonja, get a life ...)
- Vern Nelson @ The OJ Blog likes the new "No on Prop 8" ad
- Michelle Obama: Be Not Afraid
- WikiLeaks: LDS church Proposition 8 broadcast transcript, 8 Oct 2008
- Calitics: Mormons to deliver Prop 8 letters, petition to LDS Church HQ on Oct. 17th
- David Benkof: Even marriage defenders should reject Proposition 8
- Total Prop 8 Donations from Top 15 LDS Leaders: $0.00
- Vote NO on Prop 8 (and keep gov't out of our pants ... w/ great Courage Campaign video)
- DKos: kos pens another front page piece on Prop 8
- YouTube Video Response to Yes on Prop 8 Ad: Five Little Lies
- DKos: A Mormon's view of CA Prop (h)8
- MfM comments on October 8th LDS satellite broadcast re Prop 8
- Updated Yes on 8 Plans and Personnel
- Yes on Campaign Releases First TV Spot
- LA Times: Mass display of Proposition 8 support delayed
- OC Register: Intrusion into marriage should be even-handed
- Chino Blanco's YouTube Channel
- Paul Newman 1925 - 2008
- Ken Boyd ... Baghdad Boyd?
- Comments on the WSJ's 'Mormons Boost Antigay Marriage Effort'
- D-Day: Prop. 8: The Relay Fast
- WikiLeaks: Latest LDS (Mormon) Prop 8 campaign plans
- JM: 'Six Consequences' author had rocky start in Salt Lake politics
- Calitics: The Floundering Yes on 8 Campaign: One Million Missing Lawn Signs Found in ... (wait for it) ... China!
- Boi From Troy: Where are those Million Yard Signs?
- JM: Anonymous 'Six Consequences' tied to LDS PR flack Glen Greener and Protectmarriage.com
- Wall Street Journal: Mormons Boost Antigay Marriage Effort
- Latest Field Poll Delight: Support for Prop 8 is at 38%
- DKos: What Do Mormons Have Against Love?
- PHB: The Unexpected Message The Yes On 8 Campaign Sends To Jews, Mormons, And Other Non-Evangelicals
- BYU Law Professor: "Six Consequences" = "Six Falsehoods" (PDF)
- Fat Salaries For "Yes on 8" Campaign's Evangelical Directors: Paid For By LDS (Mormon) Contributions
- OC Register: Crusading for ‘Judeo-Christian values’ doesn’t come cheap
- SoCal Journo Justin McClachlan rakes California Family Council muck
- LL: Some Upbeat Prop 8 News, If You Promise Not to Get Complacent
- Ron Prentice Gets Rich Fighting Gay Marriage
- David Benkof Redeems Himself: Right-wing nonsense
- Robert Latham: You Know Everything About Same-Sex Marriage
- Thrice-married Newt Gingrich: Brave Champion of Proposition 8
- One Mormon's Letter to The Salt Lake Tribune: Get it straight
- LL: Six Big Lies the Freedom-Haters Are Spreading About Prop 8
- Is the LDS (Mormon) Church telling the truth about Proposition 8?
- Huckabee: Romney responsible for implementing gay marriage in Massachusetts
- Frank Schubert: Micro-targeting Mormons
- Mormon Prop 8 Plan: 1,000,000 yard signs
- Vern Nelson @ The OJ Blog: Jubal’s Terror Unfounded: Schubert Flint NOT Overrun by Gay Yippie Bloggers!
- More Proposition 8 lies from the "Yes on 8" campaign
- ACTION ALERT: Tell the Right-Wing Consultants NO to Prop 8!
- August 14th Action in Irvine: Schubert Flint Open House
- Irvine CA 92614: Prop 8 Action Alert
- Prop 8 Photo Essay: Jennifer Kerns
- "Yes on 8" RSVP? Need your advice.
- Steven Greenhut: Hypocrisy and gay marriage
- Red County blogger Jeff Flint is the Prop. 8 consultant
- Carlyle Potter: Is Jesus pleased?
- Derek Price: Feeling the spirit of political rules
- Googling Gay Marriage: Putting a Fork in Prop 8
- The Prop 8 ATM: A Christmas Carol for Jeff Flint
- Meet Rameumptom, Inc: Schubert-Flint
- 9Moons: California Mormons Won’t Be Cool with Acts of Protest at Their Chapels
- An invitation to show up or walk out on June 29th
- BCC: Same-sex marriage and hypocrisy?
- Mormons enter California marriage fight
- New York Marriage Equality: Astroturfing - Courtesy of the Same Ten (Mormon) People
- Thank you, Governor Lynch. Thank you, Amelia.
- Pastor may have lost post over Prop 8
- NOM and Cornerstone Policy Research Present: "I'm Confused"
- About that CPR-A Cornerstone Policy Research New Hampshire "Poll"
- Heroes vs Zeroes: another NOM FAIL, this time on CNN
- The LDS Church, Proposition 8, and the Federal Law of Charities
- Pres. Obama's Mother Baptized by Proxy in Mormon Temple
- Outrage: The Movie
- Note to my Mormon friends at UFI, NOM and the Digital Network Army (DNA)
- Marie Osmond Talks About Her Daughter's Civil Rights
- "No Offense" but the latest NOM ad barely rates a mention
- How many Mormon actors in NOM's "Gathering Storm" ad?
- Check out NOM's Stand4Marriage Rally facebook page
- Preeminence vs Partisanship - Utah Gov. Huntsman: Equal rights are important. NOM? Not so much.
- Monrovia City Council Election Results: Shaw in, but is Kirby out?
- William Duncan of Utah is in Maine this week to Testify against LD 1020
- Mormon Sci-Fi Author Orson Scott Card Joins National Organization for Marriage Board
- Mormon Scion Matthew S. Holland Quits the NOM Board
- Stephen Colbert May or May Not Get a Call from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints about his new Ad
- Utah Tea Party Roundup
- Mormons for Marriage at Sunstone West
- Glenn Beck is still Mormon. Glenn Beck is still Insane.
- The Making of a National Organization for Marriage (NOM) TV Ad
- The Quorum of the Twelve Apostates
- No Protest Planned for LDS (Mormon) General Conference
- Glenn Beck is Mormon. Glenn Beck is Insane.
- Marriage equality rally in Montpelier, Vermont
- USA Today: If only Romney's supporters would act more like Mormon missionaries, the bias against Mitt would melt away.
- Mormon-owned Deseret News: Robert P. George is a philistine and Chuck Colson a boor
- Prop 8 redux! Some radical wacko is tracking Mormon prophet Thomas S. Monson using Google maps!
- Californians Against Hate: Manhattan Declaration -- Who Are They Kidding?
- Persecution Politics: Christian Leaders Sign Historic-Futuristic Declaration
- Maine’s Election Ethics Commission “Eager” to Continue Investigation into the National Organization for Marriage’s Role in Referendum Campaign against Marriage Equality
- Why the recent LDS statement in support of SLC nondiscrimination ordinances really does matter: The history of the LDS Church's position on housing and employment rights for gays
- Sutherland Institute's latest bright idea: Eliminate Utah Office of Tourism
- Buttarspalooza 2.0! In his own words: Utah Senator Chris Buttars Doesn't Want The Gays Stuffing It Down His Throat All The Time
- Gayle Ruzicka: Mormon church is wrong to oppose discrimination against LGBT Utahns
- Sutherland Institute: Mormon support for fair housing and employment = "giving a mouse a cookie"
- Dan Aiello: A kiss helps bring civil rights to Salt Lake City
- Utah Senator Chris Buttars "I accept the verbiage of the Mormon church." Verbiage? What a creep.
- Sutherland president Paul Mero ties religion to political thought
- NY Times: Mormon Support of Gay Rights Statute Draws Praise
- WaPo: Scott Fish claims Mormons not funding Maine campaign
- NOM in Maine: Follow the money, if you can
- Attorney General to NOM: Get into compliance with Maine law before the election. "Why not? What is there to hide?"
- NY Times: BYU students travel to Maine, LDS Church in Maine encouraging members to get involved in the Question One campaign
- Mormon Like Me: Black Saints, Bigots, and Beck
- For LDS, the handwriting is on the wall: MENE, MENE, TEKEL, UPHARSIN
- As California's fight over gay marriage moves to Maine, so do the Wirthlins.
- I was hungry, you gave me hate, I was sick, you gave me lies.
- Uncovering secrets in Maine
- Mormon Marriott's Moral Masquerade: Hotel Chain Profits off of Unsafe Porn, Says AHF
- Stand for Marriage Maine's New TV Ad is pulled from YouTube due to Copyright Infringement
- 8: The Mormon Proposition (the movie - first trailer now online!)
- LA Times: Mormon Mainer Miriam Conners talks Yes on 1: "There is no family without mom and dad." Really, Miriam? None?
- The Religious Right is Swiftboating Same Sex Marriage in Maine
- The Gathering Storm Against NOM
- “No on 1” Ad Pre-empts Attacks from the Right
- Maine’s Anti-Equality Bait and Switch Auditions
- Criswell Associates and Coyote Films producing the sequel to NOM's "Gathering Storm" ad
- Red Flags in NOM Tax Return
- The real Common Sense America?
- So, who runs Common Sense America?
- Battle Lines Drawn In Maine Same-Sex Debate
- National Organization for Marriage 2007 tax return
- Michelangelo Signorile asks Brian Brown about Common Sense America
- LAT: The federal case on Prop. 8 could get ugly, with every canard about homosexuality being put on trial.
- How the Mormons finally got to meet the Pope: Prop 8.
- NCAA officials: BYU-Hawaii gets 3 years of probation for failing to monitor athletics program
- Polling Report: Court Decisions and Trends in Support for Same-Sex Marriage
- NOM's Brian Brown: “What kind of a country have we become ... ?"
- Maine asked to probe marriage referendum fundraising
- Take the Pledge to Defeat 1 | Protect Maine Equality
- AP: Maine Marriage Campaign Draws Complaint
- Breaking: Gay Marriage Leads to Deforestation
- Portland Diocese: Our recent $100K political donation came from a mystery donor
- National Organization for Marriage says HD90 is just the beginning
- Misplaced Catholic priorities in Maine means three churches will close
- An odd silence on gay marriage
- 'The Odd Couple': Sen. Orrin Hatch on his long friendship with Sen. Kennedy
- “My dad thinks it would be a bad business idea if I ever married a black girl.”
- First Sunday For ELCA (Lutheran) Churches After Historic Vote
- Church changes signage after controversial vote on homosexuality
- "I will make every effort to build as large and respectable a closet as possible for you."
- NOM Skirts IRS Regulations on Disclosure of Tax Returns
- Boies and Olson want to depose Frank Schubert and Jeff Flint
- Ted's Excellent Adventure - NYT: An Unexpected Ally's Road to Championing Same-Sex Marriage
- Karen Merkley's latest brilliant idea - MGF: Adopt-a-Site scheme for Mormon astroturfers
- I ♥ Holland - UFI: Dutch media leery of World Congress of Families wingnuts
- Newsweek: 'Big Love' Gets Unwarranted Criticism From Mormon Church
- "Big Love," the Temple, and What is Sacred: A Review
- Prop. 8 Press Sec. Sonja Eddings Brown issues "Big Love" instructions
- Kirby: Are ceremonies so sacred, or are Mormons insecure?
- Salt Lake Tribune: No need for an HBO apology on 'Big Love'
- Wrong on both counts
News and views on NOM, marriage equality and the Mormon church from a former LDS missionary. This site is not affiliated with The National Organization for Marriage or The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. © Copyright 2009 by Chino Blanco. All Rights Reserved.






The definition of family is under scrutiny.