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New Assault on Marriage in Illinois

Today, May 30, 2012, the homosexual activist organization Lambda Legal and the ACLU of Illinois have filed two lawsuits against the clerk of Cook County, charging that his office’s refusal to issue marriage licenses to 25 homosexual couples violates the equal protection and due process clauses of the Illinois Constitution.

The fact that Illinois’ civil union law grants homosexual couples all the rights, privileges, and responsibilities of marriage means next to nothing to homosexual activists. As IFI and many others warned, civil union legislation was merely a stepping stone to legalized same-sex marriage.  “It’s now painfully obvious that the purpose for securing civil unions legislation last year was to gain legal leverage in the attempt to overturn the Illinois law that defines marriage as the union of one man and one woman,” said IFI’s executive director, David E. Smith.

It is not the legal benefits and responsibilities that homosexual activists most ardently desire. Rather, they seek the symbolic victory that legalized same-sex marriage represents. Homosexual activists want to eradicate any formal public recognition that homosexual relationships are different from heterosexual unions.

The Illinois Family Institute’s cultural analyst Laurie Higgins states that “Homosexual activists and their ideological allies will exploit any means to achieve their goal of eradicating moral disapproval of homosexuality, including censorship, propaganda, demagoguery, slander, and judicial activism.”

The means they are now using in Illinois are those they used to legalize same-sex marriage in Iowa. Homosexual activists have announced they are bypassing the will of the people as reflected in their elected representatives. According to the Chicago Tribune’s cheerleader for the homosexuality-affirming movement, Rex Huppke, “[John] Knight, the ACLU attorney, said that he is confident same-sex marriage rights can be won through the state’s judicial system and that there is no reason to wait for lawmakers to act.”

Governor Pat Quinn (D) and Cook County Clerk David Orr (D) have both stated publicly that they believe same-sex marriage should be legalized.  While apparently believing that the criterion of numbers of partners is essential, they believe that sexual complementarity is irrelevant to marriage.

Let’s hope and pray our judges are wiser.




Higgins Responds to Tribune’s “Transgender” Stories — You Can Too

Today, Monday, December 19, 2011, the Chicago Tribune included not one, but three articles (click HERE,HERE, and HERE) on “transgenderism” by Rex Huppke, their designated proselyte for “progressive” views of homosexuality and Gender Identity Disorder (GID). (In the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, the American Psychiatric Association uses the term Gender Identity Disorder to designate the phenomenon that Huppke refers to as “transgender issues.”)

In response to these articles, I sent this brief letter to Mr. Huppke and to the Tribune editorial board:

Dear Mr. Huppke,

Once again, you’ve written an editorial masquerading as a news story. Your lengthy article (or three articles) on “transgender” issues includes one mention of American Family Association’s dissenting views on Gender Identity Disorder and one quote from Focus on the Family’s position statement on Gender Identity Disorder.

Apparently, you didn’t solicit any comments from either public policy organizations or mental health professionals who hold different views on the nature of Gender Identity Disorder, the morality of cross-dressing, or the ethics of “sex reassignment” surgery. The absence of any substantive exposition of dissenting views is particularly notable in light of two articles written by psychiatrist Dr. Keith Ablow that lit up the blogosphere, particularly among those who identify as homosexual and transgender. (Read Dr. Ablow’s articles HERE and HERE.)

It would have been illuminating to interview some theologians and philosophers on the nature of reality. For example, is “reality” merely a construct of our minds or our subjective feelings, or does an objective reality exist?

Another interesting question concerns allowing people to change their birth certificates: Does such an act make the state complicit in fraud?

Or, what evidence do you have for your clear implication that “discrimination” is the cause of the the increased risk of suicidal ideation among those who experience Gender Identity Disorder. And what do you mean when you use the word “discrimination”? Do all expressions of moral disapproval of behavior constitute illegitimate “discrimination” or just those with which you disagree?

But alas, it’s abundantly clear that your mission is not to report or discuss, but to exploit your position as a journalist to write an extended apologetic for your personal moral, philosophical, and political views, painted over with a rhetorical patina of neutrality.

What is equally troubling is that your bosses find this acceptable.

Sincerely,

Laurie Higgins
IFI Cultural Analyst

Take ACTION: Chicago Tribune reporter Rex Huppke continues to write pro-homosexual opinion pieces, presenting them as “new” articles.

Send email complaints to the Tribune editorial board about Mr. Huppke’s lack of balance and failure to present views from mental health professionals who hold different views on the nature of Gender Identity Disorder, the morality of cross-dressing, or the ethics of “sex reassignment” surgery.

 

Illinois Family Institute
P.O. Box 88848
Carol Stream, Illinois 60188

Phone: (708) 781-9328
Fax: (708) 781-9376

Evil men don’t understand the importance of justice,
but those who follow the Lord are much concerned about it.

~Proverbs 28:5






Nanny State Trolls for Homeschooled Children in Illinois

By Julie Schmidt

Recently Illinois Senator Ed Maloney (D) introduced SB136 which would require “the parents or legal guardians of children attending non-public schools, a defined term, or private or parochial schools to annually register their children with the State Board of Education, in conformance with procedures prescribed by the State Board of Education.”

Basically homeschoolers and anyone else who has deemed the public education system a failure would have to register their children with the State, since apparently Senator Maloney believes “that since the State was responsible for the education of our children, the State should know who was being homeschooled,” according to Pastor James McDonald who met with the Senator along with several homeschooling advocates.

I hate to burst the Senator’s progressive utopian bubble, but as Pastor McDonald points out “in the eyes of most home educators, the responsibility to ensure our children receive a competent education belonged to parents, not the State.” I don’t think registering children, like licensing a dog, was exactly what Thomas Jefferson had in mind when he envisioned public education.

Jefferson trusted the people closest to the issue to care most for the outcomes. Regarding education he stated in a letter to Joseph Cabell, “But if it is believed that these elementary schools will be better managed by the Governor and Council, the commissioners of the literary fund, or any other general authority of the government, than by the parents within each ward, it is a belief against all experience.”

Hardly a resounding endorsement of the power of the State, which he was extremely wary of, when he stated in the same letter, “What has destroyed liberty and the rights of man in every government which has ever existed under the sun? The generalizing and concentrating all cares and power into one body, no matter whether of the autocrats of Russia or France, or of the aristocrats of a Venetian senate.” Or even the Illinois Senate.

Jefferson also believed that education was-brace yourself progressives-voluntary. He stated, “It is better to tolerate that rare instance of a parent’s refusing to let his child be educated, than to shock the common feelings by a forcible transportation and education of the infant against the will of his father.” So I will give you a moment to consider how he would have viewed compulsory registration. “Appalled” would be kind.

Laurie Higgins of Illinois Family Institute (IFI) applies the “board of education” to our illustrious politicians’ posteriors when she said, “Serious thought should be given to the proper role and limits of our state and federal governments. If the vast majority of home schooling families are educating their children well, IFI doesn’t believe that it is appropriate to penalize them in order to solve the problem of the failures or inadequacies of a minority of home schooling families.”


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IFI’s Laurie Higgins Responds to Southtown’s Mischaracterization

Kristen McQueary of the Southtown Star newspaper has the dubious honor of being the first journalist of whom I’m aware to mischaracterize a position of mine through rhetorical manipulation.

The offense occurs in this statement by McQueary: “[Higgins] went on to say that no human being is perfect and that an extramarital affair, for example, would be an OK offense for a schools [sic] CEO, as long as the person repented their wrongdoing — much as she believes Huberman should.”

What she neglected to say was that she asked me the question: “Well, what would you say if Mayor Daley appointed someone who had had an extra-marital affair?”

I responded that if this person came forward publicly and affirmed extramarital affairs as morally legitimate and shared with the public his intention to maintain an extramarital relationship, I would be equally concerned and find him equally unsuitable for the position.

If, however, he expressed his view that his conduct was immoral and repented of it, his failing should not disqualify him from the position. In other words, it is not personal failings but public affirmation of immorality as morality that renders Huberman unsuitable for the position of premier educational leader in Chicago.

I would never say or imply, nor do I believe, that extramarital affairs are “OK offenses” for anyone.

McQueary dismisses my comparison of homosexuality to polyamory with a wave of her patronizing pen: “Higgins compared homosexuality to the sexual trysts of polyamoury, the practice of having more than one intimate relationship, even though Huberman implied he is in a committed relationship.” In a follow up phone conversation with McQueary, I asked how polyamory was different from homosexuality. She told me that she would not answer the question.

McQueary might want to do a little more research. Many polyamorists believe that their emotional and sexual attraction to more than one person simultaneously is a sexual orientation — not merely a practice. And some, perhaps many, are in committed relationships. In fact, Mormons who have multiple wives would be more accurately described as polyamorists than polygamists in that they are not legally married.

McQueary implicitly expresses the tired, unproven, and profoundly destructive argument that of all the wide variety of sexual behaviors emerging from the fertile and dissolute minds of humans, from bestiality to “man-boy love” to consensual incest to polyamory to homosexuality, the only one that is not merely a practice, the only one that constitutes an immutable identity that all must approve, affirm, and celebrate is homosexuality. And these philosophical propositions about the nature and morality of homosexuality are foisted on all of society with no proof.

McQueary finds it “repugnant when social conservatives waste valuable time and resources fastened to the bedposts of others, all under the banner of ‘family values.'” She omitted another part of our discussion that would have been relevant here. She asked me why I spend so much time writing about this issue. I explained that I spend so much writing about this issue because public educators are spending so much public time and public money trying to transform the views of students on the nature and morality of homosexuality which is decidedly not the proper purview of public educators.

I explained that public schools engage in pervasive, near-absolute censorship of conservative scholarship and thinking on homosexuality which violates fundamental pedagogical principles. I offered her examples of ways in which unproven, controversial theories on the nature and morality of homosexuality are advanced in public schools. But I guess time and space constraints prevented her from including those quotes.

McQueary is “dumfounded by those who associate homosexuality with sexual deviance,” which is another way of saying that she believes homosexuality is not deviant. That, of course, is a moral claim for which she, and public educators who share that view and promote it with public money, never provide any evidence or justification. They simply declaim that homosexuality is not deviant and anyone who has arrived at a different moral conclusion is a “hater.” No discussion — just arrogant, dictatorial fiat.

When will conservatives demand that those who make this radical, subversive moral claim provide evidence for it? For example, on what basis do liberals determine what constitutes moral behavior? Are they devotees of John Stuart Mills’ utilitarianism? Are they members of the homosexuality-affirming Metropolitan Community Church? Do they believe in radical subjective relativism? Do they believe that homosexual conduct is biologically determined? If so, where’s their evidence? And how do they reconcile that unproven claim with “Queer Theory” that holds that sexual orientation is neither inherent nor immutable? Do they believe that any and all behavior that emerges from biologically influenced impulses is automatically moral? Are they willing to apply that principle consistently to all volitional behavior?

Ms. McQueary recommends that Illinois Family Institute: “should be sizing up Huberman over the measurements that really matter: his ability to improve one of the most troubled school systems in the nation.” The problem is that accepting the view that public affirmation of homosexuality doesn’t matter requires prior assent to the proposition that homosexual acts are moral acts.

I agree with the sentiment behind McQueary’s weary sigh over the “utter uselessness” of discussions with someone blind to reality and truth. I disagree with her, however, about which view of homosexuality embodies blindness.