AFAJournal.org - News of Interest 5.03
 
(photo above) Actress Leslie Hope (left) and lesbian director Lee Rose (standing) are shown on the GLAAD
Web site discussing the Lifetime lesbian drama, An Unexpected Love. Also pictured is co-star Wendy Crewson.

ENTERTAINMENT
The Walt Disney Company continues its promotion of the homosexual agenda, as its ABC network and cable television network Lifetime present new “gay”-themed programming.

In April, ABC’s soap opera, All My Children, aired the first lesbian kiss in daytime television history. Teen character Bianca Montgomery, who had already come out on the soap as a lesbian, kissed her friend “in a moment of truth and true love,” ABC said in a statement.

According to Reuters, Agnes Nixon, the creator of All My Children, defended the show’s portrayal of lesbianism. “The theme of All My Children from the beginning is the belief that, as God’s children, we are bound to each other by our common humanity despite our many personal differences; that it is our failure to understand and respect those differences that causes most of life’s pain and suffering,” she said. “The Bianca story is our latest effort to dramatize that belief.”

In an interview with the homosexual magazine, The Advocate, Brian Frons, president of ABC Daytime, promised that the lesbians on All My Children would go even further than a mere kiss. “They will actually have a sexual relationship,” he said.

Lesbianism also received a promotional push on one of Disney’s cable networks, Lifetime. The made-for-cable movie, An Unexpected Love, follows a woman who abandons her husband and children and finds fulfillment as a lesbian.

Writer-director Lee Rose said, “I know people, friends, who have done that.”

Rose is a lesbian who is no stranger to working on films that promote the homosexual lifestyle. She also directed another Lifetime lesbian flick, The Truth About Jane, about a teenager who comes out as a homosexual to her family. In A Girl Thing (Showtime), Rose showcased yet another lesbian love affair.

In an interview with Lifetime, heterosexual actress Leslie Hope, who plays the main character on An Unexpected Love, said, “Wouldn’t it be wonderful if this movie could wedge open the door of prejudice a tiny bit and illuminate what we all should know by now? That most of us are looking for pretty much the same thing: to love and be loved.”

In an interview with the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD), Hope also said she hoped that, by watching An Unexpected Love, “those viewers who might be prejudiced or intolerant” might find lesbian relationships “a little less scary.”

“And people insist there is no homosexual agenda in Hollywood?” said AFA Chairman Don Wildmon. “A lesbian writer and director who regularly puts out films promoting lesbianism as normal and natural, and even heterosexual actresses who hope these films change people’s minds about homosexuality? Sounds like an agenda to me.”

Wildmon noted that Lifetime has made a habit of producing homosexually-themed programming, such as Change of Heart, in which a husband announces to his wife and family after 20 years of marriage that he is “gay;” and Labor of Love, about a heterosexual woman who asks her male homosexual best friend to be the father of her child. Similarly, Lifetime has broached the subject of homosexuality in documentary fashion on its Intimate Portraits series.

Disney/ABC is also set to capitalize on the Broadway success of the smash hit Hairspray, starring homosexual actor Harvey Fierstein, who plays a drag-queen mom. ABC has signed Fierstein for a new sitcom in which he will also play a woman who is a mom.

The series will be handled by homosexual producers Craig Zadan and Neil Meron. That duo has handled numerous projects for Disney, including the 1995 made-for-TV gay propaganda movie Serving in Silence: The Margarethe Cammermeyer Story, about a lesbian Army officer.

The “gay” pair told The Advocate, “We’ve always found Disney more than willing to let us present gay stories.”

Zadan said that Disney was equally enthusiastic about the controversial 2001 movie What Makes a Family – produced for Lifetime – about a lesbian couple raising a baby. He added that, although cable has been pushing the envelope on homosexual issues for years, the networks are now becoming more “progressive,” and “as usual, Disney is leading the pack.”

Also on tap from Disney/ABC: the network has announced that it is developing a light-hearted one-hour drama with a pair of crime-solving homosexuals – who happen to be lovers. The new series will be called Mr. and Mr. Nash, and will be similar in nature to the old popular ABC dramas Hart to Hart and Moonlighting.

Reuters, 4/14/03; The Advocate, 4/29/03; AP, 3/24/03; USA Today 4/8/03; www.lifetimetv.com, 4/25/03; www.glaad.org, 4/25/03; The Hollywood Reporter, 11/13/02

Media, corporations give to liberal group
Advocacy groups don’t get any more liberal than People for the American Way (PFAW). That’s why it is of peculiar interest to pro-family organizations to discover just who has been donating money to PFAW.

The 20-year-old organization supports the entire panorama of radical leftist positions, such as favoring same-sex marriage, unrestricted abortion rights, and explicit sex education for students of all ages, while opposing public school reforms and conservative nominees to the federal courts.

In its annual report, some of PFAW’s listed donors were media organizations, such as the New York Times Company, Time Inc., the Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS), and the National Broadcasting Company (NBC). The Walt Disney Company, which owns ABC, also donated money to PFAW.

“Since these media companies regularly report on the cultural issues that define the ideological rift in this nation, I would think it approaches a conflict of interest for those same media companies to be giving to an organization that clearly reflects only one side of that divide,” said AFA Chairman Don Wildmon.

Not surprisingly, entertainment companies were also represented on the annual report: Dreamworks SKG, Time Warner, Sony Corporation of America, USA Networks, Inc., VIACOM, and Warner Bros. Records, among others, gave money to PFAW.

Major companies gave as well, such as America Online, Chase Manhattan Corporation, International Business Machines Corp., and Morgan Stanley Dean Witter; as did major players in the publishing industry, like Random House, Simon and Schuster Consumer Group and Warner Books.

www.pfaw.org, 4/28/03

NBC showcases first romantic male ‘gay’ kiss
The pro-homosexual sitcom vehicle Will & Grace continues to reflect NBC’s intention of bringing explicit male homosexual conduct to primetime television. On the March 13 episode, two male characters shared an affectionate kiss on the lips – a first for the network show.

“The producers of this show have said right from the beginning that they would make sure the main homosexual character, Will Truman, is a sexual character with a love life,” said AFA Chairman Don Wildmon. “But they’ve hesitated to show anything explicit for almost five years because they understand that the majority of Americans do not want to see two men kissing.”

Will & Grace has not shied away from the subject of homosexual sex, as the main characters have frequently talked about male genitals, homosexual promiscuity, group sex and even anal sex.
The two main male homosexual characters, Will and Jack McFarland, did share a kiss in a previous episode, but it was merely an attempt to get the attention of a television camera crew.

Other network sitcoms have occasionally shown a same-sex male kiss, but the context made it clear it was for the purpose of generating laughter – and not as an expression of homosexual affection.

On the March 13 installment, however, Will walks into Barry’s apartment and kisses him on the lips. Barry is a recently out-of-the-closet homosexual who has caught Will’s fancy, and the two men have dated, although Barry says he wants to date other men.

“It was a quick kiss, but we have no doubt that it is the first step to a more passionate scene later in the series, whether or not it is between the same two characters,” Wildmon said. “This is yet another example of network television striking down cultural taboos. The stated objective of the homosexual movement within Hollywood is to put homosexual and heterosexual sexuality on the same level of visibility, and Will & Grace has taken the next step in achieving that goal.”

Meanwhile, NBC has signed up the Will & Grace principals for another year – the sitcom’s seventh season.

Hollywood Reporter, 4/16/03

FCC inaction allows decadence in prime-time
AFA continues to call upon the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to enforce the law when it comes to indecency on network television, saying it may soon be too late to turn back the clock.

Don Wildmon, AFA chairman and founder, noted a number of examples of recent indecency that threatened to eliminate any remaining standards for prime-time television.

For example, on the February 25 episode of ABC’s NYPD Blue, series hero Detective Andy Sipowicz’ live-in sex partner, another detective named Connie, drops her bathrobe in the bathroom, offering full rear and side nudity. Andy’s six-year-old son comes into the bathroom and gawks at the naked woman. She turns full face to the camera as she covers her private parts with her hands.

“The Federal Communications Commis-sion’s negligence in enforcing indecency laws for broadcast television has now resulted in a network’s use of a little boy in a scene involving adult nudity,” said Wildmon. “It is unconscionable to believe those entrusted with keeping the public airwaves safe against sexual perversion continue to disregard their sworn duty and turn their back on the common good.”

Wildmon said FCC Chairman Michael Powell should shoulder the blame for the continued deterioration of network programming.

“Chairman Powell has made it clear he wants no part of holding networks accountable for the constant barrage of sex, violence, and profanity on television. Maybe it’s time to put someone in charge of the FCC who cares about the plight of families. We are fed up with non-responsive officials,” he said.

Contact information
Michael K. Powell, Chairman
Federal Communications Commission
445 12th Street, S.W.
Washington, DC 20554
Phone: 1-888-225-5322
Fax: 202-418-0710
E-Mail: mpowell@fcc.gov

ACTIVISM
Street preacher wins lawsuit
A disorderly conduct charge brought against a young man who was publicly proclaiming Christ was recently dismissed after the AFA Center for Law & Policy (CLP) got involved.

Michael Marcavage, a Christian, was preaching on a Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, sidewalk last Halloween night when police officers told him to cease. Marcavage asked what law he was breaking, and the officers had no reply.

According to a witness, when he continued to preach, police knocked Marcavage to the ground, dragged him across the sidewalk and slammed him up against a storefront window. He then spent twelve hours in jail before being released.

The judge dismissed the case after determining that he was lawfully exercising his First Amendment rights.

CLP senior trial attorney Brian Fahling, who represented Marcavage at the trial, said, “Michael was roughed-up and spent 12 hours in jail for no other reason than he was preaching the gospel.” Fahling said a federal lawsuit against the officers and the police department is likely to result.

Missouri county works to pass adult ordinance
Judy Tillet knows that sexually oriented businesses bring devastating results to communities. Lower property values, increased crime rates, and general blight are among the obvious negative effects. She also knows strip clubs are especially alluring to young military men who are away from home for the first time.

When topless bars and strip clubs began surfacing near the army base of Fort Leonard Wood in Missouri, she took action. Initially organizing through the Pulaski County area Ministerial Alliance, Tillet’s group now includes a school board president, a Chamber of Commerce president, two attorneys, and a commercial land developer.

Tillet’s Community Action Team Against Pornography held an educational forum in March, attended by nearly 400 local citizens who want the county and cities to adopt stringent regulations for adult businesses.

“The primary goal of the meeting was to define pornography, and discuss the effects it has on our community,” said Tillet. “The secondary goal was to activate members of the community to get involved in picketing, educational funding, and contacting state representatives and senators.”

The group says it has the support of county leaders and the commandant at Fort Leonard Wood, and hopes to get an ordinance passed quickly. A model ordinance, provided by the AFA Center for Law and Policy, is being used to make sure the sexually oriented businesses are forced to comply with rigid requirements, such as zoning and licensing.

Randy Sharp, Director of Special Projects for AFA, said adult businesses are quickly exiting larger cities, which are passing laws to restrict them, and opening in smaller towns like those in Pulaski County. He added that towns that don’t have laws are at great risk, and should begin the enactment process before a problem arises.

For more information about the sexually oriented business ordinance and step-by-step guidelines for adopting regulations in your community, visit www.afa.net or call 662-844-5036.

PORNOGRAPHY
A&F publishes new lewd catalog
Clothing retailer Abercrombie & Fitch (A&F) continues to thumb its nose at the concerns of parents and the culture at large, putting out yet another pornographic quarterly catalog.

Its Summer Issue 2003 does contain the latest A&F selection of hip clothing, and a number of frank interviews with celebrities. But as usual, the catalog also includes 119 pages of attitude and photos – many of them involving completely nude models (genitals obscured), with breast and rear nudity, in a variety of provocative and sexual poses.

AFA President Tim Wildmon said A&F is selling more than a clothing line – it is selling a lifestyle. “The A&F catalog has the same thing every quarter: handsome young men and beautiful young women, all with that perfect look, and all apparently living a carefree, hedonistic lifestyle without consequences,” said Wildmon. “Nothing could be further from the truth for the millions of average people living in the real world, a world in which casual sex means unwanted pregnancies, abortions, and life-altering sexually transmitted diseases.”

A&F’s stubborn refusal to act more responsibly in its corporate endeavors has led to AFA calling for a boycott of the retailer’s clothing line.


New video gives hope to men battling pornography
Young men who face the temptations of pornography may think they’re alone in their fight, but a new video lets them know they have plenty of company – and presents strategies for gaining victory.

Entitled Every Young Man’s Battle, the documentary focuses on the problem of pornography and sexual temptations faced by teenage and young adult males. A major portion of the video’s impact comes from interviews with young men who once suffered from pornography or sexual addiction and are now recovering from its negative effects.

“This video is more than just informative – it’s captivating,” said AFA Executive Assistant Buddy Smith, who reviewed Every Young Man’s Battle. “The interviews conducted with those who have struggled with and overcome pornography are genuine and sincere. These young men are obviously veterans of the sexual temptation wars.”

The video also features a portion of the interview Dr. James Dobson conducted with serial killer Ted Bundy on the eve of his execution. Bundy admitted that pornography played an influential role in the horrible sex crimes he committed against young women.

Based on the book by the same name by Steve Arterburn and Fred Stoeker, the video is the idea of Steve Feazel, a co-founder of Vision Word Productions, Inc., which specializes in producing videos and films that embrace Christian themes and family values.

Feazel said he became convinced that young males, the target audience of the book, were “more likely to watch screens than read pages,” and he approached Arterburn about making a documentary version for video release.

“Every Christian young man should watch this video, because it will inspire men to fight sexual temptations head- on,” Smith said.

To order: Available on VHS ($22) and DVD ($27). To order Every Young Man’s Battle, call 888-FAMILIES, option 4, or visit www. afa.net/battle.

New York prof keeps job after child porn bust
Edward Samuels pleaded guilty to 100 counts of possessing pictures of a sexual performance by a child. Investigators found on his personal computer more than 100,000 images of extremely young children – even babies – being sexually assaulted. Some pictures showed young girls being raped by adults and dogs. He has lost his license to practice law. Yet Samuels, 53, remains on the faculty of New York Law School. And the two in-house computer technicians at the law school who reported Samuels’ porn stash have been fired.

Officials with the college say Samuels was placed on unpaid leave indefinitely until they could determine what to do with him. Because he is a tenured instructor, a spokesman for the school said, “He cannot be removed from his job until a determination is made through the process required by his contract and established faculty rules.”

Samuel’s porn stash was discovered after he brought one of his porn-clogged computers from home to be worked on by the technicians after it developed a problem. They alerted school officials to what they saw on the computer, and school officials alerted authorities.
Samuels faces as little as probation when he is sentenced June 23.

New York Post, 4/16/03; 4/18/03

General Motors says good-bye to porn
An anti-pornography group said General Motors’ (GM) sale of Hughes Electronics to News Corp. is a “significant” pro-family victory.

In April, the National Coalition for the Protection of Children and Families praised GM for selling Hughes, since that company is the parent of satellite-provider DirecTV, which provides hard-core pornography.

Along with the Religious Alliance Against Pornography (see AFA Journal, 5/03), the coalition has been calling on GM and other Fortune 500 companies to get out of the porn business so they do not legitimize the industry by being a part of it. National Coalition CEO Rick Schatz said his group wanted the public to know that pornography is still a dirty business.

“As General Motors sells Hughes Electronics and DirecTV to [News Corp. CEO] Rupert Murdoch, that in and of itself will not reduce the amount of pornography that’s available in the marketplace in total,” Schatz said. “But at least we get a company like General Motors out of the business – and that’s very, very good.”

Jerry Kirk, founder and chairman of the National Coalition, said, “We are so grateful for the many concerned citizens who signed petitions and wrote letters to General Motors,” he said.

CEO Schatz said he believed that part of the reason for GM’s decision was that people had sent a very clear message to the company: “You can either have your good name or you can be in the pornography business, but you can’t have both.”

Schatz says his group has not formally decided whether it will now target News Corp. for its participation in the pornography business.

AgapePress, 4/15/03

Peer-to-peer networks not just about music
With all the news about music-swapping on the Internet, one might think digital music files are the most-swapped items across peer-to-peer networks.

Think again. A study by Palisade Systems showed that, of 209 million search requests monitored on the Gnutella network during a 17-day period in February, 42% of searchers were looking for adult and child pornography – only 38% were looking for music.

Peer-to-peer (P2P) networks, as they are called, operate through software that allows computer users to trade computer files with each other online. These kinds of networks have come under increasing scrutiny from the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) as it fights copyright violations, saying the swapping of music files online constitutes theft. The most widely-known P2P network, Napster, was closed down last year following copyright violation lawsuits from the RIAA.

CBS Marketwatch, 3/18/03

PRO-LIFE
Abortion halted by federal court

A girl whose parents were trying to force her to get an abortion was recently given a reprieve via an emergency Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) issued by a federal court in Jackson, Mississippi. The 16-year-old girl had pleaded with her parents to let her keep the baby, but they insisted the abortion take place.

In desperation, she contacted the AFA Center for Law & Policy in Tupelo, Mississippi. AFA attorneys Stephen Crampton and Michael DePrimo hastily prepared the lawsuit and obtained the TRO just hours before the abortion was scheduled to take place.

“The law protects a woman who chooses to keep her child, as well as those who choose to abort,” said Crampton.

DePrimo added, “While we are thankful the court entered the order, it is a sad fact that legal action was necessary to save the life of this unborn child.”

Fortunately for all concerned, the girl’s parents decided to reconcile with her and the lawsuit was dropped.


RELIGION

Voice of the Martyrs sends aid to Iraquis

An interdenominational organization that has been helping persecuted Christians in countries around the world for more than 30 years is now providing help to Iraqi brothers and sisters in Christ.

The Voice of the Martyrs (VOM) is providing “Action Packs” for sending to the Iraqi Christian community, one of the oldest in the Middle East. An Action Pack consists of a vacuum bag filled with items chosen by the person purchasing the pack, along with a personal note. They can be purchased for only $5.00 from the VOM Web site at www.persecution.com/actionpacks or call 918-337-8015.

A free copy of the video, Faith in Action is also available. The video highlights the Action Pack program and features footage from Pakistan and Afghanistan.

AFA Chairman Don Wildmon urged Christians to order a free subscription to the VOM monthly newsletter. “This organization is doing a wonderful job of helping persecuted Christians” he said. “Their newsletter will provide insight into the lives of men and women who daily put their lives on the line for the sake of Christ.”

The VOM’s Statement of Faith features Hebrews 13:3: “Remember them that are in bonds as bound with them, and them which suffer adversity, as being yourselves also in the body.”

How to contact political leaders
If a political issue has gotten your dander up and you would like to call or write your congressional leaders or even the president and voice your opinion, it is essential to know how to contact them. There are several ways to reach these leaders.

The simplest way is to call your senators or representative. Each state has two senators, and each person has one representative for his or her district in the House of Representatives.

For those unsure who their representative or state senators are, there are several online Web sites to help identify them. One Web site, www.eff.org, can walk a person through the steps of how to contact his or her congressional representatives. The Web sites for the U.S. Senate and the House of Representatives are also helpful in teaching citizens how to contact members. Those addresses are www.senate.gov and www.house.gov, respectively.

If you already know the name of the person you want to contact, and want to call them rather than E-mail them, simply call the U.S. Capitol Switchboard at (202) 224-3121, or toll-free at 1-800-962-3524, and ask for a particular legislator.

Because of post-September 11 security issues, it is best not to write your representative a letter and send it through the mail. Letters sent through the mail can take up to three months to reach your representative or senators, and by that time important legislative issues may already have been considered.

Those wanting to contact the president can do so in a similar fashion. The Web site for the White House is www.whitehouse.gov. Those wanting to call the White House and comment on current events and politics can call the comments line at (202) 456-1111. The number for the White House switchboard is (202) 456-1414.

Those wanting to E-mail the president can do so by addressing E-mail to president@whitehouse.gov.


 

A&F publishes new lewd catalog

Street preacher wins lawsuit

Abortion halted by federal court

Missouri county works to pass adult ordinance

Media, corporations give to liberal group

NBC showcases first romantic males ‘gay’ kiss

FCC inaction allows decadence in prime-time

New video gives hope for men battling pornography

New York prof keeps job after child porn bust

General Motors says good-bye to porn

Peer-to-peer networks not just about music

Voice of the Martyrs sends aid to Iraquis

 

HOW TO CONTACT POLITICAL LEADERS