____________________________________________________________________________________
Phyllis Schlafly, often referred to
as the founding mother of the Christian conservative movement and described as
“one of the top five most powerful anti-gay forces in the country” by The
National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, was fondly remembered as a “fierce and
tireless warrior” by Donald Trump during a subdued eulogy Saturday.
Trump, who has courted the LGBT community in recent months, said
Schlafly, who died Monday at age 92 in her home in St. Louis, “never stopped
fighting for the fundamental idea that the American people ought to have their
needs come before anyone and anything else.”
He called the ardent
opponent of same-sex marriage and gays serving openly in the military, a “truly
great American patriot,” adding, “Phyllis was a strong, proud, fierce, and
tireless warrior, and she was a warrior for the country, which she loved so
much.”
In the 1970s, she led the successful fight against the Equal Rights Amendment, a law which would have ensured women were treated the same as men under state and federal laws, partly by claiming it would pave the way for same-sex marriages.
Slate writes:
Anti-gay rhetoric was central to
Schlafly’s anti-ERA campaign, and it allowed her to bring together a variety of
groups that were united in their opposition to homosexuality. A staunch
Catholic, Schlafly innovatively drew from different conservative and religious
traditions to build a multifaith and geographically diverse coalition. Drawing
from longstanding opposition to racial integration, interracial marriage, and
mixed-race families, her pamphlets and articles transposed racial rhetoric onto
fears of homosexuality. She frequently associated the ERA with the dangers of
“sex mixing,” “homosexual marriage,” and the threat of “homosexual
schoolteachers.”
As early as 1973, she warned that
the ERA “would legalize homosexual marriages and open the door to the adoption
of children by legally married homosexual couples.” The ERA would enable these
gay rights, she said, because any “law that defines a marriage as a union of a
man and a woman would have to be amended to replace those words with ‘person.’
”
Television evangelist Pat Robertson
has warmly praised Schlafly as the woman who gunned down the ERA. “If it were
not for this lady,” Robertson said, “we
would have had homosexual rights written into the Constitution.”
would have had homosexual rights written into the Constitution.”
In 1992, Schlafly’s son John, was
“outed” as a gay man by the New York-based magazine Queer World, also known as
QW, which has since suspended publication. Phyllis characterized the media’s
interest in her son’s revelation as “obviously a political hit against me.”
Her son disagreed with one common
contention of the religious right, that homosexuality is a choice. “You can say
in some sense I choose to write with my right or left hand,” Schlafly told the
Examiner. “But the point is that it is such an automatic decision. That’s how I
see homosexuality.” He also objected “to anyone saying that being gay constitutes
not having good moral character.”
Trump called Schlafly, who fought
aginst the dangers of the gay agenda, “one of the great champions for the
American family.”
“Phyllis fought very hard to the
very end for a free and prosperous America. She understood that to be truly
united as a country, we can’t simply turn to government or to politicians,”
Trump said. “The bedrock of our unity is the realization that we are all
brothers and sisters created by the same God. Phyllis understood that. Phyllis
understood that.”
Even in her final years, the Eagle
Forum founder and leader continued her crusade against same-sex marriage. She
warned the LGBT community that despite the Supreme Court’s decision in June on
marriage equality, it will only serve to reinvigorate the anti-gay movement.
“We should develop all kinds of
strategies — legal strategies, legislative strategies and public opinion
strategies, in order to reject the rules of, in many cases, a single judge or
just a simply majority of judges,” she said. “I do believe the grass roots can
take back the Republican Party… These kingmakers… they’re the people who really
want us to be bipartisan and get along with everybody. But that’s not the
American way. Americans believe in the adversarial concept.”
Read more articles from The Gaily Grind, here.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.