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CHARLOTTE
OBSERVER COVERAGE,
February 16-24, 2007
Posted
2-16-07
http://www.charlotte.com/mld/charlotte/16711047.htm
REGIONAL
ROUNDUP
GROUP
PLANS TO COUNTER GAY-LESBIAN FUNDRAISER
Mecklenburg
County
A local conservative
Christian group says it will protest an upcoming Charlotte fundraiser
for a national gay and lesbian group by holding a series of lectures
next week on -- among other things -- biblical condemnations of
homosexuality. Michael Brown, head of the Coalition of Conscience,
said the lectures were timed to coincide with the Feb. 24 fundraising
gala for the Human Rights Campaign.
“My issue
with the Human Rights Campaign is that it’s really ... the
homosexual rights campaign,” said Brown, founder of the Fellowship
for International Revival and Evangelism church in Concord.
The locale for
the free 7 p.m. lectures Monday through Friday: the Booth Playhouse
at the N.C. Blumenthal Performing Arts Center in uptown Charlotte.
The group is also running a large ad in Saturday’s Observer.
The Human Rights
Campaign released a statement saying only that it expects this year’s
Carolinas Dinner “to be more successful than ever before due
to the fact that people in North and South Carolina understand the
importance of promoting equality in every aspect of American society.”
-- Tim Funk
Posted
2-21-07
http://www.charlotte.com/mld/charlotte/news/opinion/16745239.htm
Letters
to the Editor
Why
rent Blumenthal for gay-bashing talks?
The writer
is associate professor, UNC Charlotte Department of Dance and Theatre.
In response
to “Group plans lecture series to protest gay-lesbian fundraiser”
(Feb. 16):
So the Performing
Arts Center has decided to rent space in the Booth Playhouse to
conservative Christians who want to counter the “homosexual
agenda.” Can we soon expect Klan Kapers and Holocaust-deniers
Hoedowns?
Would someone
please ask the Arts & Science Council why these uptown theaters
are empty and thus available for hate groups? Why has local theater
never received ASC support on a par with dance, opera and the symphony?
This bloated organization is more concerned with perpetuating itself
with fund drives than with fostering arts groups that could fill
these theaters.
Are the theaters
empty also because the Observer continues to marginalize theater
and arts coverage? The most theater coverage in recent years has
been your misinformed pursuit of scandal at the late Charlotte Rep.
Bob Croghan
Charlotte
Tax-supported
theater isn’t appropriate place
I know the dollars
of the “Coalition of Conscience” are no different from
any others’ when it comes to buying Observer ad space, but
it does bother me to see its misguided message being spread at a
tax-supported venue such as the Booth Playhouse.
I can only hope
real Christians won’t waste their time listening to Michael
L. Brown.
Michael
K. Warner
Charlotte
Posted
2-22-07
http://www.charlotte.com/mld/charlotte/news/opinion/16753886.htm?source=rss&
channel=charlotte_opinion
Observer
Editorial
FREEDOM
OF SPEECH
Should
theater be available to anti-gay agenda group? Yes
A group of social
conservatives that opposes what it calls a “radical gay agenda”
has rented the uptown Booth Playhouse this week for a lecture series
on homosexuals, society, religion and the law. Some critics have
questioned whether it’s appropriate to rent the publicly owned
space for such a purpose. The answer is simple: Yes, it is.
The group, called
the Coalition of Conscience, planned its lectures to precede the
annual Human Rights Campaign dinner here Saturday. Dr. Mike Brown,
the coalition director, said it will not be “a forum for gay
bashing” and will do nothing that’s “bigoted or
mean-spirited.”
He contends
that the term Human Rights Campaign is misleading. “It’s
the homosexual rights campaign,” he said, promoting an agenda
that affects “how we define marriage, how we run our businesses,
how we teach our children, and even how we interpret the Bible.”
You don’t
have to agree with him in order to have a stake in ensuring his
right to rent the theater. Questions about the appropriate use of
public facilities often arise when controversial issues are involved.
There were many objections when “Angels in America,”
an award-winning play with homosexual themes, was presented at the
Blumenthal Performing Arts Center. And many citizens don’t
like it when gay groups use public parks for celebrations.
Citizens ought
to be wary of urging the government to make political value judgments
about who can and can’t use public facilities to air their
ideas. There’s a risk in trying to use government authority
to deter speech by your opposition. The risk is this: A slight shift
in government might make your side the opposition.
Free speech
that you disagree with may be annoying, but it’s preferable
to empowering government to decide who can say what, and where.
This is, after all, a nation that could not function without a robust
exchange of information and ideas.
Posted 2-23-07
http://www.charlotteobserver.com/127/story/28408.html
Letters
to the Editor
Can’t
cultural venues offer what people want?
In response
to “Why rent Blumenthal for gay-bashing talks?” (Feb.
21 Forum):
Bob Croghan
blames the Arts & Science Council and even the Observer for
the empty seats at uptown cultural events.
Mr. Croghan,
if you provide a product interesting to enough people who will pay
you for the opportunity to see it, then you will be not only successful,
but also self-sufficient -- without the need for public funding.
I doubt the
Coalition of Conscience asked for or expected such money.
Todd Isaacs
Mooresville
Who
speaks for all gays? Not Coalition, not HRC
Coalition of
Conscience director Michael Brown refers to the Human Rights Campaign
as the “homosexual rights campaign.” It’s better
characterized as the “homosexual wing of the Democratic Party.”
The HRC has offered apologia for Democrats who flip-flop on gay
issues, while turning a blind eye when a Republican takes a pro-gay
position.
Opinion within
the gay demographic is much more diverse than either the HRC or
the Coalition of Conscience would have you believe.
Adrianne
Pryor
Charlotte
Posted 2-25-07 AND 2-27-07
http://www.charlotteobserver.com/171/story/33448.html
Dr.
Brown’s Editorial
FOR
THE RECORD
AMERICA’S
NEW SCAPEGOATS
Conservative
Christians under fire for views on homosexual practices
From Michael
L. Brown, PhD, director of the Coalition of Conscience:
In 1989, two
Harvard-trained gay authors, Marshall Kirk and Hunter Madsen, published
their watershed book “After the Ball: How America Will Conquer
Its Fear and Hatred of Gays in the ‘90s.” Their goal
was the “conversion of the average American’s emotions,
mind, and will, through a planned psychological attack, in the form
of propaganda fed to the nation via the media.”
One of their
strategies was to “jam” people’s emotions by associating
“homo-hatred” with Nazi horror, bringing to mind images
such as “Klansmen demanding that gays be slaughtered,”
“hysterical backwoods preachers,” “menacing punks,”
and “a tour of Nazi concentration camps where homosexuals
were tortured and gassed.”
Their strategy
worked like a charm, as Jeff Jacoby, a conservative columnist with
the Boston Globe, commented, “Dare to suggest that homosexuality
may not be something to celebrate and you instantly are a Nazi.
... Offer to share your teachings of Christianity or Judaism with
students `struggling with homosexuality’ and you become as
vile as a Ku Kluxer ....”
I can now confirm
this firsthand.
We recently
held a series of lectures on “Homosexuality, the Church, and
Society,” at Charlotte’s Blumenthal Performing Arts
Center. Every night, we reserved at least 45 minutes for questions
and objections. Our ad in The Charlotte Observer actually encouraged
dissenting viewpoints and stated explicitly that the lectures would
not be a forum for hate speech. And every night, we went out of
our way to speak to the gay and lesbian community with respect and
dignity.
But Kirk and
Madsen were absolutely right. Public perceptions can be manipulated
to the point that the moment someone airs any differences with the
homosexual community, they are labeled Nazis and Klansmen.
In the last
few days, e-mails and blogs have referred to us as hell-bound mindless
bigots, ignorant morons, lunatics and frothing nutbars, accusing
us of openly touting the Nazi agenda, being part of the KKK in Charlotte,
and espousing the American version of Nazism -- all this without
attending a single lecture. Yet it is I and other conservative Christians
who are the hate-filled bigots! How ironic, yet how utterly predictable.
A UNCC professor
chimed in as well, writing a letter to the editor in which he asked,
“Can we soon expect Klan Kapers and Holocaust-deniers Hoedowns”
at the Booth Playhouse?
Isn’t
this over the top? Is there no tolerance of opposing viewpoints
anymore? As a Jewish follower of Jesus born of Jewish parents who
descended from Eastern Europe, I find the constant comparison to
“Nazis” and now “Holocaust deniers” especially
inappropriate.
These lectures
were timed to coincide with the annual Carolinas Dinner of the Human
Rights Campaign, the world’s largest gay, lesbian, bisexual
and transgender advocacy organization, boasting a $30 million budget
and holding to some views that hardly represent mainstream America.
As for those who beg to differ with some of their radical views,
we are labeled Nazis, Klansmen, and Holocaust deniers.
It appears that
America not only conquered much of its fear and hatred of gays in
the 1990s, but it found a new scapegoat: anyone who questions the
validity of homosexual unions and homosexual practice.
Feedback
offers persons or groups criticized in Observer editorials, columns
or news stories an opportunity to respond.
Posted 2-25-07
http://www.charlotteobserver.com/115/story/30723.html
UPTOWN
GAY
RIGHTS ADVOCATES BOND AT FUNDRAISER
Controversial event draws group protests, raises over $400,000
FRANCO
ORDOÑEZ
fordonez@charlotteobserver.com
James Bond might
have been ruffled by all the attention but also intrigued.
The world’s
most debonair fictional spy served as the theme for the 12th annual
gay rights dinner at the Charlotte Convention Center on Saturday.
It was a fundraiser
for the Human Rights Campaign, a national gay, lesbian and transgender
advocacy organization.
More than 1,500
gays and their straight friends mingled to music from Bond films.
Several performers dressed as characters from the movies: A shirtless
man coated in gold-colored makeup amused guests as “Goldfinger,”
carrying hors d’oeuvres on a table wrapped around his body.
A man dressed as Bond nemesis “Dr. No” danced.
The fundraiser
and awards ceremony also attracted its share of controversy.
Christians demonstrated
outside the Convention Center. Down the street, at the Blumenthal
Performing Arts Center, a local conservative Christian group had
just finished a weeklong series of lectures protesting the gala
and what the religious group called the Human Rights Campaign’s
“homosexual agenda.”
Rodney Tucker,
co-chairman of the gala, said he thought Agent 007 would have ordered
a martini and joined the fun.
Jennifer Holliday,
Tony Award-winning star of Broadway’s “Dreamgirls,”
warmed up the crowd by belting out her hit “And I’m
Telling You.” Actor Leslie Jordan of television’s “Will
& Grace” gave the keynote speech.
The Alliance
of AIDS Services, which provides care to AIDS patients, was given
the Community Service Award, one of several that the Human Rights
Campaign presents to groups and people who have helped improve the
lives of gay people.
“Rainbow
Radio,” a broadcast program serving S.C. gays and lesbians,
received the group’s Equality Award.
Scott Vitez
received the Legacy Award. He is best known as Miss Shelita Ham,
the founder and star of Gay Bingo, which raised nearly $700,000
for the Regional AIDS Interfaith Network in six years before ending
last spring.
“It’s
all flattering,” Vitez said. “I didn’t care what
type of costume I had to wear (at Gay Bingo) as long as people kept
coming to support RAIN.”
Saturday’s
dinner was the Human Rights Campaign’s best attended one nationwide,
organizers said, raising more than $400,000.
Corporate sponsors
included Bank of America, Wachovia and Duke Energy.
Coalition of
Conscience Director Michael Brown, who led the protest series at
the Blumenthal, said he believed most people would be shocked to
find out about the corporate sponsorship. He called the Human Rights
Campaign an “extreme homosexual action group” and said
it was deceptive to call itself a human rights group.
“I also
work against bigotry and hatred, but I will not endorse the sexual
practices and lifestyles they endorse,” he said.
Those at the
dinner said the controversy wouldn’t spoil the party.
“I feel sorry for them,” said Dianna Ward, 38, of Charlotte.
“If Jesus were walking today, he’d be at the HRC dinner.
He wouldn’t be outside condemning people.”
Dan Mauney,
co-chair of the gala, said the controversy actually helped boost
awareness and ticket sales.
“We’re
on Cloud Nine with this event tonight,” he said. “Each
year, the dinner grows. ... Being from a very typical conservative
area, it tells me the area is changing in a positive way. We’re
hearing loud and clear from the community that `It is OK to be you,
and we support you.’ “
The Coalition
of Conscience is a network of Christian leaders and believers, currently
based in the greater Charlotte, North Carolina area, who are working
together for moral and cultural change through the gospel.
Dr.
Michael L. Brown is the Director of the Coalition and serves
as its voice to the local and national community.
Download this document in PDF format:
click
here
Dr.
Michael L. Brown
ICN Ministries
PO Box 1446
Harrisburg, NC 28075
704-782-3760
e-mail: ministry@icnministries.org
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