Wednesday, August 02, 2017

Family Research Council thinks lying about transgender troops is a Christian value

Tony Perkins and his group lie about trans soldiers defending their freedoms.

I feel secure in saying that repeatedly, I've proven on this blog that the Family Research Council, in spite of all its claims of being a "Christian" organization, has no problem with spreading outright lies and distortions in its quest to stamp down on LGBTQ equality.

However, in FRC's quest to keep it's sacred cow Donald Trump safe in the White House, the organization is obviously picking up his main bad habit; telling lies so pathetic that it takes no effort in refuting them.

Today's Washington Update FRC put out defending Trump's sad attempt to ban transgender men and women from the military is  a perfect example. The amount of lies and misdirection the Family Research used in just two paragraphs of the post left me shocked. In over 10 years of tracking and calling out the group, I thought I had seen the full length of its audacity. Apparently I hadn't:


Liberals have spent the last week insisting that Donald Trump's military policy is wrong -- but they certainly haven't come up with any compelling reasons why. While conservatives point to a laundry list of problems from the potential $3.7 billion price tag to "sensitivity" training, the Left's only defense seems to be trotting out photos of a former Navy SEAL Christopher (now Kristin) Beck. No one argues that Beck served his country with distinction -- but he never did so as a woman. He identified as a new gender after he was discharged, and even then, didn't publicly "come out" until two years later. As Donna Carol Voss points out in a great column for the Federalist, "6 Ridiculous Arguments in Favor of Transgender Soldiers," it's "disingenuous to say Beck is the first female Navy SEAL when that career ended two years before Christopher -- who was known for his beard -- transitioned to Kristin. There has never been a female Navy SEAL, only a male Navy SEAL who retired and took feminizing hormones."
  
Ask a liberal how Obama's policy actually improves readiness, and they'll respond one of two ways: with a personal story or a personal attack. Why? Because there hasn't been a single scientifically-based, rational military argument for it. Without psychology, top brass, or even popular opinion on their side, the Left resorts to a tired playbook -- distractions and name-calling. Fox News's Tucker Carlson found that out in his debate with New York Congressman Sean Maloney (D). Like most liberals, Maloney's go-to justifications for Obama's were Beck and transgender empowerment. Apparently, he thinks the military's job isn't winning wars but putting people on the path to self-actualization.

There are so many lies and misdirections here, I need to number them.

1. Liberals have spent the last week insisting that Donald Trump's military policy is wrong -- but they certainly haven't come up with any compelling reasons why. While conservatives point to a laundry list of problems 

That statement is a misdirection. The "laundry list" is a link FRC's issue brief on the controversy.  FRC conveniently omitted that both liberals and conservatives spoke out against the ban, including five Republican senators - Orrin Hatch, Joni Ernst, Lindsey Graham, Richard Shelby, and John McCain. Also, some conservatives said that "they were pushing only to prevent the Pentagon from paying for medical costs associated with gender confirmation -- not an outright ban."  That brings us to point two.

2.  the potential $3.7 billion price tag 

 It's like I've said so many times before that when groups like FRC find a factoid they can use against the LGBTQ community, they will repeat it constantly regardless of said factoid being debunked. The idea that keeping transgender men and women in the military will cost over three billion dollars is not a possibility. It is a straight-up lie.

According to CBS News:

President Trump's assertion that permitting transgender people in the armed services entails major health care costs appears to be overblown, based on estimates from the think tank RAND, which was asked by the Department of Defense to study the issue last year. Health care costs for treating active members who want to transition to another gender would increase by between $2.4 million to $8.4 million annually, RAND found. That translates to 0.04 percent to 0.13 percent of the agency's annual spending on health care. "Our study found that the number of U.S. transgender service members who are likely to seek transition-related care is so small that a change in policy will likely have a marginal impact on health care costs and the readiness of the force," the Rand researchers wrote.

To come up with its figure, FRC used one of its fake experts, Peter Sprigg. Sprigg, a former "professional actor" and presently a pastor,  has been anointed by FRC as "Senior Fellow of Policy Studies." Who would you trust to give the best research? Him or an organization asked by the Department of Defense to provide research?

3. Because there hasn't been a single scientifically-based, rational military argument for it. Without psychology, top brass, or even popular opinion on their side, the Left resorts to a tired playbook -- distractions and name-calling.

This a major lie on so many levels, the main one will be covered in point four. But more egregiously in this point are the links FRC provides to claim that top military brass and popular opinion are not on the side of those against the ban. Both links are to articles talking about delaying the implementation of Obama's policy allowing transgender men and women to serve openly. Neither article have anything to do with Trump's outright ban.  What's even more brazen of FRC to use those articles is the fact that both were published in June, a month before Trump tweeted his ban.

In reality, top military brass and public opinion are in favor of transgender soldiers serving in the military.

4. The entire tone of FRC's article is that folks against the ban can't find any good reason to oppose it, therefore we are attacking those who support the ban or using supposedly deceptive personal stories, such as the one the group spotlighted.

That is the most blatant lie. In column after column and editorial after editorial, reasons why Trump's ban is bad policy are laid out. Here are a few:

Trump’s cruel, unnecessary transgender ban

Transgender military ban shameful act by Trump

7 reasons Trump's transgender military ban is wrong

No Justification

Trump's Dishonorable Transgender Ban 

And there are many diverse personal stories of those negatively affected by Trump's ban. Here are a few of those:

After Trump announces ban, trans soldiers wonder what comes next

Trans troops continue their service as Trump threatens expulsion 

These extremely swole trans soldiers plan to keep fighting

Let's focus on the Family Research Council because the way the group chose to defend Trump's ban says more about it than the issue of  transgender soldiers. What does it say about a supposed "Christian" group which will use lies and distortions to spit on those defending its freedoms?

2 comments:

Unknown said...

The FRC represents everything that is wrong with the US. They not only deliberately distort the Bible to support their narrow minded, bigotted views but the Constitution too!

Jesus famously shunned the "righteous" nd spent all his time among the outcasts of society, the lepers, tax collectors, the widows and the infirm. If the second coming was tonight and there was a choice of whom he would spend his time with, would it be the Sanhedrin, er sorry, FRC or would it be the LGBT community?

Unknown said...

Tara Martel, I'm not a Christian, but I had a Christian upbringing and I remember the teachings perfectly well. I'd like to thank you for your comment, which is biblically right on the money. People like FRC are no more Christian than I am. Hell, I AM a transgender woman, and I really do try to treat other folks the way I like to be treated, so I guess that makes me better than those FRC wipes, and I don't even believe in god. Christ compared those people to a "white-washed tomb," painted up all nice on the outside and dead inside. I'm with Ghandi, who famously said, “I like your Christ, I do not like your Christians. Your Christians are so unlike your Christ.”