The Fib Factory
by Wayne Besen
June 22, 2006
I have yet to visit Focus on the Family's massive "campus" in Colorado
Springs a place so large it has its own zip code. But each year, thousands of
fundamentalists traipse through this tourist trap to bow to King James. The
people I know who have visited say that pictures of the group's leader, James
Dobson, hang ubiquitously while tour guides reverently refer to him as "Dr.
Dobson."
"I felt like I was in North Korea and Dobson was playing the part of Kim
Jong Il," a friend recently told me. "Call it what you will, but this was a
form of idolatry."
While I'm sure the toady tour is mesmerizing, what I really want to do is
slip past security and into the bowels of the building where a trap door must
exist that leads to "The Fib Factory."
In this liar's lair, I picture a team of butch women and effete men -
ex-gays in their Homosexuality and Gender Department hooked up to polygraph
machines. These "experts" are asked by Dobson to say whatever comes to mind about
homosexuality. Whenever a red light flickers, signifying a bald faced lie,
Dobson turns to his personal assistant and says "Write that down we have
a new talking point."
This scenario is fiction, but so is this group's alarming propaganda. Dobson'
s maddening mendacity is only surpassed by his capacity for audacity. The
hocus pocus from Focus is spreading like a plague of locusts, while their
fallacies are finding their way into municipalities.
This week, my organization, Truth Wins Out, caught the right wing's 800
pound gorilla in two white lies as large as New Hampshire's White Mountains. The
group grossly distorted a study by a Canadian researcher that showed teenage
lesbians had a higher rate of suicide attempts. Unconscionably, Melissa
Fryrear, a spokesperson for Focus on the Family, blamed gay activists for causing
the deaths, saying that teaching self-acceptance caused the young women to be
suicidal.
"Regrettably, they think they have to embrace homosexuality because pro-gay
advocates told them that they were born gay," said Fryrear.
This interpretation of the data "baffled" Dr. Elizabeth Saewyc, the Ass
ociate Professor at the University of British Columbia, who conducted the study.
"Nothing in the brief results we presented or in our overall study could
lead to such conclusions," she said after I contacted her and showed her how
Focus on the Family portrayed her study results. "Population surveys cannot
determine cause and effect, they can only suggest possible links. Even so, other
researchers have not found these sorts of links, and neither have we."
The Canadian Press, a wire service, interviewed Sawwyc and she expressed
further alarm on how her scholarly work had suddenly ended up as culture war
fodder for the Focus foxhole.
"The research has been hijacked for somebody's political purposes or
ideological purposes and that's worrisome."
Realizing that she was caught in a calumny, Fryrear invoked the work of Dr.
Robert Spitzer, a Columbia University researcher who had published a 2001
study on sexual orientation. The Focus spokeswoman said in the article that
Spitzer's research linked contemplating suicide to unwanted attractions to the
same sex.
I contacted Spitzer the next day and it turns out that his work had also
been distorted. He sent me a statement outlining his dismay over the way Focus
on the Family misrepresented his study.
"Unfortunately, Focus on the Family has once again reported findings of my
study out of context to support their fight against gay rights," said Spitzer.
"Although a third of the subjects in my study reported having had serious
thoughts of suicide related to their homosexuality, not one of them blamed the
gay rights movement's advocating a 'born-gay' theory of homosexuality as the
cause of their suicidal thinking."
Fryrear essentially tried to dig herself out of a hole caused by distorting
the work of one researcher by twisting the work of another. Isn't there
something in the Bible about not baring false witness? Just another day at the Fib
Factory, I guess.
Focus on the Family has always been truth challenged and taken special
delight in mocking science. Remember, this group also started The Family Research
Council, a Washington lobby that ironically does virtually no original
research.
In Focus on the Family's mammoth "campus" there are hundreds of employees.
But is there a single person there who knows a centrifuge from a centerfold
or a test tube from a boob tube? All they understand is the science of spin,
which can lead to embarrassing sin, as James Dobson learned this week.
Wayne Besen is a nationally recognized advocate for gay and lesbian rights. He has appeared as a guest on leading news and political talk shows including: NBC Nightly News, The Roseanne Show, CNN's Talk Back Live and The Point, Fox's O'Reilly Factor and Hannity and Colmes, Fox News and MSNBC News.
Please visit Wayne's Website WayneBesen.com, and you may write to him at wbesen@aol.com
or phone 917-691-5118.
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