Posted on 08/28/2008 7:03:24 AM PDT by ZGuy
The news media loudly proclaimed its support for the homosexual activist agenda at the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association convention in Washington, D.C.
Its spelled NLGJA, but they pronounce it Negligee.
The National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association (NLGJA) just held its annual convention here in Washington D.C., attracting hundreds of journalists and ringing endorsements from virtually every major publication and broadcaster in the news media.
In a full-page ad in the convention program, NBC Universal declared it is proud to support NLGJA, under the bold headline: YOUR VICTORIES ARE OUR VICTORIES.
After listening to speaker after speaker express hatred and contempt for political and religious conservatives while plotting how to advance the homosexual activist agenda through journalism, Im left wondering whether Americans know the extent of the medias bias on homosexual issues. Do they know that the news media have thrown themselves fully behind the gay rights movement? Every major news organization sponsored the convention, bought space in the program or had recruiting booths.
Hatred. NBC/National Journal reporter Matthew Berger said he experienced reverse Stockholm syndrome while on the campaign trail covering GOP religious conservative Mike Huckabee. Stockholm syndrome is what afflicts hostages who come to love their captors. If Bergers feelings changed after traveling with the Huckabee campaign, they went in the opposite direction. He acknowledged how difficult it is for a journalist to do his job when you hate the people youre covering. Berger said he was happy when he was transferred to the gay-friendly Rudolph Giuliani campaign.
Sending an outspoken activist like Berger, the former president of NLGJAs Washington D.C. chapter, to cover the Huckabee campaign is like sending a hard-right activist to cover the Obama campaign. What was NBC thinking? Maybe they had no choice. Does NBC have anybody on staff who doesnt hate religious conservatives?
Kerry Eleveld, news editor for a homosexual-themed magazine appropriately named The Advocate, described as refreshing Pastor Rick Warrens questions to the presidential candidates at the Saddleback Church forum on August 16. However, she also got big laughs when she said she understood how others might find the pastors participation in the political process nauseating.
Discussing attitudes toward homosexuality, Los Angeles Times opinion pages editor Robin Rauzi revealed Big Media contempt for the rubes in Flyover Country: We feel our readers are ahead of where they are in Kansas City.
Political activism. During a sparsely attended (11 out of hundreds of conferees) session promoting objectivity in news coverage, a reporter from a Florida newspaper acknowledged his biases: the publics right to know, and equality. By equality, he meant the homosexual activist political agenda. He revealed the tension that ought to have bedeviled every journalist at the conference: how to avoid ideological bias while covering the news.
On a partisan level, the conferees clearly leaned toward the Democrats. One speaker frankly admitted that the homosexual activist community generally expects most gays to be Democrats. Two panels touched on a partisan controversy raging in the homosexual community: James Kirchick, Assistant Editor of The New Republic, said gays are shocked and up in arms because the owner of Manhunt, a very popular same-sex dating site, contributes money to presumptive GOP presidential candidate John McCain.
Even Patrick Sammon, president of the organization for homosexuals in the GOP, the Log Cabin Republicans, stressed that his organization does not support social conservatives. Sammon called former Pennsylvania GOP Sen. Rick Santorum a bigot. Another journalist observed that some people in D.C. make it their business to out homosexual staffers of GOP congressmen with an anti-gay agenda.
A panel supposedly intended to foster accurate coverage of religion quickly turned into a political strategizing session aimed at retaking Christianity from conservatives. The moderator and organizer of the panel, furniture magnate Mitchell Gold, is the founder of Faith in America, a homosexual activist organization targeting the religious community.
Gold said, The single biggest [obstacle] to gays having equal rights in the country is religion, so I set myself to learn about it. One of the panelists, Ann Craig, director of Religion, Faith & Values for the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD), said, Were not getting anyplace until we begin conquering the debate in the religious community.
How to do it? Panelist Jimmy Creech, the former United Methodist pastor defrocked in 1999 for conducting same-sex marriages, told the journalists to seek out other voices rather than quote the 700 Clubs Pat Robertson and Focus on the Family founder Dr. James Dobson. According to Creech, conservative Christian leaders like Robertson and Dobson are the most radical Christians in America today, and represent a very minority point of view.
The sole journalist on the panel was David Waters, editor of the Washington Post/Newsweek On Faith blog. Waters urged reporters not to go to established leaders like Robertson and Dobson, contrasting them to real people in the pews.
Sponsorship. Who paid for this blend of journalism and activism? The NLGJA convention was underwritten by most of the biggest names in the news business. At the $25,000 level: the McClatchy Company. At the $15,000 level: CBS, CNN, Gannett Foundation, ESPN, and Hearst Newspapers. Kicking in $10,000 were NBC, Fox Business, Fox News, News Corporation, and The Washington Post. Good for $5,000 were ABC News and Bloomberg. Publisher and broadcaster Cox Enterprises bought the inside cover of the program, and CBS News salutes NLGJA on the back cover. Gannett (USA Today) salutes NLGJA in a full-page ad, as does The New York Times in a half-page ad. A.H. Belo Corporation (Dallas Morning News, Providence Journal) declares it is a proud sponsor in a full-page ad, while The Washington Post congratulates NLGJA in its full-page ad.
Recruiting. NLGJA members generally view themselves as members of an oppressed minority group, which suggests theyre likely to bring a political agenda to their journalism. The NLGJA convention doesnt seem to be a likely place to find objective reporters. Nevertheless, most of the top organizations in journalism sent recruiters: The New York Times, The Washington Post, CNN, ABC, NBC, CBS, AP, NPR, Bloomberg, even conservative-leaning Fox. The poor Fox recruiter seemed lonely.
The political and ideological bias so readily apparent at the NLGJA convention reflects a glaring problem in the news industry as a whole. Reporting the news objectively is still a matter of professional pride to most journalists, but many also have bigger fish to fry.
Sending an outspoken activist like Berger, the former president of NLGJAs Washington D.C. chapter, to cover the Huckabee campaign is like sending a hard-right activist to cover the Obama campaign. What was NBC thinking? Maybe they had no choice. Does NBC have anybody on staff who doesnt hate religious conservatives?
Where’s the tolerance?
Where’s the LOVE from this “gay” person?
I reject it too. Not just for secular and OBVIOUS reasons but also "religious" reasons. Mike is weird and a humanist but he has the right to reject the choice of the “gay” lifestyle.
NBC to Gay Journalists: “Your sore butts are our sore butts.”
I’m not religious myself but I prefer to be surrounded by Christians and Jews rather than people who worship penis’s and vagina’s.
I went to school with one of the journalists in the article. She didn’t seem that bigoted against non-gays in college. What happened?
“as underwritten by most of the biggest names in the news business. At the $25,000 level: the McClatchy Company.”
....ahh yes, McClatchey...the queer journalists may love them; but Wall Street sure doesn’t:
http://bigcharts.marketwatch.com/quickchart/quickchart.asp?symb=mni&sid=0&o_symb=mni&x=57&y=17
So folks at N.B.C., how are you going to feel and act when you come home some day and an old queen is trying to seduce your young son?
If you object you will be arrested and put in jail.
NBC will advocate criminal penalty protection for such molestation of minors.
You’re on to something here. The homosexual community seems to be fixated on sex. Not saying that other people don’t talk about sex or brag about what they do, but it does seem like the homosexual community is focused on how and with whom they carry on their intimate activity.
They have to focus on sex. They can’t create a family rubbing same-gender sex organs together so they have to concentrate on the act, rather than the purpose.
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