Posted on 01/23/2002 8:43:27 AM PST by tdadams
(CNSNews.com) - Need money for college tuition? A group of employees from telecommunications giant AT&T will help pay the bills of students who identify themselves as homosexuals.
Grades and extra-curricular activities don't count as much as sexual orientation for this type of financial help.
The scholarship comes from the AT&T Foundation's LEAGUE, which is an acronym for Lesbian, Bisexual, Gay & Transgendered United Employees.
LEAGUE is one of seven "Business Resource Groups" at AT&T, serving as a homosexual advocacy resource for the telecommunications giant, its customers, shareholders, colleagues, families and the global community.
For the past six years, LEAGUE at AT&T Foundation has awarded a handful of $1,500 academic scholarships to self-identified homosexual youth. LEAGUE Foundation spokesperson Charles Eader noted that applications have doubled every year since the fund was launched.
And for those homosexual students who have demonstrated leadership in promoting diversity and understanding in the community, the LEAGUE Foundation offers a $2,500 scholarship dedicated to the memory of Matthew Sheppard, whom it considers a model of courage.
Sheppard, who was homosexual, was tortured and beaten to death by two men on Dec. 28, 1998 in Wyoming. He was 21 at the time.
LEAGUE Foundation said it hopes Shepherd's memory will inspire lesbian, bisexual, gay & transgendered applicants and recipients of scholarships to persevere against anti-homosexual intimidation both in and out of the classroom.
According to Eader, applicants must be high school graduates; identify themselves as lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgendered; have achieved a cumulative grade point average of at least 3.0 on a 4.0 scale; be actively and substantially involved in community service; live in the United States; and have been accepted to attend an accredited college or university in the United States.
But conservatives are outraged by the notion that homosexuality is being rewarded by corporations such as AT&T.
"It's sad that teenagers are being deceived about sexuality and recruited into a lifestyle that is unhealthy and immoral," said the Family Research Council's Kristin Hansen. "It's definitely evidence that homosexual activists are organized at many facets of society -- in the corporate world, in schools and in the media."
Eader noted that LEAGUE Foundation is funded wholly by donations and does not receive any financial support from the AT&T corporation. AT&T allows LEAGUE Foundation to conduct its communication and planning activities -- including phone calls, faxes, and emails -- on corporate premises. However, Eader noted that LEAGUE and LEAGUE at AT&T Foundation "are 2 different and distinct, even though related, organizations."
Membership in the AT&T Business Resource Group LEAGUE is reserved solely for AT&T employees. According to Eader, any homosexual advocacy group or its members may become part of the 501(c)3 LEAGUE at AT&T Foundation charity . This charity also "welcomes financial support from the larger LGBT community and its allies," according to the group's Web site, which is hosted by AT&T.
"The level of organization is not a surprise," Hansen said of LEAGUE's wide-open membership requirements and financial practices.
Eader said homosexual scholarship recipients who have been outspoken in their communities are encouraged to continue such activism when they get to college, but he said they have no obligation to do so. Eader added that the names of scholarship recipients remain anonymous, no matter what path they choose to follow.
But scholarship recipients are not discouraged from performing acts of "community service." In fact, Eader said LEAGUE and its supporters would benefit from having a fresh voice on campus promoting the homosexual issues and diversity.
Hansen said LEAGUE's scholarship offering is just another example of incentives encouraging behavior. "And if there's money available," she added, "it legitimizes a behavior."
Those are Private organizations, not a public company.
So show me how I'm wrong...
What's the point? You're not going to listen to anyone but those who agree with you anyway.
But I will say this... this is a free country. We have a Constitution that sought to severly limit the role of government in the everday lives of American citizens. American citizens have the right to be left alone (that is in the Federalist Papers, since you'll ask). It also made clear that America is not to be a theocracy, so you cannot refer to your own religious values as some kind of authority on what the law should be.
ConLib
America was built on Godly values, it is clearly evident in early law, early writings by the founding fathers, etc. The right to practice religion freely was never intended to be freedom from any religion. I don't want to spread my religion to others by force, not in the least. I do want good Godly laws that protect my children and my future gand-children from perverts and immoral people. Without moral laws, we have no forundation of which to build law.
The hate and venom spewed on these threads is sickening most of the time. I have gay friends and a gay nephew - I love them all dearly. When people stop treating gay people as a "thing" and treat them as real live human beings we will all be better off. (If that sounds a bit familiar, it's a lot like what we as pro-lifers are asking of pro-abortionists.) I prefer to leave judgment on this and any other situation like it to God.
The law already protects you, your children, and grandchildren from perverts and immoral people. If someone molests them, that person will go to prison and should stay there for a long time, if not for life.
But the law does not allow you to prescribe how other consenting adults are allowed to live their life. Simple as that.
Religion is a personal thing. You can choose to believe in whatever faith you choose and worship in any manner you choose. No one can take that away from you.
But you can't dictate your religious values to others under the aegis of law. That's a theocracy. Whether you call it a theocracy or not doesn't change the fact that it is a theocracy.
The right to practice religion freely was never intended to be freedom from any religion.
I agree completely, and am constantly disabusing people of the popular fallacy that the Constitution calls for a "separation of church and state." That is an invented phrase used by the left to drive religion out of America. It's increasingly effective as the size of government (the public sector) continues to grow and get its tentacles in every facet of American life.
I am a Christian and would fight to the death anyone who would try to make America an atheist nation. But at the same time, I'm respectful of others choices in life so long as they do not initiate force or fraud against me.
I look to the example of Jesus at the well and decide that it's not my place to judge others. That's God's job, and if God gives a man his entire life before he is judged, who am I to preempt God?
Your buddies already tried that.
It is impossible to practice one's religion, if one is not free from the imposition of his neighbor's religion by government force.
Maybe you missed that fact.
Have you ever comitted sodomy?
I'd bet serious money that you have.
And yet instead of rightly opposing the government social programs that pay these medical expenses, you attempt to use one wrong (government socialism) to justify another (government imprisonment of all homosexuals).
You sure have a funny way of looking at things.
It is the same reason why drugs should not be legalized. Smoking pot encourages behavior that shouldn't be looked upon with indifference. Laziness, losing your sexual inhibitions, gluttony are vices, not virtues.
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