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25th-Jun-2008 03:09 pm - Religion Poisons Everything.
Go Obey Your Husband You Stupid Republic
I'm a fan of the show 30 Days on the FX network. I believe it is the best reality TV program available. My favorite episodes are those that deal with religious differences and socioeconomics because they are topics I'm interested most in. The episode where the Christian man goes to live with a family of Muslims in a largely Muslim community (Muslims & America) was fascinating and enlightening, mostly because the man got the most he could out of his learning experience and came away with understandings he never would have had on his own. The cornfed boy next door guy who went to live in San Francisco with a gay man (Straight Man In A Gay World) and immersed himself in gay culture was also very good, you had the opportunity to see someone evolving in much the same way. In the first season (we're not halfway through season 3) the show's creator, Morgan Spurlock (whom most will know from his documentary Supersize Me) and his fiancee had to live on minimum wage - to include ALL of their living expenses (rent, utilities, healthcare, food, transportation, everything) for 30 days (Minimum Wage). It was amazing. This season alone they've done a remarkable episode where a former NFL Cornerback had to live in a wheelchair for, you guessed it, 30 days (30 Days In A Wheelchair).

Last night's episode absolutely gobsmacked me. I have cried myself into a headache over it. It was about a gay couple and their three adopted sons who have a Mormon woman come and live with their family. The woman's name is Kati, and she is virulently opposed to same sex adoption. [info]lolasenvy posted a scathing response about it, and I have to say that I feel essentially the same way she does.

Once again, as evidenced by this show, you see how religion poisons everything - to quote Christopher Hitchens. Episode synposis:
30 Days - Season 03, Episode 04: Same Sex Parenting
PARTICIPANT - Kati, 41
RESIDES - Fullerton, CA
OCCUPATION - Substitute Teacher
AIRDATE - Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Kati believes that children should be raised by a mother and a father and not by same-sex parents. As the mother of two adopted sons Kati believes that she has ample experience to determine what kind of environment is conducive to healthy, successful adoptions. In fact, Kati was adopted as an infant herself.

For 30 Days, Kati will live in Ypsilanti, Michigan with domestic partners Dennis and Thomas Patrick and their four adopted sons: Josh, 11; Paul, 8; Joey, 8; and Raul, 6. The Patrick's have been together for 10 years, and in 2001, Thomas legally changed his last name to Patrick. Kati will attend church with the family, help the boys get ready for school each morning and talk candidly about her views on parenting and gay adoption as she observes how the Patrick's parent their boys.

Kati will volunteer and travel to the state capitol with the Coalition for Adoption Rights Equality (CARE), a children's advocacy group lobbying for legislation to legalize dual-parenting rights for same-gender couples. She will socialize with women from the Lesbian Mom's Network, a group that connects lesbian mothers and their children with families like their own. She will also meet with former foster children who talk about what it's like to grow up without parents or a permanent home and the need for more foster parents.
It's not available just yet on Hulu and I'm not sure when it will reair on FX, but if you're impatient and don't want to wait you can download the torrent here. I highly reccommend having this episode handy and sharing it with as many people as possible. Once you've seen it, I'm interested to know your thoughts.
Max
The picture to the left is of a family, more specifically the Lofton-Croteau family. It is comprised of two fathers and five siblings of different ages, genders, bloodlines and races. It was forged of love, patience, understanding, and a deep sense of responsibility. The eldest three of the children in this family were born with HIV/AIDS in Florida, where they were basically discarded by their heterosexual birth parents and left to a horrible system of state government in Florida which is the only state with an outright ban on gay adoption. They were taken into the family as infants, having languished in hospitals in Florida until Mr. Lofton and Mr. Croteau took them home and made for them a family. The two youngest, also born HIV positive, were taken in by the family in Oregon, where they all currently reside. The foster parents ( Steve Lofton, 44, and Roger Croteau, 46) of these children (Frank, 14, Tracy, 14, Bert, 10, Wayne, 8, and Ernie, 5), decided that the babies needed to be taken care of by parents who could handle the demands and create a loving environment for them to live in - despite the odds stacked against them that these children may not even live for very much longer. A sixth child, Ginger, died of AIDS complications in 1995 at the age of 6. All of the children were old enough to understand — and to be devastated.

Because the family cannot legally adopt these children as they are wards of the state of Florida and the couple is gay, Steve and Roger are regularly reminded that Florida's law banning gay adoption puts their family in jeopardy. Every few weeks, a letter comes from the state, giving an update on the status of finding another family to adopt Bert. Because he no longer tests positive for HIV and is under the age of 14, Bert is deemed "adoptable." Steve and Roger are legally prohibited from adopting him because of Florida's ban. So the state continues its effort to find him another home, even though this is the only family he's ever known—even though, like all five of the kids, he's already home. THIS IS AN OUTRAGE! This prompted the involvement of the ACLU, on whose behalf a website has been created for the family called Let Him Stay. A documentary on the family called We Are Dad is currently airing on Showtime and is also available on Netflix.

Apparently people like Katherine Harris and Jeb Bush think it is perfectly fine for caseworkers in the Florida Department of Children & Families to totally lose track of the children they're supposed to be monitoring:
But allowing people who just HAPPEN to be gay yet are willing and able to create good homes for some of these children, that is not, nor should it be feasible under the state legislature. And for what, I ask?

The American Academy of Pediatrics issued a policy statement supporting legal and legislative efforts to provide second-parent or co-parent adoptions to same-sex couples. The policy statement was published in Pediatrics, a peer-reviewed academic journal. It urged AAP members to "support the right of every child and family to the financial, psychological and legal security that results from having legally recognized parents who are committed to each other and the welfare of their children." The North American Council on Adoptable Children issued policy statements saying that sexual orientation "is not a determinant of good parenting and further that banning same sex adoption is dangerous."

There are currently more than 500,000 children in the foster care system in the United States being deprived of stable homes and loving families. The number of children that require adoption in the U.S. is over 190,000. The fact of the matter is evidence does not exist that proves that a child raised by a gay parent is harmed or disadvantaged in any way. In fact, one study showed that the process a homosexual couple has to go through to get a child is so time consuming that it actually proves their desire for a child. Studies show that the care is no different between a homosexual couple and a heterosexual couple. The American Academy of Family Physicians, the Child Welfare League of America (also telling the appeals court that the ban hurts children who are waiting to be placed in adoptive homes), the National Association of Social Workers, the Evan B. Donaldson Adoption Institute, and the American Psychological Association all recognize that families headed by gays or lesbians can be run exactly the same as heterosexual headed families. Nearly a dozen former Florida state legislators who voted in favor of the ban in 1977 have since apologized for supporting it and publicly called for the ban to be repealed.

No research studies provide evidence that gay parenting hinders a child’s ability to grow psychologically. Gay parents can teach a child to have more tolerance for diversity and perhaps break down several of societies stereotypes against homosexuals. The only type of problem a child would possibly have to face is bullying by peers in school. Studies have not shown that children raised in a homosexual environment become homosexual themselves. Research does not provide evidence that homosexual couples raise children in a relatively unfit or unhealthy environment.



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