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Representative Fischer's (R) statement upsets gays
Wednesday, October 25, 2006
(Kentucky Post)Kentucky
Post
By Kevin Eigelbach, Post
staff reporter
Gay rights groups are
objecting to comments that state Rep. Joseph
Fischer made to a Northern Kentucky
newspaper.
According to a Community
Recorder article published Thursday, the Fort
Thomas Republican said that it's obvious that
homosexuals can change their
orientation.
In an interview with The
Post Tuesday, he didn't back away from that
statement.
"I've done a little research
into that," he said, and referenced two Web
sites, http://www.narth.org/
and http://www.couragerc.net/.
The former is the Web site of the
National Association for Research and Therapy
of Homosexuality, whose primary goal is to give
therapy to homosexuals who want to
change.
The latter is the site for
Courage, a Roman Catholic group that helps
homosexuals live a celibate
lifestyle.
Kentucky Equality Federation,
a gay-rights group, disputed that homosexuals
can change, citing American Psychological
Association policy.
The federation
challenged Fischer to change his own
orientation to homosexual for 48 hours, an
invitation Fischer said he didn't intend to
respond to.
Fischer's Democratic
challenger, Fort Thomas resident Linda
Klembara, said she didn't believe homosexuals
could change their sexual
orientation.
"I don't ever remember
consciously saying, 'I'm going to be a
heterosexual,'" she said. "I think we're all
born who we are."
Fischer told The Post
that the Community Recorder quoted him
accurately, but somewhat out of
context.
He was asked if it was OK under
Kentucky law to fire someone for being gay, and
he said it was.
"I favor the present law
as it exists," he said. "I don't favor
extending special civil rights beyond the
traditional protected
classes."
Homosexuals have not
experienced the same type of "insidious
discrimination in housing and employment" as
blacks and women, he said.
Usually,
society defines protected classes by their
inherent characteristics and not the
relationships they form, he said.
"As a
class, gays have equal or higher median income
as heterosexuals," he said. "That may not be
the case for women and minorities."
The
federation's president, Jordan Palmer, said
Fischer's statement that it's all right to fire
employees for being gay reminded him of other
things that used to be OK in the United States,
such as forced segregation.
"The
comments made by Representative Fischer are a
slap in the face to the people who lay their
lives on the line every day to protect the
ideals the founders of our nation had," he
said.
He also disputed Fischer's
statement that gays had not suffered as much as
blacks and other minorities.
During
World War II, at least 15,000 gay men died in
concentration camps in Germany, he said. German
soldiers were also known to use gay men for
target practice, aiming their weapons at the
pink triangles gays had to wear on their
shirts.
"I'd like Representative Fischer
to provide us with a number of exactly how many
people need to suffer before he will
acknowledge it," Palmer said.
Fischer's
statements weren't that much of a surprise to
Covington resident Dean Forster, secretary for
the Kentucky Fairness Alliance.
Fischer
has sponsored several "anti-gay" bills, Forster
said, including one to rescind city ordinances
in Covington, Lexington and Louisville to
protect gays from discrimination.
"I
will certainly be looking to support candidates
who advocate legislation that protects all
people from discrimination," Forster said of
the November election.
Klembara, also of
Fort Thomas, said her faith would not allow her
to condone prejudice against anyone. She
doesn't believe employers should be able to
fire people just for being gay.
"It's my
belief that when the Lord told us to love one
another, it was not a suggestion, it was a
commandment," she said.
