The National Association for Research and Therapy of Homosexuality (NARTH) is a discredited “ex-gay” fringe organization that peddles fraudulent “cures” for homosexuality. Sadly, a lucrative market still exists for anti-gay stereotypes disguised as science and the greedy ideologue “therapists” eager to profit from unnecessary pain. They take advantage of vulnerable people who want to “fit in” and exploit suffering families who are desperate to believe they can cure a loved one.
Here are 10 Key Facts to know about NARTH:
1) NARTH recommends “treating” males as young as three years old, referring to them as “pre-homosexual boys.” In our view, this is consumer fraud since parents are unlikely to see results, despite expensive therapy sessions. We also believe forcing children to undergo traumatic, shame inducing “therapy” is child abuse that may cause lasting psychological scars.
2) Reparative therapy is not considered a legitimate and accepted form of psychological care. It is soundly rejected by every mainstream medical and mental health organization in America. The American Psychological Association says attempts to change sexual orientation can cause, “anxiety, depression and self destructive behavior. In August 2009, the American Psychological Association produced a landmark report that said, there was “no evidence” that ex-gay therapy was effective, and many cases it was linked to harm. There are survivor organizations to help the victims of such therapy, as well as support groups for spouses who married a gay partner who could not change sexual orientations.
3) NARTH believes that heterosexuality is quite malleable. The group’s founder, Dr. Joseph Nicolosi, claims that if a straight male suffers “defeat or failure” he could become vulnerable to homosexuality.
4) NARTH is not a secular organization, as it often claims. For many years, Dr. Joseph Nicolosi served as a spokesperson for the far right Christian organization Focus on the Family. On CNN’s 360 Degrees with Anderson Cooper, (April 14, 2007), Nicolosi said, “We, as citizens, need to articulate God’s intent for human sexuality.” At the Feb. 10, 2007 Love Won Out conference in Phoenix, the “secular” therapist told the audience, “When we live our God-given integrity and our human dignity, there is no space for sex with a guy.”
5) Upon co-founding NARTH, its co-founder, Dr. Charles Socarides, who has a gay son that once served as President Bill Clinton’s gay liaison, told The Washington Post, “Homosexuality is a psychological and psychiatric disorder, there is no question about it. It is a purple menace that is threatening the proper design of gender distinctions in society.”
6) NARTH habitually distorts research. In 2008, Dr. Lisa Diamond, University of Utah, publicly rebuked NARTH in a Truth Wins Out YouTube video. Diamond claimed that Dr. Nicolosi deliberately twisted her work for political gain. NARTH also uses outdated studies from up to 100 years ago and repackages these invalid studies as new.
7) In 2006, NARTH psychiatrist Joseph Berger, MD, a member of its “Scientific Advisory Committee,” wrote a paper encouraging students to “ridicule” gender variant children. “I suggest, indeed, letting children who wish go to school in clothes of the opposite sex–but not counseling other children to not tease them or hurt their feelings,” Dr. Berger wrote on NARTH’s website. “On the contrary, don’t interfere, and let the other children ridicule the child who has lost that clear boundary between play-acting at home and the reality needs of the outside world. Maybe, in this way, the child will re-establish that necessary boundary.”
8) In 2006, Gerald Schoenwolf, PhD, also a member of NARTH’s “Scientific Advisory Committee,” wrote a polemic on the group’s website that seemed to justify slavery: “With all due respect, there is another way, or other ways, to look at the race issue in America,” wrote Schoenwolf. “It could be pointed out, for example, that Africa at the time of slavery was still primarily a jungle, as yet uncivilized or industrialized. Life there was savage, as savage as the jungle for most people, and that it was the Africans themselves who first enslaved their own people. They sold their own people to other countries, and those brought to Europe, South America, America, and other countries, were in many ways better off than they had been in Africa. But if one even begins to say these things one is quickly shouted down as though one were a complete madman.”
9) NARTH’s co-founder, Joesph Nicolosi encourages male clients to become more masculine by drinking Gatorade and referring to friends as “dude”. NARTH therapists have been known to practice rubber band therapy, where a gay client is made to wear a rubber band and snap it on his wrist when sexually stimulated. It is a mild form of aversion therapy meant to “snap” the client out of the moment of attraction. NARTH members have also been known to practice “touch therapy”, where a client sits in the therapist’s lap for up to an hour, while the therapist caresses him.
10) NARTH associates with known extremists. At one NARTH convention, Richard Cohen (see Cohen and Nicolosi videos below) served as a therapy trainer. Cohen once belonged to a cult that practiced nude therapy and was permanently expelled from the American Counseling Association in 2003 for malpractice. Dr. Jeffrey Satinover, a NARTH therapist, has written that Prozac may cure gayness. Holocaust revisionist Scott Lively, has been a frequent contributor to NARTH’s website. Lively’s book, “The Pink Swastika” blames the holocaust on gay people. NARTH therapist Christopher Austin, (mugshot left) who taught seminars for NARTH, was convicted for sexually abusing his clients.
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I hear about NARTH thanks this website, then I attend the NART Conference an probably the gay community needs to know better what really this association does… Im a gay man and I attend the conference for curiosity and understand the other point of view.. If we claim diversity we cannot deny that are people that does not want to be gay and APA says it is fine for religious view … Diversity includes ALL…
Comment by Kuno Beck — November 21, 2009 @ 11:58 pm
First off, to point out the obvious, this post smacks of concern-trolling, or outright trolling. I’m hard-pressed to think of a self-respecting gay person I’ve ever met who would go to a NARTH conference “just to see the other point of view,” unless she’s a journalist.
But as to the idea that this is merely “another point of view,” I call that a buncha bullroar, and here’s why:
The people who “don’t want to be gay,” for the most part, find themselves feeling that way because of the societal implications of being gay, and more specifically, the anti-gay bigotry that still exists, mostly perpetuated by fundamentalist Christianity in the US. (And yes, bigotry hiding behind poorly translated/completely misread Bible verses is still bigotry.)
So, you have people, many of whom are readers of this site, who have been so torn down simply because of who they are, by the faith institutions they’ve been taught to trust and rely on for guidance. So it’s only natural that an organization like NARTH, which lies through its teeth in claiming that it’s a “secular” organization, steps in offering to help these people shed their “unwanted same sex attractions.” It’s all a scam, and it’s one big self-perpetuating circle of shame, perpetuated by the fundamentalist religious-industrial complex.
And NO, the APA does NOT say that what NARTH does is okay, nor does it say that it’s possible or even healthy to attempt to change one’s sexual orientation. In fact, they and many other credible medical mental health organizations have specifically said that the work done by the charlatans at NARTH/Exodus, etc. are harmful, and not valid, accepted psychology.
And no…respecting diversity and being tolerant does NOT include respecting and tolerating the view of intolerant, deceitful bigots!
I hope this helped.
As I said, my concern troll alarm went off hardcore on this.
Comment by Evan — November 22, 2009 @ 12:18 am
Kuno:
I find it interesting that you failed to refute any of the 10 points – and related videos. The reason is, you can’t.
We have documented NARTH members in their own words. Truth Wins Out has made public their hateful quotes and bizarre methods.
I’m sorry the facts are painful and inconvenient. That, however, does not change the validity of these 10 points.
Comment by Wayne Besen — November 23, 2009 @ 12:43 pm
[...] [...]
Pingback by Homosexualism has a cure! - Page 6 - Volconvo Debate Forums — November 23, 2009 @ 10:17 pm
For the record, and for anyone who may be interested, I transcribes the Lisa Diamond interview awhile back, please feel free to use it.
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Kuno says:
Diversity includes ALL…
No it doesn‘t, and mustn’t:
So, Kuno, if we are to diversify to the point of including those who are anti-diversity (NARTH, Exodus, et al), then we may as well just go back into the closet and/or expect to be imprisoned–or worse–because those are the end goals of NARTH and Exodus. If you don’t realize that about anti-gay organizations, then you’re the one who “needs to know better.”
Comment by Patrick Fitzgerald — November 25, 2009 @ 6:16 am
What Patrick said.
Comment by Break the Terror (Evan) — November 25, 2009 @ 3:08 pm
[...] Association report that was so pathetic it was virtually ignored by the media.By the end of 2009, NARTH had solidified its place as a cabal of embittered and irrelevant quacks on the far outer fringes of psychology. [...]
Pingback by Truth Wins Out - Top 10 Ex-Gay-Related Events of 2009 — December 31, 2009 @ 4:22 pm