Bristol Palin, exemplar of so-called “traditional families” that she is, just couldn’t let President Obama’s historic endorsement of marriage equality pass by last week without throwing in her two cents. (If you missed this important development in this historic story, reading this handy post from Evan will catch you right up.) Basically, Bristol Palin turned the story around into one about how she, her mother, and other “Christian female” presidential candidates are, in fact, the victims of the current President’s social conscience. His daughters’ perspectives helped him evolve on marriage, but when “Christian women” run for President, they’re picked apart about the degree on which they rely on their spouses. As an example, Bristol cites Michele Bachmann being asked at a debate about whether, as president, she would “submit” to her husband Marcus. (Palin writes as though the question was just plucked out of thin air by a mean-spirited, anti-Christian debate moderator rather than a logical follow-up to remarks Rep. Bachmann made herself when running for office in Minnesota in 2006.) And of course, there’s also her mother, the perpetually victimized Sarah Palin, who her daughter believes was the target of unjust questions about the role her father — Gov. Palin’s husband, Todd — played in decision making (despite the fact that Todd Palin was widely known to be one of Sarah’s closest advisors).
Bristol also hauled out two thoroughly debunked right-wing talking points about marriage — first, that it’s been a static and unchanging institution for “thousands of years,” and second, that “in general kids do better growing up in a mother/father home” (when in reality, study after study after study shows that claim to be patently false).
As it turns out, a lot of people had a lot to say about Bristol Palin’s factually inaccurate, anti-Obama, anti-gay blog post. Some were supportive, some opposed; some were well-reasoned and calm, others were vicious and mean-spirited. In response, Bristol came out with another post on Monday where, in vintage Palin fashion, she failed to address any of the legitimate arguments made by her critics, bashed “Hollywood-type sheeple” for their allegedly uniform intolerance for people with anti-abortion and anti-gay views (apparently I missed the memo that a stint on Dancing with the Stars qualifies one as a Hollywood insider these days…), and said that she felt “[hated] in the name of love” and “[bullied] in the name of tolerance.” She then attempted to imply that in voicing her belief in marriage discrimination, she was speaking for her generation — my generation, the Millennials, who support marriage equality by a landslide margin of 22 percent. Yeah, no.
But it was Bristol’s attempt to cast herself as a victim of hateful bullying that really bothered me. In fact, it bothered me so much that I spent part of my lunch break on Tuesday writing a response that I posted to her blog and Facebook page. While she’s not likely to see it, reply, or come around to a pro-LGBT perspective anytime soon, I thought I’d share it with you, dear readers, just the same. Here’s what I wrote:
Hey, Bristol. I’m so sorry that you felt bullied by some of the abusive comments that were left on your original post. They are indeed awful and inexcusable.
That said, welcome to the world that lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgendered people live in every day. In fact, according to an exhaustive analysis of FBI hate crimes data by the Southern Poverty Law Center, LGBT people are at a greater risk of being targeted for a violent hate crime than literally any other minority group — more than twice as likely to be attacked as Jews, 2.6 times more likely than African-Americans, nearly 4.5 times as likely as Muslims, almost 14 times more likely than Latinos, and 41.5 times more likely than whites. In large swaths of our country, gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender youth are regularly teased and beaten up for who they are (or who their peers *think* they are), all the while living in a culture that shames them into silence. Many of them have homophobic parents or guardians, so they can’t even turn to the people who are supposed to love them unconditionally. LGBT youth are four to five times more likely to attempt suicide than their straight counterparts because of the malicious bullying and crushing hatred that they’re surrounded by every day. I should know: I attempted suicide myself at age 16.
Do you know why that world of bullying, death threats, verbal and physical violence, and murder on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity exists? Do you know why my community, the LGBT community, faces such a grave threat of hate-motivated violence? Guess what – it’s because of religion-based bigotry. I work for an organization that fights the “ex-gay” myth (propagated, incidentally, by your own church, among many others), which is the lie that it’s possible to change from gay to straight – to “pray away the gay” – through a mixture of prayer and so-called “reparative therapy.” Anti-gay pastors and religious profiteers across the country peddle this lie to scared, self-loathing teenagers and homophobic parents who’ve internalized the vicious anti-gay rhetoric they hear from the pulpit every Sunday. The claim that gay people can become straight is denounced by literally every single reputable medical and mental health organization in the country because it has no basis in research, doesn’t work, and can actually be dangerous to its victims, but that doesn’t stop the evil charlatans who cash the checks and make bank while holding out false hope for change, oblivious to (or utterly careless about?) the lives that they ruin in the process. And before you even *dare* to doubt that lives are ruined, I’d like to challenge you to walk in my shoes. We hear from people who bear permanent emotional and mental scars as a result of the “ex-gay” myth literally every day. Many who attempt suicide as a result of their guilt about their inevitable failure to “pray away the gay” bear physical scars as well. We also hear from many parents, siblings, and relatives of those who are no longer alive to tell their own stories – people who killed themselves trying to live a lie in order to accommodate the religion-based bigotry of people just like you.
So while I am truly sorry to read about the abuse that’s been directed your way since your anti-Obama blog post, I strongly object to your attempt to cast yourself as any kind of a victim. To the contrary, you, your mother, and the putridly anti-gay Republican Party are the ones who are victimizing LGBT people. And spare me the line about how your anti-gay views are unassailable because they’re your firmly-held religious beliefs. It’s utterly hollow. Hate wrapped in the name of God is still hate.
In closing, I must submit an important correction. You wrote about the “younger generation” in the context of abortion, then continued in the same sentence about how “voters just keep defending [so-called] traditional marriage.” If you meant to imply here that the “younger generation” — *our* generation – supports the continued exclusion of loving same-sex couples from full civil marriage equality, you are wrong. Seriously, no, *incredibly* wrong. In fact, you couldn’t be more wrong: repeated polling consistently proves that our generation OVERWHELMINGLY believes that EVERY American deserves the freedom to marry the person they love, regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity. You’re free to hold any views you like, no matter how bigoted they are. But you are *not* free to misrepresent the truth. And the truth is that when it comes to marriage equality, the jury is in – and you’ve lost. The anti-gay mistakes of our parents’ generation (anti-LGBT marriage discrimination amendments, laws that marginalize and persecute the LGBT community in the areas of employment, housing, etc.) will be fixed by our generation, if they aren’t rectified even sooner than that. Despite your own personal homophobia, ours is *not* a homophobic generation; your anti-gay views are already a minority view among your peers. The day will come, very soon, when the loving marriage (of six years and counting!) that my husband and I enjoy will be recognized from coast to coast, and our nation will be the better for it. My hope and prayer for you is that someday you’ll be able to stop your homophobic bullying, let go of your own bigotry, and come to embrace your lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender friends, family members, and fellow citizens as equal Americans and full human beings.
John M. Becker
Let me know your thoughts. Am I wrong to get so irritated when bullies play the victim?










John – A very well-reasoned and thought out post. Sadly, though, it will probably sail over the head of Ms. Palin and her followers. She will more than likely delete this from her website and declare that it was hate speech.
Wow unbelievable! John I cannot believe she even thought about writing that. How has she been bullied in any way shape or form, besides being knocked up at 16 ? Maybe if she opened her eyes and walked out of that sheltered box life she lives she would see what is actually going on in this world.
Excellent response. Unfortunately, it would take a thinking mind to be open enough to even begin to absorb some of the truth. Bristol, your mama threw you into the public arena and now you are jumping in by your own choice. That said, do you honestly expect us to not respond to the same old bull we’ve been hearing all our lives? You say it; we’ll answer it. Bullying? Get over yourself. You’re just a new voice spewing the same bigotry.
I really don’t understand these people at all. I have been a Christian for more than forty-four years and while I never read the Bible straight through from beginning to end as one would a Stephen King novel, over the course of more than twenty-five years of spare-time study I have covered a fair portion of it, and on the subject of marriage I can safely say one thing to these nut jobs: “Biblical marriage” DOES NOT EXIST. Marriage is dealt with in the Bible, to be sure, but it bears virtually no resemblance to the institution as it is known today. And we all know that Jesus never said one word about homosexuality, and the only comment he made about marriage was a direct answer to a direct question about divorce. To put it mildly, He disapproved of it. That does not seem to stop the Bible Belt from leading the country in divorces.
These people spew their venom at every opportunity and they couldn’t care less who it hurts. Then when the people it hurts take a stand and tell them to stop it, all of a sudden they play the victim card and use words like “persecution,” the meaning of which I am convinced they haven’t the first clue.
No one would give a damn what this little w***e thought of Obama’s announcement if she weren’t something that dropped from between Sarah “Barrakudzu” Palin’s legs. She’ll have fun trying to get married to a nice fundy man some day. By her own rule book, he’ll have the right to insist that she be stoned to death for not being a virgin at the altar.
“…when“Christian women” run for President, they’re picked apart…” ummm, Hilary Clinton falls into that category and the right has been picking her and her family apart since 1990. I guess they don’t consider Hilary to be a ‘real’ Christian since she doesn’t hate all the right people and discriminate against the required groups of scapegoats.
Scott,
These people spew their venom and know EXACTLY who they are trying to hurt. You give them too much credit.
I was a christian for 40 years. Before my deconversion I spent untold energy trying to “love” fundagelicals and somehow include them in my theological framework as fellow believers. Glad I gave that nonsense up. Theology and arguing about it is a complete waste of time. Might as well argue about space aliens for all of the good it does you.
Let’s see: but not for having a famous mother, who’d give a s**t about Bristol Palin or give HER the opportunities most young people dream about? BP has courted as much of a public life as her mother. She got knocked up while unwed and still a teenager. She has no college education (even though her family can afford it while many can’t). And she’s gotten on television, getting millions, of not hundreds of thousands of dollars in earning, regardless she has no talent and no disciplines in the arts.
She absolutely is in no place to comment on what she thinks is an entire group of people’s moral failings.
Nor can she cry victim, when her rude comments offend and she has to take what she dishes out.
She will NEVER have suffer anything close to what gay young people are at risk of suffering.
She still has the love of her family and their support, while many teens her age are homeless with no where to live or work.
Abandoned by their families for just being gay, regardless they are still good kids with great potential to do good things.
She is a useless waste of oxygen, accomplishing nothing of meaning, while being the worst kind of role model for girls at risk of unwed, unwanted pregnancy.
Sometimes people like her really do need to learn the meaning of shut the hell up, when they don’t know what they are talking about.
My favorite quote is “Hate wrapped in the name of God is still hate.” I am so tired of these so-called “Christians” who claim that by hating others and preaching that hate are somehow doing the work of God. Keep up the good work, John.
Just an FYI — Bristol doesn’t write her blog. Her ghostwriter, probably on Sarah’s PAC payroll, writes her blog.
Anyone who has ever heard or read Bristol’s attempts at communication know that she is no way capable of the work being presented as her own.
I wonder if Sarah has done this to further punish Bristol, in a mistaken belief that she lost her chance to be queen of everything because of her daughter’s untimely pregnancy.
How Bristol is ever going to make friends, find a boyfriend or have a life now that Sarah has decided to use her as another attack animal is a mystery to me. Does Bristol even have a personality of her own?
Spot on Wayne. I might also add that like her mother, she seems to suffer severe logic distress, attempting to connect two (or more) unrelated dots. For example, submitting to one’s husband is hardly the same thing as taking into account the thoughts of those closest to you. Submitting means allowing her (Bachmann) husband to override her opinions and feelings in a given matter. Hardly the same thing as listening to what your now, adult children might say on a particular subject.
Hey, Jared! Thanks for your kind words! Actually, though, this is John, and I wrote this piece ;-) Logic distress — good point!
This is a typical tactic – to deflect criticism, accuse the other side of doing what you yourself are guilty of. I have to give the right some credit, to say things like “we are the real victims” and “Bristol Palin has the moral authority to talk about marriage” and have ANYONE believe it is a neat trick.
“Am I wrong to get so irritated when bullies play the victim?”
No. I’m sick to death of people who abuse others in every way possible then wail like banshees because their victims don’t just sit silently and take it.
1 – For the life of me, I don’t understand why ANY of Bristol Palin’s opinions on ANY issue are of interest to ANYONE. The fact that Americans give attention to the opinions of celebrities or the merely well-known on public issues is a serious shortcoming within the electorate.
2 – “I’m a victim, too” is a way of saying “I have it worse, therefore I deserve attention first” or, “my opinion matters”. When these are followed by half-facts, heresay and opinions sent through a Mixmaster with an added smattering of Christian claims and a pinch of “I like being famous”, the result is…. Bristol Palin.
Sorry. Hearsay (corrected spelling)
We need to differentiate between feelings and actions. I’m a homophobe, as were my parents and grandparents. My inclination may be to hurt those who engage in same gender sexual activities, but I have a responsibility to not act that out.
A person may have attractions for a person of the same gender, but fisting, felching, rimming, and sodomy are not required actions.
you need to learn your place Roberto. Being gay is an identity, and one as moral and decent as heterosexuality, and sexual acts between two consenting adults are no more (or less) immoral than those between heterosexual persons.
I am sorry that you are a self admitted bad person, and I am sorry your parents and grandparents were not good people either. Hopefully they are still with you, and your father, mother and grandparents can mature, improve themselves, and become ladies and gentlemen, and not the bogots and bad people you say they are, albeit ones who at least know that hurting people is unacceptable.
I wish you, and them, all luck in growing in their moral development, and moving past the inferior morality you show in your homophobia/bigotry.
Roberto said “A person may have attractions for a person of the same gender, but fisting, felching, rimming, and sodomy are not required actions.”.
Irrelevant. Swimming, football and barbequeing are not required actions, that in no way entitles anyone to tell others they can’t or shouldn’t do such actions.
Roberto, you said, “My inclination may be to hurt those who engage in same gender sexual activities . . . “
Why are you inclined to hurt people that have no negative impact on your life whatsoever? If you can discover an honest answer to that question, you would vastly improve your self-awareness. And why are you commenting on a gay blog on a Saturday evening? I think you have some deep issues you need to wrestle with.
In Roberto’s twisted mind he thinks if he resists attacking innocent people they owe it to him not to have sex.
Well, look what the cat dragged in. Another internet tough guy whose comical attempt at proving his nonexistent masculinity would, in reality, end in his face having a close encounter with the pavement. Perhaps it already happened, which is why he must troll gay sites with his violent fantasies.
I will, however, commend you for your honesty about how terrible a person you are, Roberto.
Roberto,
First and foremost, not being a nice, kind, gentle person is not a good thing to admit Ina public forum. In fact, it’s not even good thing to be. It’s certainly nothing to be proud of. That you aremeansthat your parents hAve failed you.
More important, you seem extremely knowledgeable about sex acts, most of which most people never heard of. And oneof which–sodomy– is as common among Heteros as it is among gay men. And given that 97% of people are heteros who commit sodomy, however defined, some 40% of the time, at ny given moment you have more sodomitical hetrosexuals than there are gay people in toto.
But I digress I the cause of education. My real question is this’: if these sex acts bother you so much, why on earth are you thinking about them so very, very, much.
Personally, I think you’re a bad, bad little boy who definitely deserves a spanking. You’d like that, wouldn’t you?