Posted March 25th, 2008 by Wayne Besen

– The symposium will be at 2:00 p.m. on Monday afternoon (5/5/08) in lecture halls 159 A & B in the Washington, D.C., Convention Center –

Since 1973, the once dreaded American Psychiatric Association has become an ally of gay and lesbian equality. They have consistently withstood outside pressure from right wing organizations and instead chose to do what was in the best interest of GLBT mental health. Most notably, they endorsed same-sex civil marriage in a groundbreaking 2005 position paper.

In 1997, the APA first addressed ex-gay (or reparative) therapy by stating, “The potential risks of ‘reparative therapy’ are great and include depression, anxiety, and self-destructive behavior…Further, APA calls on these organizations and individuals to do all that is possible to decrease the stigma related to homosexuality wherever and whenever it may occur.”

In 2000, the APA issued an even stronger statement and recommended “that ethical practitioners refrain from attempts to change individuals sexual orientation, keeping in mind the medical dictum, to ‘first do no harm.’”

Unfortunately, a terribly misguided gay psychiatrist, Dr. David L. Scasta, is violating the spirit — if not the letter — of APA policy statements. In May, he will be part of a controversial symposium (Scasta calls it historic) he organized. It includes ex-gay therapist, Dr. Warren Throckmorton, who is the Sultan of Stigma and a leading purveyor of religion-based shame therapy.

Writing in the Association of Gay and Lesbian Psychiatrists’ newsletter, Scasta claims this forum will seek, “common ground” on “both sides of the religious divide.” He also urges that participants keep the symposium, “scientifically and rationally based” and hopes those on stage are committed to, “avoiding rhetoric.” Near the end of his article, Scasta claims his goal is to “ratchet down the forces of polarization.”

If the seminar’s mission is to let cooler heads prevail, inviting Throckmorton is a curious choice. An unlicensed psychologist who teaches at fundamentalist Grove City College, Throckmorton wrote an inflammatory paper for a right wing website titled, “Is Sexual Re-orientation Possible?”, that compared leaving homosexuality to quitting smoking.

“Most people who stop smoking report cravings but don’t give into them,” Throckmorton wrote in his paper. “Does this minimize their status as former smokers?”

In the same paper, Throckmorton claimed that he “healed” a gay client after teaching him “self-understanding and assertiveness.” Even more bizarre, Throckmorton suggested taking anti-anxiety drugs might “cure” homosexuality.

Throckmorton also produced a defamatory ex-gay video entitled, “I Do Exist.” The movie’s opening scene was a wide shot of New York pornography shops that supposedly represent gay life. His film featured Joanne Highley, a known exorcist.

Scasta’s having an extremist like Throckmorton talk about reconciliation between religion and the science is like inviting Louis Farrakhan to a seminar to discuss Mid East peace between the Jews and the Palestinians.

Asked what he thought about the symposium, Dr. Jack Drescher, former Chair of APA’s Committee on GLB Issues said, “In our AGLP newsletter, Dr. Scasta described this panel as ‘Letting the Wolves into the Hen House.’ I can only speak for myself, but I’m pretty sure no one at the APA will be eaten. But I am concerned that when a respected colleague lies down with wolves, he may catch something more than he bargained for.”

While Scasta may be well intentioned, he seems woefully ignorant of his guest’s dubious credentials. Scasta justifies offering Throckmorton a platform because the doctor has rebuked the infamous Dr. Paul Cameron (who claimed gay people die by the age of 40). Big deal. Cameron had become so radioactive that even Focus on the Family admonished him as early as 1996 saying they do not “adhere to Cameron’s statistics.”

Scasta also points out that Throckmorton called bizarre ex-gay therapist Richard Cohen a “menace.” What he fails to say is that Throckmorton wholeheartedly supported Cohen up until the moment Cohen humiliated himself on Comedy Central’s The Daily Show with Jon Stewart.

Similarly, in a desperate attempt at self-preservation, Throckmorton took “I Do Exist” off the shelf the very week one of his “changed” subjects seemed to back away from supporting ex-gay ministries. The good doctor appears to have a habit of altering the facts by omission.

Throckmorton tries to appear enlightened because he rejects traditional “reparative therapy” which blames parents for causing homosexuality. This has more to do, however, with his ongoing campaign to undermine his chief rival, reparative therapist, Dr. Joseph Nicolosi.

Throckmorton’s goal is to supplant Nicolosi’s reparative therapy model with his own ex-gay therapy regimen, known as Sexual Identity Therapy (SIT). Instead of blaming parents, SIT urges clients to suffer in deep, closeted denial in order to please God. Although Throckmorton says he has counseled 250 patients, he is unable to bring any of his successful cases forward.

Finally, Throckmorton habitually downplays the harm done by ex-gay therapy, despite the increasing number of survivors who have come forward to discuss their negative experiences. Why aren’t any ex-gay therapy victims represented on this panel?

It is a mystery why Scasta would want to legitimize a fringe professor from a small anti-gay fundamentalist college. Instead of furthering understanding, Scasta is eroding his own standing and possibly that of the American Psychiatric Association. Scasta is placing science on the same plane as right wing sophistry - all at the expense of the mental health of GLBT people.

Tags: conversion therapy, defamation, identity, psychiatry, pundit, research

Related posts

5 Comments »

  1. Dear Dr. Scasta:

    As a survivor of 13 years of the closet and 5 years in
    an ex-gay ministry, I was disturbed to read Wayne
    Besen’s account of the upcoming symposium featuring
    Warren Throckmorton. Until there is anything
    approaching valid and replicable data for the ex-gay
    cultists to present, there is no appropriate forum for
    them in scientific or clinical discussions. For this
    reason I dispute that you can have a “scientifically
    and rationally based” discussion with Throckmorton on
    the panel. All of the scientific data we have is
    clear, there is no “common ground” to be found between
    those who recommend gay people to change through quack
    therapy and those who seek to relieve the tremendous
    social shame and guilt forced on clients by the
    dominant culture, of which the ex-gay movement
    represents an extreme. For many of us who still have
    nightmares, that the science is on our side is quite a
    comfort. While I’m sure the idea of a forum including
    an ex-gay therapist might seem interesting and
    provocative, I think it would be better for the
    Association of Gay and Lesbian Psychiatrists to focus
    on scientificaly rigorous data. Since Throckmorton
    cannot provide any, giving him another forum to air
    his unsubstantiated ideas denigrates the
    organizations’ historic committment to science-based
    therapies.

    Clinton Henry Trout, MPH
    Candidate for Doctor of Public Health
    Boston University

    Comment by Clint Trout — March 26, 2008 @ 8:45 am

  2. Henry Trout is right, right, right!

    Comment by Larry — April 7, 2008 @ 10:15 pm

  3. So Throckmorton thinks homosexuality is like smoking? What about if you love sucking on a red-hot, smoking homosexual like I do?

    Comment by David Skidmore — April 15, 2008 @ 1:27 am

  4. […] The symposium, moderated by Harvard psychiatrist Dr. John Peteet, who chairs APA’s Corresponding Committee on Psychiatry, Religion and Spirituality, is titled “Homosexuality and Therapy: The Religious Dimension.” Indeed, the panel includes two prominent religious figures from radically different perspectives - New Hampshire Episcopal Bishop Gene Robinson and the Reverend Dr. Albert Mohler. Robinson came to nationwide attention in 2003 when he became the first non-celibate, out gay person elected an American Episcopal Church bishop, for the Diocese of New Hampshire. […]

    Pingback by Truth Wins Out - Gay City News: Junk Science On Stage — April 24, 2008 @ 4:07 pm

  5. […] Psychiatric Association’s cancellation of the “Quack Panel” he was scheduled to appear on this week, notorious “ex-gay” therapist Warren Throckmorton continued on his vindictive […]

    Pingback by Truth Wins Out - Bitter Throckmorton Continues ‘Sour Grapes Media’ Tour By Trashing TWO in Fringe Right Wing Media — May 9, 2008 @ 11:12 am

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URL

Leave a comment