Lee Duigon
October 1, 2004
Grassroots citizens' groups in Massachusetts
have claimed a major victory in their state's
September 14 primary election.
The powerful, nationwide homosexual lobby
targeted seven pro-family legislators for
defeat. Underfunded and understaffed, the
Article 8 Alliance, the Parents’ Rights
Coalition, and other grassroots groups supported
the seven.
The box score: David 6, Goliath 1.
"It's the first victory party I've
been to in 15 years," said Article 8's
Amy Contrada.
Article 8 has led a campaign to remove
the four Supreme Judicial Court judges who
imposed homosexual "marriage" on
the state this year. The judges may be removed
via a bill of address (see chalcedon.edu/articles/0406/040601duigon.php).
Bill's Sponsor Wins
Tops
on the homosexuals' hit list was Rep. Emile
Goguen, sponsor of the bill of address. Goguen
won 71% of the vote in his district — despite
a personal pledge by Arline Isaacson, the
leading homosexual lobbyist in the state
(and a lobbyist for the state teachers' union),
to take him down.
"Gay groups from outside the district
brought in poll checkers, sign holders, etc.,
on Election Day — as many as ten at
every polling place," said Brian Camenker,
co-founder of Article 8.
Isaacson, according to MassNews.com, "even
bussed 35 nasty, out-of-state activists into
his district" (see massnews.com, Sept.
17).
The homosexual lobby poured $100,000 into
a fruitless effort to defeat pro-family Rep.
Joyce Spiliotis. She won 48% of the vote
to 31% for a candidate backed by a homosexual
political action committee (PAC) and 21%
for a third candidate.
"Outside homosexual organizations
paid for several mailings and brought in
people from out of town and out of state," Camenker
said.
Article 8 and the Parents’ Rights
Coalition held a press conference and organized
a mailing to alert voters to the pro-sodomy
stances of the losing candidates.
That had to be done because the state's
news media uniformly supported the pro-sodomy
candidates.
"The media tried to keep the voters
in the dark about the records of those gay-friendly
candidates," said Ray McNulty, media
consultant for the Massachusetts Family Institute.
“A Tough Loss”
The
citizens' groups almost preserved all seven
of the incumbents they supported, but Rep.
Vincent Ciampa lost in his district by 117
votes. The sodomy lobby spent $50,000 to
defeat him, according to Camenker. "Other
gay groups paid for multiple mailings that
saturated the district every few days," he
added.
The winner, avowed homosexual Carl Sciortino,
made the news last year when he and his "partner" disrupted
a Roman Catholic mass to protest the church's
teaching against homosexual "marriage."
Where Are the Churches?
When
the voters of Missouri this summer amended
their state constitution to protect marriage,
local churches played a prominent role (see
chalcedon.edu/articles/0408/040818-2duigon.php).
"We're still waiting for the churches," Amy
Contrada said. "I've heard many pastors
say New England is a tough territory for
orthodox Christianity. But I think now it's
more a case of Massachusetts churches being
intimidated by leftist 'tax monitors.'"
Some left-wing groups this year, amid loud
publicity, have "monitored" church
services for pastoral remarks that might
violate the federal tax codes (see chalcedon.edu/articles/0409/040901-1duigon.php).
"We're worried about how quickly this
is progressing in our state," Contrada
said. "Lately it seems you can't argue
against 'gay marriage' without someone accusing
you of hate speech."
But Ray McNulty had a different take on
the churches.
"We expect the churches to be much
more energized in the general election in
November," he said. "In the primary
election we saw a lot of grassroots activity
in those legislative districts where the
homosexual agenda was an issue, but it was
pretty quiet elsewhere. It won't be so quiet
in November."
An Uphill Battle
Currently
the only state to recognize homosexual "marriage" — is
it Massachusetts' destiny to be "the
Gay State"?
"It's hard," Contrada said. "The
public schools have brainwashed the younger
generation: a lot of young people don't understand
sexual morality. And with the schools pushing
homosexuality so hard, it seems every family
these days has one [a young person who has
'come out' as a homosexual]. When you try
to discuss the issue, you wind up with these
little old ladies accusing you of being mean
to their grandchildren."
Massachusetts public schools, she added,
hold an annual "Day of Silence" to
demonstrate solidarity with and support for
the homosexual agenda, and one school now
flies "the Gay flag" alongside
the American flag.
Victory in the primary election, Camenker
said, "is only the beginning. The general
election will be much tougher. The gays have
targeted several more incumbents, have more
horrible candidates, are raising more money,
and are doing more and more organizing. We
can't rest on our laurels."
Up against a hostile news media, rich and
powerful unions (especially the teachers'
union), paid professional lobbyists, and
money and manpower provided by national homosexual
organizations, the Article 8 Alliance — ordinary
citizens with one small rented office, a
few telephones, and a firm determination
to save their state from organized sodomy — looks
to continue its battle into November and
beyond.
For more information or to make donations,
phone Article 8 at 781-899-4905 or see the
website, article8.org.
Lee Duigon is a Christian free-lance writer and contributing editor for the
Chalcedon Report. He has been a newspaper editor and reporter and a
published novelist.
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