The Palm Beach Post

Moore’s anti-gay stance worries LGBT community

- By Steve Peoples

BIRMINGHAM, ALA. — A smiling Roy Moore stood shoulder to shoulder with his fiercest religious allies.

Flanked by a huge sign for Moore’s Senate campaign, one supporter railed against the “LGBT mafia” and “homosexual­ist gay terrorism.” Another warned that “homosexual sodomy” destroys those who participat­e in it and the nations that allow it. And still another described same-sex marriage as “a mirage” because “it’s phony and fake.”

Thursday’s news conference was designed to send a powerful message to the political world that religious conservati­ves across America remain committed to Moore, a Christian conservati­ve and former judge whose Alabama Senate campaign has been rocked by mounting allegation­s of sexual misconduct. The event also revealed an aggressive strain of homophobia rarely seen in mainstream politics — in recent years, at least.

But in a Senate campaign suddenly hyper focused on Moore’s relationsh­ips with teenage girls decades ago, Moore’s hardline stance on gay rights and other LGBT issues has become little more than an afterthoug­ht for many voters as Election Day approaches.

Moore first caught the attention of many in the LGBT community after describing homosexual conduct as “an inherent evil against which children must be protected” in a 2002 child custody case involving a lesbian mother. In a 2005 television interview, Moore said “homosexual conduct should be illegal.” He also said there’s no difference between gay sex and sex with a cow, horse or dog.

Moore’s stand — combined with the fiery comments from his supporters — unnerved some in Birmingham’s relatively small LGBT community.

“It made me extremely angry,” said Mackenzie Gray, a 37-year-old who came out as transgende­r in 2010. She says most people in her life don’t know she was born a man.

“My fear with the religious leaders and the hateful rhetoric we’re hearing is that it’s going to start escalating into something even larger,” Gray said. “It’s dangerous.”

Indeed, other LGBT activists suggested this week that open acceptance of Moore’s anti-gay rhetoric harkens to a dark and violent time in Alabama history.

Moore’s Democratic challenger, Doug Jones, is known best, perhaps, for prosecutin­g the men who bombed Birmingham’s 16th Street Baptist Church — a prosecutio­n that came nearly 40 years after the 1963 crime that killed four black girls. Racial tensions have lingered in the state, even as the violence lessened. In 2000, Alabama became the last state in the country to overturn its ban on interracia­l marriage.

The state has been slow to embrace gay rights, as well: 81 percent of voters supported a ban on samesex marriage in 2006. Only neighborin­g Mississipp­i, with 86 percent, scored higher.

Patricia Todd, the state’s first openly gay state representa­tive, says she has faced at least four death threats in recent years. One woman called Todd’s cell phone and vowed to kill her and her family, she said, noting that local LGBT leaders meet quarterly at the FBI office in Birmingham to help identify potential hate crimes.

“It’s been brutal, but it’s gotten to the point where I just laugh at them,” Todd said Friday.

She’s not laughing at Moore.

“It’s awful because he says the most hateful things,” she said.

In contrast to many conservati­ve politician­s with national ambitions, Moore has made little attempt to change his tone on LGBT issues as equal rights for the gay community has earned increasing acceptance among mainstream America.

Moore’s hero status among many Christian conservati­ves was cemented in 2016 when, as the chief justice of the Alabama Supreme Court, he refused to comply with a Supreme Court ruling that legalized same-sex marriage nationwide. He was later suspended, the second time he was forcibly removed from the state Supreme Court.

Earlier this month, Moore said, “The transgende­rs don’t have rights,” during a news conference, according to the Montgomery Advertiser.

Moore’s unapologet­ic positions — and his repeated promises to take them to the U.S. Senate if elected on Dec. 12 — were celebrated at Thursday’s news conference by the religious leaders who traveled from as far as Colorado, Ohio and Texas to stand at his side.

Rabbi Noson Leiter, who once called Hurricane Sandy’s destructio­n “divine justice” for same-sex marriage, lashed out at “homosexual­ist gay terrorism.”

“We need Judge Moore to stand up to the LGBT transgende­r mafia,” Leiter said. He added, “We need someone with a proven record of facing off against the gay terrorists.”

Another Moore supporter, Texas Christian activist Steven Hotze, warned in 2015 that children would be “encouraged to practice sodomy in kindergart­en” as a result of same-sex marriage. On Thursday, Hotze refused to describe the union of two gay people as marriage: “It’s ‘mirage’ because it’s just like a mirage — it’s phony and it’s fake.”

North Carolina-based Christian activist Flip Benham last year warned in a Charlotte City Council meeting that the policies that protect the civil rights of transgende­r people would trigger “bloodshed coursing down the corners of our streets.”

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 ?? BRYNN ANDERSON / AP ?? U.S. Senate candidate
Roy Moore’s campaign has been rocked by mounting allegation­s of sexual misconduct. But he has a core of supporters who share his views on homosexual­ity.
BRYNN ANDERSON / AP U.S. Senate candidate Roy Moore’s campaign has been rocked by mounting allegation­s of sexual misconduct. But he has a core of supporters who share his views on homosexual­ity.
 ?? JAY REEVES / AP ?? The Rev. William J. Barber, former head of the North Carolina NAACP, speaks at a rally in opposition to Republican U.S. Senate candidate Roy Moore at a church in Birmingham, Ala., on Saturday.
JAY REEVES / AP The Rev. William J. Barber, former head of the North Carolina NAACP, speaks at a rally in opposition to Republican U.S. Senate candidate Roy Moore at a church in Birmingham, Ala., on Saturday.

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