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Dobson's Nomination to Radio Hall of Fame Protested

Truth Wins Out, a gay rights advocacy group, launched a campaign Thursday protesting the recent nomination of Focus on the Family founder and president James Dobson to the Radio Hall of Fame.


Truth Wins Out, a gay rights advocacy group, launched a campaign Thursday protesting the recent nomination of Focus on the Family founder and president James Dobson to the Radio Hall of Fame.

“It is outrageous and insulting that James Dobson would be nominated,” Wayne Besen, executive director of Truth Wins Out, said in a press release. While the Hall of Fame criteria for nominees does not address content or character, the LGBT advocacy group is demanding that Dobson’s name be removed from consideration because of homophobic and antigay comments made in articles, books, and on the air.

“I’m not surprised,” Besen said of Dobson’s nomination. Besen is, however, outraged: “[Dobson] is a very accomplished broadcaster, but I think it’s offset by the fact that he’s a very accomplished liar.” Truth Wins Out also maintains that Dobson has a history of distorting scientific research to defend his faith-based claims.

Several instances of misinformation occur in a guest article Dobson authored for Time magazine in December 2006. In “Two Mommies Is One Too Many,” Dobson commented on the announcement that Mary Cheney, Vice President Dick Cheney’s lesbian daughter, was expecting a child with her partner, Heather Poe. “The majority of more than 30 years of social-science evidence indicates that children do best on every measure of well-being when raised by their married mother and father,” Dobson wrote.

Dobson went on to cite the parenting book of child psychologist Kyle Pruett, Fatherneed, as supporting Dobson’s claim. In a video clip posted on Truth Wins Out’s website, Pruett decried Dobson’s citation of his book. “I was disappointed, I was dismayed, and frankly, I was…mortified that my work would be in paragraphs of the conclusion that [Dobson] drew," Pruett said, adding, "There is no science that says those children [who are raised by gay or lesbian couples] are at risk.”

Dobson also referred to the work of Carol Gilligan, a professor at New York University’s School of Law, in the article. Dobson portrayed her as siding with his criticism of Mary Cheney and her partner. Following the publication of the article, in a direct letter to Dobson, Gilligan wrote, “Not only did you take my research out of context, you did so without my knowledge to support discriminatory goals that I do not agree with…. What you wrote was not truthful.”

While Dobson insists in his 2004 book Marriage Under Fire that “I have never said anything hateful about homosexuals on our broadcasts, and I do not condone violence or disrespect for anyone,” he predicted in a 2005 on-air broadcast that the legalization of same-sex marriage would lead to “group marriage,” “marriage between daddies and little girls,” and “marriage between a man and his donkey.” Dobson concluded in the same broadcast that same-sex marriage “will bring the destruction of this nation and many others.”

Dobson also lamented California’s recent legalization of same-sex marriage on the Focus on the Family website: “Chalk up another disastrous loss for the defenders of morality and the family.”

The National Radio Hall of Fame did not return calls for comment. (Hannah Clay Wareham, The Advocate)

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Reader Comments
  • Name: JW
    Date posted: 7/15/2008 8:49:00 AM
    Hometown: Middletown

    Comment:

    What is the National Radio Hall of Fame THINKING? Where am I? What year is this? What planet is Dobson from? My blood pressure just went up... Good reporting.

  • Name: Allen White
    Date posted: 7/14/2008 6:45:00 PM
    Hometown: San Francisco, California

    Comment:

    E-MAIL SENT TO:MR. BRUCE DUMONT, Founder and President, Radio Hall of Fame: You are President and Founder of the National Radio Hall of Fame. It is both shameful and a tragedy for your organization to nominate James Dobson and the "Faith in the Family” program. Dobson might get in. Billy Graham, the Metropolitan Opera, “Meet The Press” founder Lawrence Spivak, Walter Cronkite, NPR’s “All Things Considered” and even Lucille Ball didn’t. Eddie Anderson, “Rochester” on the Jack Benny program, died in 1977. It took 13 more years before he became the first person of color to be inducted. By now, you know James Dobson is most identified for his bigotry and discrimination. Your organization and the age of radio deserve better. I know I’m not alone in finding this nomination an insult and most certainly worthy of your re-consideration.

  • Name: Sandy M.
    Date posted: 7/14/2008 1:58:00 PM
    Hometown: San Francisco, CA

    Comment:

    ALW writes: "Remember we are not all like that." Aw, how nice. How nice that you expect us to treat ALL of you fairly when the vocal majority of you condemn us and the SILENT MAJORITY of you do absolutely NOTHING to stop the vocal minority from their evil. Well, nothing except to ask us to remember you're not ALL like that... Sorry, bub, but that won't cut it. Get out there and start fighting these "False Prophets" with the same zeal that they fight us. Start winning away their followers. Start prosecuting them like they prosecute us. Or is that "persecute"? When you start policing your own - maybe then we'll "remember you are not all like that". Until then, we'll remember that you sit by and let them destroy our lives and our freedoms.

  • Name: Sandy M.
    Date posted: 7/14/2008 1:57:00 PM
    Hometown: San Francisco, CA

    Comment:

    ALW writes: "Remember we are not all like that." Aw, how nice. How nice that you expect us to treat ALL of you fairly when the vocal majority of you condemn us and the SILENT MAJORITY of you do absolutely NOTHING to stop the vocal minority from their evil. Well, nothing except to ask us to remember you're not ALL like that... Sorry, bub, but that won't cut it. Get out there and start fighting these "False Prophets" with the same zeal that they fight us. Start winning away their followers. Start prosecuting them like they prosecute us. Or is that "persecute"? When you start policing your own - maybe then we'll "remember you are not all like that". Until then, we'll remember that you sit by and let them destroy our lives and our freedoms.

  • Name: Rick
    Date posted: 7/13/2008 2:28:00 AM
    Hometown: Charlotte, NC

    Comment:

    James Dobson, who claims to be a child psychologists, advises parents to warn their children about Satan. In other words, he wants parents to tell little kids that there's an evil boogie man that will get them if they don't behave. Most professional child psychologists disagree that scaring little children with invisible monsters is healthy child psychology.

  • Name: ALW
    Date posted: 7/12/2008 11:41:00 AM
    Hometown: OHIO

    Comment:

    Please, as a Christian who loves God and Neighbor, understand that I speak for many who do not side with this predominate 'Christian Leader' in all he says. Focus on the Family has some great resources for parents (funny, I know several gay and lesbian families who use some the information to care for their children), but FOF, the AFA, and many other 'Christian' leaders really hurt those who don't believe exactly as they do. On behalf of them, I say I'm sorry. Remember we are not all like that. On the note of this article...Let him have his award....he'll have to live with the guilt....which can be worse than outward criticism.

  • Name: david seybold
    Date posted: 7/11/2008 10:55:00 PM
    Hometown: Lewisburg Pa. 17837

    Comment:

    Dobson and his "Run away Train" mentality is a disgrace that makes no sense. He must be an embarassment to the religious right and the conservative Republicans in general. How can one conclude that same-sex marriage will open the door for all sorts of other legalized unions? He should be more concerned about the decline of traditional marriage with an ever increasing divorce rate. Love always wins out, and if it occurs between two men, then he should give his blessing.



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