After suicides, Mormon leader rants against gays


Human Rights Campaign



The recent suicides of several gay teenagers have made national headlines. Yet this is the moment – of all moments – that a top Mormon leader decides to broadcast a verbal rampage against gays to millions of viewers.

I couldn’t believe it either. Boyd K. Packer, the second-highest leader in the Mormon Church, said in a sermon broadcast to millions yesterday that same-sex attraction is “impure and unnatural” and can be overcome, and that same-sex unions are morally wrong.

Do we need more proof than the suicides of teens as young as 13 that words like these can do unimaginable damage?

We cannot stay silent. By speaking out together, we can show the Mormon Church hierarchy that it has literally risked the lives of children by inciting their tormentors. And we can ensure that the young people who heard this sermon know that it is scientifically wrong and profoundly misguided.

Speaking before 20,000 people and broadcasting to millions more, Packer said same-sex unions are morally wrong and “against God’s law and nature” – and that the church hierarchy would continue to support marriage bans like Proposition 8 (which was funded largely by Mormons).

It makes me physically sick to think how many young lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender kids had to sit in those pews and listen to that venom.

Comments like these are exactly what makes young LGBT kids think there’s no way out but suicide – that their parents will reject them, that their communities will shun them, and that living openly will bring pain or violence – that even God looks on their very identity as a sin to be “overcome.”

And these lies fuel the bullying, harassment, and violence that plague our schools.

Packer’s lies have been disproven over and over again by science and by the spiritual experience of Americans who know their LGBT neighbors and care about them. We know sexual orientation cannot and should not be changed and that two people falling in love is beautiful, not evil.

But unless we refute these lies whenever groups like the anti-LGBT National Organization for Marriage (NOM) and the Mormon Church repeat them – whether through letters like this or projects like HRC‘s www.NOMexposed.com – we risk another young person hearing them and believing that LGBT people are “defective.” And that belief contributes to violence and suicide.

Americans are sick of the Mormon hierarchy trying to dictate what they should believe. They know commitment and love when they see it. That’s why they are turning away in droves from limitations on their friends’ and neighbors’ freedom to marry.

Thank you for helping take a stand for the truth.

Sincerely,

Joe Solmonese
Joe Solmonese
President

2 thoughts on “After suicides, Mormon leader rants against gays”

    1. As a parent i believe our kids learn a lot from home, church and the environment in which we are all subject to…the old saying the fit or the fittest and because this is true I have to speak up out and post information from those that have yet to understand that their Words are daggers to those who chose to check out and commit suicide. I feel there are no excuses, no reasons for a human being to talk and specifically in President Packer’s case teach an ideology or dogma that basically engages in hate, fear mongering and results in people who bully and kids and adults quite possibly taking their lives based on the teachings of a group of people. The problem is that people who do believe what they are reading and causing harm to others. I would question if this is what you subscribe to? I read and believe in a lot of things yet i know right from wrong and do not choose to harm others because of the words i hear or read …listen suicides from bullying of gay and a lot of straight children under 12, teens, college and adults is a reality and those who speak like Packer even Sen. DeMint should be held accountable. Everyone has worth to their lives whether you believe they do or not and the decision to believe, read is not the problem it is when a person has to decide what is being taught – to read and believe or to read believe and act out against someone just because they are different is my problem and why i posted the article. Words matter they can be the difference between life and death when the words you say hurt, practice exclusion and cause violence. The fact is one school had five suicides that should tell you how words impact the believer, the reader and the victim the talker/preacher/bully chooses to target

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