Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Tony Perkins Unhappy with Smithsonian's LGBTQ History Collection

In August, the Smithsonian National Museum of American History announced that it would add a significant number of materials related to LGBTQ history to its collection. In an August 19th ceremony, the Smithsonian accepted a rich variety of donations from LGBTQ advocates.

Donations include materials from NBC's Will & Grace, personal effects from transgender tennis player Renee Richards, diplomatic passports from the first openly gay U.S. ambassador and his husband, images gathered by photographers Patsy Lynch and Silvia Ros, gay pride paraphernalia and documents from the GLBT Community Center of Baltimore and Central Maryland, and the first transgender flag designed in 1999.

Monica Helms, the designer of the transgender flag, praised the decision. “It tells the world that trans people are part of this country,” Helms told Think Progress. “We deserve to be recognized and our history needs to be displayed like everyone else’s.”

Highlighting America's LGBTQ history helps us celebrate our country's rich heritage, right? Not according to Tony Perkins at the Family Research Council. Perkins, who previously slammed the National Women's History Museum for acknowledging the contributions of Margaret Sanger, is unhappy with the Smithsonian for acknowledging LGBTQ history.

In a September 8th radio commentary posted at the Family Research Council website, Perkins criticized the addition of LGBTQ materials to the National Museum of American History, saying "Is it the Museum of Natural History or Unnatural History?" He called the historical materials "propaganda" funded by taxpayer money before blasting the "LGBT agenda" and its "extremists". (Hat tip to Right Wing Watch.)
"This is just another platform for the Left to rewrite history and ignore the destructive side-effects of homosexuality. Students are already bombarded with the LGBT agenda. Do they really need to walk past exhibits treating its extremists as heroes? The Smithsonian may know art, but it should stop trying to frame the culture debate."
No, Tony. This isn't "rewriting" history, but restoring history. LGBTQ people have always existed and always played roles in society, but too often, the historical contributions of LGBTQ people have been ignored. Instead of censoring history to fit a right-wing narrative, it is vital that we recognize the presence of LGBTQ people in history.

Predictably, Perkins pathologizes LGBTQ status, chiding the Smithsonian for ignoring the alleged "destructive side-effects" of being gay. In doing so, he ignores history, as mental health experts have long since stopped labeling LGBTQ status as pathological.

Instead of demanding that history conform to right-wing prejudices, Perkins should educate himself on LGBTQ history. Real history, he would discover, is far richer than any Religious Right narrative.


6 comments:

  1. Of course he wouldn't mind if these same objects were displayed but labeled as evidence of social degeneracy or the effects of The Fall, just as the Creation Museum is happy to exhibit models of dinosaurs as long as they are shown wearing saddles or grazing alongside humans 6,000 years ago.

    What they object to is history itself, being shown for what it is instead of crushed into their Procrustean ideology.

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    1. Infidel -- It must be so frustrating for them when reality refuses to conform to their narrative. You'd think this would lead them to question their narrative.

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  2. Whenever I read about someone like Tony Perkins obsessing about and attacking the LGBT community or any other persons who engage in private activities that are none of his business, it makes me wonder what he has to hide. His obsession with other people's personal lives is pathological.

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    1. Agi Tater -- It's not healthy, in Perkins or in any of his ilk.

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  3. If we are supposed to "highlight the destructive side effects of homosexuality" as long as we also highlight the FAR MORE PERVASIVE side effects of religious fanaticism.

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    1. Brian -- Their fundamentalism does great harm in the world, but they refuse to realize it.

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