Peter S. Sprigg is Senior Fellow for Policy Studies at Gary Bauer
& James Dobson’s Family Research Council in Washington (not the same as Paul Cameron’s Family Research Institute).
His “research” and writings have addressed issues of marriage and family, human
sexuality, the arts and entertainment, and religion in public life. He is
unsurprisingly no fan of gay marriage and has frequently testified before
federal, state and local courts on these issues. To take a quote from his
interview with Chris Matthews: “I think that the Supreme Court decision in
Lawrence v. Texas which overturned the sodomy laws in this country was wrongly decided,”
[“wrongly decided” does not mean “legally wrongly”, of course, but that Sprigg
doesn’t like it – although he doesn’t see the difference between the two
things]. Furthermore, he “think[s] there would be a place for criminal
sanctions against homosexual behavior.” On a direct question of whether we should
outlaw gay behavior, Sprigg said “yes,” because he is a psychopathic Taliban
monster. More here.
You can see Sprigg struggling to argue that his (and anyone else’s) arguments
against homosexuality are not based on religion here (yes, his failure is epic), and his tortured attempt to argue that gay marriage
is still generally overwhelmingly unpopular among the public here.
He vigorously attacked the Obama administration’s call to protect LGBT people
from violence, calling it an “unconscionable” promotion of “the radical
ideology of the sexual revolution,” apparently because protecting people from
violence is un-Christian. To counteract the administration’s measures he reverted
to the most efficacious weapon in his arsenal: prayer.
Sprigg has also been caught advocating fractally wrong claims about evolution, claiming that even secular evolutionists (though he
doesn’t believe them) must support traditional marriage (by some
less-than-non-fallacious appeal to nature).
Sprigg is really an ardent creationist, however, from which it seems to follow
that intellectual honesty should not be considered a virtue. He is known for
complaining, with regard to a new book on evolution written by actual
scientists, that it failed to address challenges to the theory of evolution but
instead rehashed the same arguments (the book in question presented evidence,
by the way, but Sprigg doesn’t understand the difference): “What's lacking is
the true scientific debate about the merits and weaknesses of evolutionary
theory as presented by Darwin.” Such a debate was evidently missing because
evolution is obviously wrong and scientists don’t agree with him on that obvious
truth.
Among his books are “Outrage: how gay activists and liberal judges
are trashing democracy to redefine marriage,” and (with one Timothy Dailey)
“Getting It Straight: What the Research Shows about Homosexuality,” which does,
needless to say, not report what the research shows about homosexuality.
Sprigg was also a firm opponent of introducing the HPV vaccine in Michigan:
“We don't feel using school attendance as a form of coercion to get parents to
vaccinate their child is appropriate, simply because this disease is not transmitted
through casual contact the way other diseases are that are subject to school
mandates.”
Diagnosis: Certified Liar for Jesus, staunch denialist and ardently
anti-science, as well as hell bent on showing the world that he is a psychopathic monster. His
life’s work is built on the delusion that “secularists are promoting a
pro-science agenda as part of their age-old persecution of Christians”. He does
have some influence, however, and should be considered dangerous.
Sprigg has also suggested that kidnapping laws shouldn't protect gay parents.
ReplyDeleteSpriggs feeble backpedalling efforts concerning his support for the Ugandan anti-gay law. (Yes, it involves flat out lying.)
ReplyDeleteI've met about 6 members of the nyc acting community 5 of them told me he is well known as a closet case bottom boy
ReplyDeletenot surprising he was hired by the founder George Rekers who was outed and disappeared from FRC