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Wayne Besen is author of “Anything
But Straight: Unmasking the Scandals & Lies Behind the ‘Ex-Gay’
Myth” (Haworth Press); he can be reached at wbesen@aol.com.
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HOME > VIEWPOINT > OPINION
By: WAYNE BESEN COMMENTS
REGGIE WHITE, A former football star and preacher who took part in a 1998 ad campaign
that said gay people have short life spans, died last month. He was 43 years old.
According to most news reports, White was the equivalent of Mother Teresa in
football pads. His beatification includes gushing testimonials about how he
was a wonderful “Man of God” who was a great role model to children.
“As great a player as Reggie was, he was a better person. Every life
that he touched is better for it,” said Detroit Lions CEO Matt Millen.
Oh, really?
As a gay football fan, I looked up to White until he made it clear that he
frowned down on me and anyone else who did not share his fire and brimstone
religious beliefs.
Known as the “Minister of Defense,” White is most memorable to
me as an offensive minister who allowed thousands of young athletes to justify
their hatred toward homosexuals in the name of God.
AFTER HIS DEATH, we heard a lot about how he helped inner-city youth, but how
many young lives did he potentially destroy with his forceful condemnations
of homosexuality?
To listen to the cooing media, you would think that these gay youth were expendable
in White’s war against homosexuals. And make no mistake, White was as
homophobic as they come.
“Gay activists are trying to force their agenda on our children and society,
and it bothers me,” White said in an interview with Citizen Magazine.
“When you look at the gay agenda, their thing is that they deserve the
same rights as other minorities, particularly black people. That is very offensive.”
When asked why he picked gay bashing as his personal crusade, White compared
homosexuality to unflattering behaviors.
“You don’t have men and women who commit adultery who are activists
for adultery, or liars who are activists for lying,” White told Citizen.
In 1998, White appeared in a full-page ad in USA Today sponsored by 15 groups
including the Christian Coalition and The Family Research Council. The ad claimed
to tell the “truth” about homosexual recruitment in public schools
and how AIDS activists have misused AIDS funding to promote homosexuality to
elementary kids.
Fortunately, by the time White appeared in this ad, much of the public already
viewed him as an embarrassing ignoramus.
IN AN INFAMOUS speech to the Wisconsin State Legislature, White proclaimed
that Asians can turn a TV into a watch, blacks excel at celebration and dance,
Latinos can fit 20 or 30 people into one house, and whites are great with money.
White can also be attributed with helping accelerate the trend of tying sports
performance to fundamentalist religious belief. Now we can’t turn on the
TV without some egocentric millionaire jock giving God credit for his touchdown.
But the Reggie White school of prayer seemed as much about chest thumping as
Bible thumping. He was the high priest in the Temple of Intolerance, where his
muscle-bound flock read from the Book of Testosterone.
The anti-gay attitude exemplified by White and his holy-steamrollers can still
be seen today in abusive high school locker rooms across America.
Toward the end of White’s life he seemed to regret how he sometimes misused
religion.
As reported in USA Today, White told ESPN’s Andrea Kremer that he had
stopped going to church four years ago and started studying Hebrew.
Former Green Bay Packers teammate Shannon Sharpe said that White told him that
he “moved away from Christianity and started studying Hebrew because I
need to know for myself what my life holds for me.”
It is a shame that White did not live long enough to complete his religious
journey. Instead, many people will remember White as much for his disgraceful
conduct off the field, as for his supreme grace on it.
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