Archive for August, 2008

Response to NOM’s Email of August 8, 2008

Wednesday, August 13th, 2008

Memorandum

TO: Brian Brown, Executive Director, National Organization for Marriage

Maggie Gallagher, President, National Organization for Marriage

FROM: Fred Karger, Campaign Manager, Californians Against Hate

Re: Response to Your Email of August 8, 2008

DATE: August 13, 2008

I received a copy of the email you sent out attacking many Californians who stand up for equality and fairness including me. You see California has a rich tradition of leading the way on equality. It goes back to women’s suffrage where California was the 6th state in the nation to allow women the right to vote in 1911. This preceded the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution that went into effect 9 years later in 1920. Additionally, California was the first state to make interracial marriages legal in 1948, 19 years before the United States Supreme Court did so. Maybe since your organization is based in New Jersey you were unaware of these facts, but Californians are leaders on many issues and we also resent outsiders who come into California to take away our rights and bully us.

I was delighted to see your continued defense of one of your largest patrons, San Diego mega developer and hotel owner Doug Manchester who gave $125,000.00 to your effort to take away our newly recognized fundamental right to marry in California (but more on that below). Somehow you try to justify his contribution, while attacking individuals and companies that are opposed to your hateful Constitutional Amendment, Proposition 8 on the November ballot.

What about all of the corporate contributions that your organization, the National Organization for Marriage and Protect Marriage receives from companies? Here are some of them:

Fieldstead & Company, Irvine , CA – $400,000

The Vineyard Group, LLC, Mesa , AZ – $60,000

Adamo Construction Management, Lakeside , CA – $35,000

Container Supply Company, Garden Grove , CA – $25,000

TB Penick & Sons, San Diego , CA – $20,000

And Mr. Brown, let’s not forget who started this battle not just here in California, but all across the United States. You and a handful of men and women backed by big companies and wealthy donors who have put Constitutional Amendments on the ballot in 29 states. You and your allies are attempting to turn the clock back on civil rights and are forcing the gay and lesbian community and our friends to spend millions of dollars just to defend fairness and justice and stop your campaigns of fear and hate. Californians do not like organizations like NOM from Princeton, New Jersey, American Family Association (AFA) from Tupelo, Mississippi and James Dobson’s Focus on the Family from Colorado coming in to California which have spent millions of dollars in an attempt to write discrimination into the California Constitution for the very first time.

NOM has contributed over $1,000,000.00, Focus on the Family $400,000.00 and AFA $500,000.00.

Californians Against Hate will be publishing all of the contributions that have come in to hire the hundreds of professional signature gatherers and all of the money that is now coming in to run your campaign. We will post them on our web site www.californiansagainsthate.com for the world to see. We want to let our millions of friends and allies around the country know exactly who is contributing the millions of dollars to take away our freedom to marry. Then people can choose whether they want to support these businesses or not.

You continue to defend Doug Manchester and even say in your email (copy below) that, “due to the mere fact that one of the key businessmen involved donated to protect marriage, gay advocates have begun a nationwide campaign to hurt the entire–and entirely unrelated–business enterprise.” One of the key businessmen? There has been so much coverage of Mr. Manchester and his $125,000.00 contribution that I am sure that you are aware Mr. Manchester owns the hotel that bears his name, the Manchester Grand Hyatt in San Diego.


And yes, we have called for a boycott of his hotel because of his $125,000.00 contribution. The boycott has been very successful. Individuals are canceling reservations and lots more are simply not booking rooms. Several big conventions are going to other San Diego Hotels. Not sure if you have seen all the media coverage of the boycott or seen our web site www.boycottmanchesterhotels.com but many groups are leaving the Manchester Grand Hyatt and lots of San Diegans are going elsewhere to stay, eat, drink, shop, park and even get married.

Another San Diegan that gave even more money to your campaign than Doug Manchester, Terry Caster and his family, who contributed almost $300,000.00 are the owners of A-1 Self Storage Company. Mr. Caster is apparently getting inundated with people calling asking him why he has given so much money to end marriage equality in California . A-1 Self Storage has 40 locations throughout California , and I read that they had to put in a special phone line to field all the calls. Not sure if you have been to that web site www.callterrycaster.com but it has had thousands of visits just in the last 2 weeks.

So, Mr. Brown, while I do enjoy reading your emails, and I am sure they are helping you raise money, I only hope that you will be accurate and tell the truth as you send out your fund raising appeals over the internet.

Californians Against Hate was established to act a Truth Squad during this campaign. We will be watching and reporting on what we see.

Copy of Brian Brown email of August 9, 2008

NOM Marriage News: California Edition August 8, 2008

Dear Friend of Marriage,

“Grandma, my teacher says if grandpa was a girl, that’s okay, you could still be married!”

That’s one of the voices on the television and radio ad the National Organization for Marriage has run in different states. (A link to the ad is at the bottom of this letter.)

It’s a quick way to alert parents and grandparents to an essential truth: Same-sex marriage is not about what two men do in private. It’s about the values our government is going to actively promote for all our children–including in our public schools.

The vast majority of Californians, including supermajorities of Hispanic and African-American voters, agree with you and me: We don’t want public schools teaching 8-year-olds that gay marriage is okay. That’s a decision that should be left to parents and our values.

But you and I also know: Unless we pass Prop 8 in California , it won’t be. The government will step in to make sure every young child in California schools is thoroughly indoctrinated in the virtues of gay marriage as a great civil rights triumph. (Can you donate $100 to protect marriage today? What about $10 or even just one dollar–we need every dime to protect marriage for generations to come. Please go to http://nomcalifornia.org to donate!)

That’s equally true in Florida , where voters have a chance to protect marriage by voting Yes on 2 (you can donate to Yes2marriage.org), or in Arizona , where we need 50% of Arizonans to vote yes on the Arizona Marriage Protection Amendment. It will be true in New Jersey , New York , Rhode Island and any of the other states where the gay marriage lobby is actively seeking to ram same-sex marriage through the legislatures, a political payoff for years of patient political organizing and donating on their part.

The Grossmont Unions School District in eastern San Diego county became the first California school board to recognize that Yes on Prop 8 is an educational issue, too: The school board voted 4-0 to endorse Proposition 8. Yes on Prop 8 protects our children from inevitable gay marriage propaganda in public schools.

How can you as a parent object to your 6-year-old being taught that gay marriage is okay if that’s what in fact the law of California says?

David Parker, the Massachusetts parent who was arrested when he tried to prevent his kindergartener from being exposed to pro-gay marriage books, can confirm what is at stake here.

One woman who was at the Grossmont Union School District meeting said that opponents of Prop 8 were so mean-spirited, rude, and insulting–calling Californians who support Prop 8 haters and bigots–that the silent majority in the audience erupted in cheers when the board overruled them.

“The next thing the board should do is insist on classes in respect so that young people understand how to speak at a public meeting,” my informant told me.

In this case the teens were only following their “betters”: the mainstream media, the California Supreme Court, Hollywood , San Francisco ‘s Mayor Gavin Newsom, and gay marriage advocates like Fred Karger’s Californians Against Hate.

All the powerful folks agree on one thing: It’s perfectly okay to denounce, insult, misrepresent, and intimidate people who support marriage. In their eyes, those of us willing to stand for the transcendent good of marriage as the union of husband and wife are just haters and bigots who deserve to be silenced and intimidated.

And it’s increasingly clear the opponents of Prop 8 don’t care much that they intimidate or harass those who disagree with them. Ordinary norms of civil discourse, democratic debate and process don’t seem to apply to anti-Prop-8ers. When you’ve dubbed yourself the civil rights movement of the century, apparently you get to run right over people who disagree with you, without any pang of conscience.

Take Attorney General Jerry Brown for example. He’s the man charged with upholding and defending the normal rules of law. Instead he’s dedicated himself to twisting and bending as many rules as he can to defeat Prop 8. Jerry’s undemocratic antic began before the California Supreme Court ruling, when he specifically disavowed in his court briefs (allegedly defending Prop 22) the truthful and winning argument that had persuaded supreme courts in New York , Maryland , and Washington to uphold marriage laws.

Next step in Jerry Brown’s bag of tricks? Redo the ballot initiative language in ways designed to make it as hard to pass as possible. As far as I know this has never happened in California history. When a ballot initiative is filed, language is developed that describes the initiative, people sign petitions, and it goes on the ballot. Stepping in mid-game to let the Human Rights Campaign rewrite the ballot language to make it fail? Par for the course, in this debate.

Just this week Jerry Brown pulled another trick out of his bag: Prop 8, he pronounced (as if it were up to him to decide), would not be “retroactive,” meaning the gay marriages that have already taken place won’t be affected. (Well, there’s one plus side: At least they can’t argue that we’re taking away any existing rights from people!)

Sometimes the anti-democratic tendencies of the gay-marriage lobby go too far. Even the California courts could not swallow the idea that Prop 8 should be struck from the ballot on the ground that it’s not merely an amendment but a revision of the entire constitutional scheme. That is the desperate argument gay marriage advocates made in their increasingly frantic attempts to deprive California voters of our civil right to vote for marriage in California this November.

I wanted to let you in on the latest on the boycott against the Manchester Hyatt. That poor hotel, of course, has nothing to do with Prop 8, one way or another. It’s just a great hotel right there on the bay in San Diego . But due to the mere fact that one of the key businessmen involved donated to protect marriage, gay advocates have begun a nationwide campaign to hurt the entire–and entirely unrelated–business enterprise.

Think of all the people they are willing to hurt–the hotel employees, the customers who will be inconvenienced, the investors–to get what they want: to enforce the idea that people like you and me, who think marriage means a man and a woman, are just like racial bigots and should be treated the same way.

Meanwhile the real scandal is over at the Pacific Gas and Electric Company–a regulated public utility, which (according to Equality for All) donated $250,000 to defeat Prop 8. Can you imagine? A public utility is skimming money off people’s electric bills to donate $250,000 to overturn the will of 61% of its customers–even as it spends millions to try to persuade voters to defeat Prop 7, an alternative energy bill!

I’m going to email Peter A. Darbee, the Chairman of the Board of PG&E, and tell him: I’m voting Yes on Prop 8 and Yes on Prop 7. And I’m going to ask all my friends and neighbors to do the same.

If you have strong feelings on Prop 7, you may not want to go there.

But if, like me, you want to let this public utility understand that they are going to pay a price if they try to overrule the majority of Californian voters, on a matter (marriage) that is just not an electric company’s business…

Email Peter A. Darbee at peter.darbee@pge-corp.com, or call Nancy E. McFadden, the company’s public affairs representative, at (415) 267-7070. Be polite, but tell her you are voting Yes on Prop 8 and Yes on Prop 7 because of PG&E’s decision to make its customers pay to defeat Prop 8. (And can you email me at pgandemarriage@yahoo.com to let me know what she says?)

Here’s the difference between the Manchester Hyatt and PG&E: The Manchester Hyatt did not donate to Prop 8, but attempts are being made unfairly to punish the hotel anyway, because just one businessmen associated with the hotel gave money.

PG&E is using its customers’ money to defeat the will of the majority of its customers.

That’s a big difference.

Expect more absurdities and insanities as the campaign progresses.

But remember too: We know who wins in the end, don’t we? And we know who will win this November.

It’s an honor to stand with you, for marriage.

God bless you,

Brian

Brian S. Brown

Executive Director National Organization for Marriage

20 Nassau Street, Suite 242

Princeton , NJ 08542

bbrown@nationformarriage.org

P.S. You can view our national ads on the meaning of marriage by going to http://www.nationformarriage.org and clicking on “Get Informed.”

(C)2008 National Organization for Marriage.

AAFP Members Call For Boycott

Wednesday, August 13th, 2008


Everyone from lawyers to doctors are our joining the debate about whether their respective organizations should hold conferences at the Manchester Grand Hyatt Hotel, in the wake of a boycott launched by Californians Against Hate. 

The latest example of this is a statement released by the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP), assuring their membership about the hotel’s commitment to diversity. 

The written statement below came in response to a barrage of concerns from AAFP members about the choice of venue for their annual Congress of Delegates and Scientific Assembly.

Assembly Housing

AAFP Statement, July 29, 2008: The Manchester Grand Hyatt San Diego, the headquarters hotel for this year’s AAFP Congress of Delegates and Scientific Assembly, is owned by Doug Manchester. Mr. Manchester recently donated $125,000 to support Passage of Proposition 8, an amendment on the November ballot banning same-sex marriage in California. This action has generated calls from various groups for a boycott of the hotel.

Both the AAFP and the Hyatt Hotel Corporation have clear and consistent policies embracing and encouraging diversity in the workplace. Hyatt’s commitment to diversity has been reaffirmed in a letter to AAFP members and staff.

The AAFP’s policies on diversity in the workplace and diversity in AAFP education activities are available online.

Hyatt Management’s Letter :

http://www.aafp.org/online/etc/medialib/aafp_org/documents/cme/courses/conf/assembly/hyattletter.html

AAFP’s Diversity Policies:

http://www.aafp.org/online/en/home/policy/policies/d/diversityworkplace.html

http://www.aafp.org/online/en/home/policy/policies/d/diversityasssuring.html

Call Terry Caster Campaign

Friday, August 8th, 2008

NEWS RELEASE Contact: Fred Karger

July 31, 2008 619-592-2008

Californians Against Hate “Call Terry Caster Campaign” – Day 3

San Diego’s Biggest Donor to Protect Marriage — Phones Ringing Off-the-Hook

SAN DIEGO, CA — What possesses a family to give nearly $300,000.00 to change history and write discrimination into the California Constitution?

Well, here is what the San Diego Union-Tribune reported on March 15, 2008 on Caster family patriarch, Terry Caster:

Caster, who heads Caster Cos., which owns A-1 Self Storage
and other commercial properties, said he believes that marriage
between a man and a woman is fundamental to society.
“Without solid marriage, you are going to have a sick society,” he said.

This guy must really not like same-sex marriage. Mr. Caster and many of his eight sons and daughters and their husbands and wives gave a combined total of $292,600.00 to the Protect Marriage campaign between January and July of 2008.

Why so much money? Is same-sex marriage that much of a threat to the Caster family and to society as a whole? Is his family so fearful of creating a “sick society” that they are willing to take away the recently attained freedom to marry in California? And where do all his children get the $9,100.00 they contributed to the Protect Marriage campaign?

Terry Caster – $100,000 on 1/5/08
Terry Caster – $62,500 on 2/5/08
Terry Caster – $10,000 on 3/27/08
Barbara Caster – $9,100 on 4/10/08
Brian Caster – $10,000 on 1/28/08
Brian Caster – $9,100 on 4/10/08
Brian Caster – $10,000 on 7/8/08
Candice Caster – $9,100 on 4/10/08
Cha Cha Caster – $9,100 on 4/10/08
Christina Caster – $9,100 on 4/10/08
Craig Caster – $9,100 on 4/10/08
Gary Davidson – $9,100 on 4/10/08
Justin Caster – $9,100 on 4/10/08
Kenneth Kremensky – $9,100 on 4/10/08
Mechele Kremensky – $9,100 on 4/10/08
Nick Caster – $9,100 on 4/10/08

Terry Caster is the owner of A-1 Self Storage of San Diego http://a1storage.com/ and was the most generous of San Diego County’s many major donors to Protect Marriage. Mr. Caster is a very successful businessman, no doubt. A-1 Self Storage has 40 locations all over California with 28,000 storage units and 4 million square feet of self storage. He and his family have every right to contribute as much money as they want to this effort, but we are very curious as to why Mr. Caster saw fit to contribute so much money to their campaign of fear and hate.

So we are asking our millions of friends and supporters all over the United States to help us by Calling Terry Caster and asking him why he and his family are so strongly against marriage equality.

Call Terry Caster at A-1 Self Storage Toll Free
Corporate Office Number: 800-219-4854 ext. 106
Customer Service Number: 800-210-8979

When you call, please be respectful and courteous to Mr. Caster and his associates.
If the numbers are busy, please keep trying.

We have launched a brand new web site with more information on our latest undertaking: www.CallTerryCaster.com

Californians Against Hate www.californiansagainsthate.com will act as a truth squad during the next 3 months. Our purpose is to let everyone know the major donor supporters of Proposition 8. With that information, people can chose whether or not they want to patronize the businesses owned by these major donors.

We will recommend action against some of the major contributors as we did two weeks ago in calling for a boycott of Doug Manchester’s three hotels www.boycottmanchesterhotels.com We will announcing additional activities re Terry Caster and his A-1 Self Storage Company next week.

Californians Against Hate will post all these major contributors on our web site in the very near future and disseminate this information through our facebook group page http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=17558919762&ref=mf and other new media.

It is sad to me and so many other Californians to see so much money being given out of fear and hate to try take away the freedom to marry for loving couples across this great state.
Terry Caster and his wife have 38 grandchildren. What message is he sending to all his grandchildren and to an entire generation of young people?

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