Friday, November 26, 2004

In Our Thoughts . . . Words . . . and Deeds

I have had a prayer in my heart lately about honoring God in my thoughts, words, and deeds.
Thoughts ... words ... and deeds.
The images connect, intersect.
Thoughts preceed words. Words proceed deeds.

And then I remember when the Salvation Army first popped into my awareness.

November, 2001 -- The Salvation Army announces it will grant domestic partner benefits to their gay employees, in order to be eligible to receive government funding. Frankly, it smacked of selling out to me, and I was greatly relieved to hear they reversed their decision shortly after it was announced. I cut them a (what for me was a rather generous) check, made a mental note to contribute annually, then let it go.

Fast forward to November, 2004 -- Target Stores will no longer allow the Salvation Army bell ringers to collect for their annual kettle drive ...
I was shocked, angry, disappointed. Target Stores. My Target Store?? I love(d) Target, and eagerly drove past a K-Mart and a Wal-Mart to get to my Target. Well, no more! And anyhow, who doesn't like the Salvation Army?

Then I remembered ... wasn't there some controversial issue about the Salvation Army a year or two back? Thoughts ... words ... deeds. It was coming back to me. Not a year or two, but three. A decision I welcomed. Others did not.

Thoughts . . . words . . .
The accusations flew: The Salvation Army is anti-gay! Discrimination! Hate! Bigots! Some of us tune out the tired tirade, the repetitious rant of the gay-rights cadre. Some of us do not tune it out.

words . . . and more words . . . and deeds
A call to action in the gay community! Rallies! Fake-cash for the red kettles of hate! Boycott of the Salvation Army! We'll show them!

deeds . . . and more dastardly deeds. Less effectual deeds gave way to the dirtiest deed: Target gives the Salvation Army the boot. Lost donations nearly $9 million.

Is there a connection between the accusatory words and deeds gay-rights groups so ardently launched at the Salvation Army and the deeds of Target Corporation? Was the tirade justified? Anti-gay? A group that operates AIDS hospices at home and abroad? The group that both hires and gives to those in need irrespective of sexual preference?

And now I'm left feeling like I'm in an episode of "The Twilight Zone" -- the only one who remembers the gay-rights groups' response. Maybe that's how it is for gay conspiracy theorists. But it wasn't a dream. The attack of the gay-rights groups did preceed Target's attack. Is there a connection? I'll leave you the trail to follow for yourself.
thoughts . . . words . . . and deeds. And may I honor God with mine.
Here's that trail. Follow to your own conclusion:

"It establishes the organization as anti-gay... this was an extremely
divisive move that I don't think will be looked on kindly." -- David
Smith, a spokesman for the Human Rights Campaign, said here.

A Chicago gay-rights group stated, "LGBT activists and our allies are not taking this sitting down. As the Salvation Army gets approximately half its funds from holiday kettle donations, we want to hit them in the wallet: 1) We urge everyone to CEASE donating to the Salvation Army."

Here's a P-FLAG anti-Salvation Army rally, including photos.

GLAAD's efforts to thwart the Salvation Army.

Illinois Green Party's call for boycott of Salvation Army.

Anti Racist Action of Cleveland announces the "Queer Dollars Campaign."

The West Virginia Gay & Lesbian Coalition printed fake currency to put in
Salvation Army's kettles in protest.

SoulForce also supports the Salvation Army boycott & offers fake vouchers
off their home page, just updated in November of 2004.

2 Comments:

Blogger .Tom Kapanka said...

You've helped me reconsider my position on this. I did not know the background. As you mentioned in your email, and as is often the case, there could be much more to this story. If it has anything to do with SA's not cowtowing for the government funds on the gay benefits issue or if it has something to do with Target's position on same... this is a different matter, and I may have to revise my article at

November 27, 2004 at 2:39 PM  
Blogger JaneLovesJesus said...

UPDATE: Nine years later, "Nonprofit Quarterly" notes:

"It’s once again the time of year when the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) community points an accusatory finger at the Salvation Army and wags another at anyone who drops a dollar into a red kettle." (whole article here: bit.ly/1bPWAC1)

Yup, "once again" as predictable as Christmas itself is the gay war on The Salvation Army.

Please fight back with love... and cash. bit.ly/1l4gu1V

Merry Christmas!

December 21, 2013 at 11:26 AM  

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