Popular Culture Review Vol. 16, No. 2, Summer 2005 | Page 113

Americans New McCarthyism 109 insinuation that they are solely or largely because of homosexuals can and must be. The clerics’ connection with the Traditional Values Coalition would provide a source for many of the myths and stereotypes they used in their letter, but perhaps they were also listening to the wrong “experts” within their own community. The Dallas Morning News reported in August 2004 that the AIDS service organization Renaissance IQ which was supposedly dedicated to preventing HIV infections among at-risk groups, including gay men and African Americans, was ordered to pay back $112,867 to the federal government because of questionable expenses, including exorbitant staff bonuses. Renaissance IQ had also been ordered in February 2004 to repay the Texas Department of Health nearly $77,000 in state grants. Renaissance IQ was run by its controversial African-American cofounder and CEO Don Sneed. On December 8, 2004, Mr. Sneed announced that he had been dismissed from the Presidential Advisory Council on HIV and AIDS. He did so in a press release and letter that included a vicious attack on gay men and women. In his letter to Brent Minor, chairman of PACHA’s Treatment and Care Committee, Sneed wrote, “As a black grassroots Republican activist, my hands are becoming quite full as we continue to beat back the scourge of ‘marriage for gays,’ wliich would have a most detrimental effect on the black family should it come to pass” (www.dallasexaminer.com). “Scourge of ‘marriage for gays’?” Are monogamy and civil equality scourges? As has been repeatedly documented in Europe and Canada, as well as in the United States since May 17, 2004, when marriage equality became a reality in the state where the American Revolution began, same-sex marriage has had no effect on the “destabilization of traditional marriage” or families of any race or ethnicity, despite the McCarthyism and rhetoric of the Christian Right.^ Any “destabilization” is the result of forces that existed well before gay rights and marriage equality became faith-based political issues. Yet Sneed claimed marriage equality “would have a most detrimental effect on the black family.” He did not explain why or how that would be so. He simply relied on McCarthyism and the stereotypes that have become so pervasive. But the facts contradict both Sneed and the stereotypes. A February 2005 report prepared by the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force and based on Census 2000 showed that in Los Angeles and San Francisco black gay and lesbian families have a high rate of parenting, almost equal to opposite-sex African-American households (59 percent vs. 68 percent). As Strategic Director of the National Black Justice Coalition H. Alexander Robinson said, “ F