General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsBryan Fischer of the AFA: Hey, I'm just saying things the right thinks but won't talk about
Rosie Gray of BuzzFeed is out with a new profile of Bryan Fischer, the American Family Association spokesman, revealing that Fischer is a wildcard in the Religious Right movement not because of his extremist views but as a result of his readiness to broadcast them without restraint or fear of the consequences. Social conservative leaders never question or rebuke his hardline rhetoric or radical claims, chronicled almost daily on this blog, and are happy to give Fischer a platform at key events like the Values Voters Summit and appear on his radio show. As Gray writes, the leadership of the AFA is squarely behind Fischer, with Buster Wilson boasting that Fischer will say things that a lot of people on the conservative side of things think but they wont say.
Sarah Posner of Religion Dispatches noted in her report from October, 2010, that former AFA employees told her that the views represented by Fischer are not only tolerated within the organization, but any opposition to its anti-gay, anti-Muslim, anti-immigrant invectiveincluding reliance on white nativist sources in the AFAs media programsis dismissed. Whats worse, former employees say, anyone questioning such attitudes as un-Christian is denigrated, and in some cases forced out.
In fact, the only times his columns were censored by the AFA was not due to internal disagreement but because the issues he was talking about veered outside of the groups mission.
While the AFA did not remove Fischers column denying the link between HIV and AIDS from its website (which you can find here), the group expunged Fischers columns defending the expulsion of Native Americans from their land, demanding all immigrants to the US convert to Christianity and maintaining that African Americans rut like rabbits as a result of the welfare system. Again, the AFA didnt think Fischer was wrong, but as Tim Wildmon said, they were about topics that we wouldnt get into.
http://www.rightwingwatch.org/content/afa-stands-by-their-man
We should consider Fischer the hidden barometer on what the right wing really thinks about the issues and their fellow Americans as long as he being accepted like this by the right.