Americans for Truth about Homosexuality


Americans for Truth about Homosexuality is an organization which describes its mission as "exposing the homosexual activist agenda". AFTAH rejects the idea that sexual orientation is inborn and believes that people can "leave the homosexual lifestyle". AFTAH contends that there is a fundamental conflict between gay rights and religious freedom. It is designated as an anti-gay hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center.

History

AFTAH was formed as a part-time enterprise in 1996 to oppose the "radical homosexual agenda." It was reorganized in 2006 by Peter LaBarbera. It was a 5013 United States tax-exempt organization until stripped of that designation in 2010, following years of failing to file the appropriate paperwork. AFTAH's tax exempt status was reinstated in 2012 but again revoked in 2015.

“Activism”

In 1997, LaBarbera, then an editor for the Family Research Council, criticized US President Bill Clinton for supporting the Employment Non-Discrimination Act stating: "He's out there using his presidential power to boost the gay lobby. I think there is an increasing acceptance , but the majority of Americans are put off by the kind of homosexual advocacy they are seeing."
In 2009, AFTAH filed a lawsuit in US Federal Court against a Naperville, Illinois, Holiday Inn Select, because of the cancellation of a banquet the AFTAH planned to hold October 6, 2007, at the hotel. The hotel cancelled the AFTAH event after learning that it would likely draw protests from the Chicago-based Gay Liberation Network. That same year, LaBarbera, while speaking at the Reclaiming Oklahoma for Christ Conference, called for a government study of the dangers of homosexual sex.

Criticism

In 2010, AFTAH was designated as an anti-gay hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center for spreading "hateful propaganda", and claiming that homosexuality can be "cured".