Orson Scott Card, author of Enders Game, was commissioned by DC to
write the first two instalments of its new digital-first comic,
Adventures of Superman, which has prompted calls for a boycott on the
company.
Mr Card, a devout Mormon, has been vocal about his anti-gay views in
the past. In a 2004 essay titled, Homosexual ‘Marriage’ and
Civilisaition he wrote that gay people were not “normal”.
He wrote: “The dark secret of homosexual society—the one that dares
not speak its name—is how many homosexuals first entered into that world
through a disturbing seduction or rape or molestation or abuse, and how
many of them yearn to get out of the homosexual community and live
normally.”
He later wrote a re-imagining of Shakespeare’s Hamlet in which some
claim that he attempted to link homosexuality to paedophilia.
In 1990, Mr Card called for laws banning gay sex to remain in place.
Fans of Superman and DC took to twitter to question the decision to
allow such a writer to be employed by a company in the past seen as
progressive with its editorial decisions.
Many suggested that it Mr Card was an unsuitable choice to write
Superman, a character who has historically been portrayed as the paragon
of good, reports the New Statesman.
An AllOut petition with over 2,000 signatures was started in order to push DC to drop the story lines written by Mr Card.
The petition page read: “DC Comics has just hired anti-gay writer Orson Scott Card for their new digital Adventures of Superman.
“He’s written publicly that he believes marriage equality would lead
to the end of civilization. He’s also on the board of a notorious
anti-equality organization.
“We need to let DC Comics know they can’t support Orson Scott Card or
his work to keep LGBT people as second-class citizens. They know
they’re accountable to their fans, so if enough of us speak out now,
they’ll hear us loud and clear.”
Last year, DC announced that Alan Scott, the earliest incarnation of Green Lantern, would be reintroduced as gay. Prior to that, Batwoman was announced as the first lesbian superhero to have her own solo title
1 comment:
Well this problem is easily solved -- no prom any more at the school. If it's not a "school event," then don't have it, plain and simple. OK, what gives with the special ed teacher. Perhaps her students choose to be special ed because of circumstances in their lives too. So say the school district and the taxpayers some money - no need for special ed teachers either.
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