Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

In It to Win It

(10,476 posts)
Thu Apr 24, 2025, 10:25 AM Yesterday

How Sam Alito Inadvertently Revealed His Own Homophobia From the Bench - Mark Joseph Stern

SLATE (Archived)





The Supreme Court’s conservative justices unleashed a torrent of homophobia on Tuesday as they debated the meaning and propriety of several LGBTQ-themed children’s books. Throughout arguments in Mahmoud v. Taylor, these justices voiced concern—and at times, outright disgust—toward these books for portraying LGBTQ+ people as normal and loving. They argued that parents should have a First Amendment right to shield their children from such material in public schools, ostensibly to protect them from exposure to diverse families under the auspices of religious liberty. Justice Samuel Alito reserved special ire for Uncle Bobby’s Wedding, a gentle picture book that homophobic parents initially attempted to censor when it debuted in 2008. Alito suggested, over the objections of Justice Sonia Sotomayor, that the book is devious propaganda aimed at indoctrinating children who harbor reservations about same-sex marriage.

He is wrong. Alito did not just arguably miss the point of the book; he fundamentally distorted it. As author Sarah Brannen told me on Wednesday, “The book is written very simply, in language a 5-year-old can understand.” Brannen speculated that Alito “was being deliberately misleading” in his summary of Uncle Bobby’s Wedding from the bench, part of a broader effort to vilify both the school board and same-sex families. This paranoid homophobia lies at the heart of the whole case. The Republican-appointed justices made it abundantly clear that they think woke educators are inculcating children with radical, pro-LGBTQ+ values in violation of their parents’ religious beliefs. These justices sound eager to give parents a veto over classroom materials to prevent their children from learning about LGBTQ+ families. And they have zero concern for the profoundly stigmatizing message this censorship sends to children who belong to those very families.

Brannen wrote and illustrated Uncle Bobby’s Wedding in 2005, shortly after same-sex marriage became legal in Massachusetts. Upon publication in 2008, Uncle Bobby’s Wedding faced multiple challenges from parents who wanted it removed from the library, becoming the eighth most challenged book of the year in the United States. In 2022, Maryland’s Montgomery County Board of Education chose to include it on the curriculum for young students, prompting some religious parents to “opt out” their children from seeing the books. The board eventually scrapped its opt-out policy, finding that it had become unworkable: So many parents were objecting that the policy gave them a veto power over the curricula, with educators scrapping materials rather than managing the logistics of endless opt-outs. The parents then sued, alleging that the board violated their First Amendment right to free exercise by denying them the chance to shield their children from LGBTQ+ literature.

Uncle Bobby’s Wedding was one of a handful of picture books scorned by these parents—who are now plaintiffs in Mahmoud, the case SCOTUS heard on Tuesday. Sotomayor mentioned the book early on, asking the plaintiffs’ attorney, Eric Rassbach, how “mere exposure” to “two men getting married” could spur a religious objection. (“None of them are even kissing,” she noted.) Alito quickly leapt in. “I’ve read that book,” he declared, like a homophobic uncle at Thanksgiving dinner preparing to lecture his family about something he saw on Fox News. The justice asked Rassbach: “Do you think it’s fair to say that all that is done in Uncle Bobby’s Wedding is to expose children to the fact that there are men who marry other men?” He continued:

“I don’t think anybody can read that and say, well, this is just telling children that there are occasions when men marry other men, that Uncle Bobby gets married to his boyfriend, Jamie. And everybody’s happy and … everyone accepts this—except for the little girl, Chloe, who has reservations about it. But her mother corrects her: ‘No, you shouldn’t have any reservations about this.’ As I said, it has a clear moral message.”
3 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
How Sam Alito Inadvertently Revealed His Own Homophobia From the Bench - Mark Joseph Stern (Original Post) In It to Win It Yesterday OP
Please replace the word phobia with bigotry. Phobias are irrational mental fears and lindysalsagal Yesterday #1
How is surprised that Alito is a homophobe? LetMyPeopleVote 22 hrs ago #2
Alito is to social justice what ripe dog turds are to soup. Ping Tung 22 hrs ago #3

lindysalsagal

(22,672 posts)
1. Please replace the word phobia with bigotry. Phobias are irrational mental fears and
Thu Apr 24, 2025, 10:38 AM
Yesterday

dysfunctions. His hatred is entirely deliberate and avoidable. But it's not fear. There is nothing to fear from other people unless they're attacking you.

Latest Discussions»General Discussion»How Sam Alito Inadvertent...