Orson Scott Card is one of the best-selling science fiction writers alive. He is also a devout Mormon who opposes same-sex marriage. A group of pro-gay comics fans is up in arms over the fact that DC has hired Card to write a new Superman series. The Guardian is making it sound like a huge deal:
“Superman stands for truth, justice and the American way. Orson Scott Card does not stand for any idea of truth, justice or the American way that I can subscribe to,” said Jono Jarrett of Geeks Out, a gay fan group. “It’s a deeply disappointing and frankly weird choice.”
A film of Ender’s Game, co-produced by Card and starring Harrison Ford, is set to be released in November. Jarrett speculated DC was hoping pre-publicity for the movie would drive sales for the comic.
“I feel like they were hoping that no one will notice. It’s a free country, and what’s important is what we do here. This is a man who wants to take away my civil rights, and I will not be giving him my money,” said Jarrett.
Actor Michael Hartney, who describes himself as “as big a Superman fan as you’ll ever meet”, has written to DC voicing his concerns about Card.
“If this was a Holocaust denier or a white supremacist, there would be no question. Hiring that writer would be an embarrassment to your company. Well, Card is an embarrassment to your company, DC,” he wrote in a letter also published on Tumblr.
Fortunately, a gay comic writer quoted in the piece understands that blacklisting Card is offensive:
Dale Lazarov, a gay comic writer, said it was counterproductive to attack Card’s appointment: “I’ve known Orson Scott Card is a raging homophobe since the early 90s. I refuse to buy or read his work. But asking that he be denied work because he is a raging homophobe is taking it too far. Asking for workplace discrimination for any reason is counterproductive for those who want to end discrimination on their own behalf.”
True enough. What does Card’s view on homosexuality have to do with Superman? This is about trying to punish Card for thoughtcrime.
Incidentally, as the reader who sent this item in points out, it’s telling and inadvertently funny that The Guardian called Card “a noted anti-gay writer” in its lede. This tells us more about the fixations of Guardian writers than it does about Card. I don’t read science fiction, but if I did, I wouldn’t care what Card’s cultural politics were, unless they showed up in his fiction and were preachy — in other words, if his politics caused him to make bad art. It is entirely possible that Card is a first-rate artist, but a political dunderhead. Only political dunderheads, though, would condemn his art because of his political views, and it takes a true McCarthyite cretin to try to convince a publisher to deny the man work because of his political views.
I did learn from this story that DC turned Batwoman into a lesbian in 2006. I had not realized that DC Comics characters were sexual. A lot has changed since I was into superhero comics back in the 1970s.



icarusr wrote: “A particular viewpoint that is based, in part, on religion/dogma and in part on deep bigotry and ignorance – see Heather, above –”
What icarusr is not capable of seeing is that his views on homosexuality are based exactly on dogma and deep ignorance (“it is because I say so”). This in turn produces deep bigotry against anyone who doesn’t share his views and he has no qualms about causing them harm whenever he feels like it.
Contrary to what icarusr claims, it didn’t take much persuasion to convince a large swath of American society that there is nothing wrong with adultery, porn, promiscuity, and homosexuality – they were dying to hear it in the first place. This kind of ideology gives people a free pass to be as dysfunctional as they like and to do harm and think they are “good.” What more could they ask for?
As someone noted in another thread, anyone who transgresses any kind of moral boundary regarding sexuality is seen as “evolving” by liberals. The only minor exception is pedophilia, but only if you really push it in pre-pubescent categories, otherwise, for teenagers, it’s being increasingly normalized as well.
icarusr: “But if Heather is my employer, and spews her idiotic psychobabble to prove that I am suffering from some sort of violent dysfunction* because I love a man and not a woman, well, damned right I will sue her and damned right she should suffer.”
Sue for what? Thought crime? Freedom of expression? Sue me for having knowledge on sexual psychology that you don’t have? Sue me for questioning your idiotic views on sexuality? Sue me for pointing out that you are no authority on the issue of sexuality?
And should people who promote porn have a right to “sue me and to make me suffer” because I question their views too? The people who endorse prostitution, adultery, promiscuity, transmitting deadly STDs with impunity, abortion on demand, age of consent at 13, binge drinking, legalization of hard drugs as well? The pedophiles too?
* Heather never said anything about you suffering from a specifically “*violent* dysfunction.” That is a dishonest claim. On the other hand, does it take a violent dysfunction to claim she did? That’s a good question.
……………………
Scotty said: “If she had uttered similar remarks about blacks–or about Christians–how would this situation be changed?”
If certain students had said they wanted to show porn or perform sexually explicit acts in their prom, and she uttered similar remarks – how would this situation be changed?