On a UK Channel 4 tabloid-style show broadcast this week, Dr.
Christian Jessen visits some mostly U.S.-based quack therapists who
offer harmful gay 'reparative therapy' to ask them to (the show's title)
Cure Me, I'm Gay.
The Telegraph writes:
The names of the treatments are appalling
enough: aversion therapy (offered on the NHS well into the Eighties);
gay rehab; reparative therapy; deliverance. And if he understandably
doesn’t try them all, his enquiries strike a neat balance between
laughing at the absurdity of the theories and highlighting how dangerous
they are when levelled at vulnerable people. As he points out, therapy
is usually intended to build up self-esteem, rather than shatter it.
But Jessen is no journalist, and finds it
hard to maintain an emotional distance as brainwashed teenagers inform
him that homosexuality is caused by demons. There’s also a feeling that
he lets his quarries off the hook: while unmasking arrant nonsense is
easy enough, he doesn’t really challenge, or engage, with their
arguments face to face.
So, who knows what approach Smid is taking to this program - if he's
recommending his old nonsense for the fee that Channel 4 is paying him —
because
according to media reports he tells Jessen on the program that if he
wants to cure his gayness he should stop listening to Adele:
Retired doctor John Smid from Texas
offers rehab and orders him to strip his life of things that encourage
him to be gay. He throws out Jessen’s Adele CD and tells him: “Adele is
very popular within the gay community. You have to listen to Christian
music.”
Smid also makes him bin his tight undies claiming they will “stir his sensuality” and make him want sex.
Smid also makes him bin his tight undies claiming they will “stir his sensuality” and make him want sex.
Looks like Richard Cohen also makes an appearance. Wonder if he'll do any pillow beating?
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