THE SKELETON ARMY
 


Despite their motto, THE SALVATION ARMY is not actually “Doing The Most Good.” THE SALVATION ARMY, criticized for years for their discriminatory anti-LGBTQ practices, claims they’ve changed.¹ They haven’t.²

LGBTQ youth and adults, and particularly trans women of color, are more likely to suffer domestic abuse, substance issues, and homelessness than any other population.³ And yet trans people are turned away from treatment or forced to conform to traditional Christian gender norms to receive crisis services at facilities across the country.

 

Members of the Skeleton Army, December 2019

 

 
 

Prejudice, Not Love

In the Summer of 2017, The City of New York charged four substance abuse centers for malicious anti-trans policies and abuses — including one operated by THE SALVATION ARMY,² continuing a pattern of anti-trans policies by the tax exempt religious non-profit.

The New York City Commission on Human Rights found that faith based shelters and treatment facilities broke New York law by:

  • “Refusing to accept transgender people as patients or tenants”

  • “Assigning trans people rooms based on their sex assigned at birth instead of their lived gender identity”

  • “Unwarranted physical examinations to determine if trans people are on hormone therapy or have had surgery”

  • “Segregating transgender patients into separate rooms”

Skeleton Army Member, December 2019

 
 
 

Read the full press release from the NYC Commission on Human Rights here.

 


 
 
 

A Systemic Problem

Nationally, faith-based substance abuse programs, domestic violence centers, and homeless shelters have documented patterns of discrimination against LGBTQ youth and adults, especially trans people, compounding their issues and risking their lives.³

Non-scientific biases and fundamentalist narratives do not belong in mental health and crisis management.

 

Skeleton Army Members, December 2019

 

Read the National Center for Transgender Equality (NCTE)'s 2015 Transgender Survey.

 

 

The Skeleton ARMY Mission Statement

 

The SKELETON ARMY promotes education about programs that are actually addressing homelessness, substance abuse and domestic violence in the LGBTQIA+ community.

The SKELETON ARMY believes that mental health, substance abuse, and housing intervention should conform to best practices informed by the best empirical understanding of reality, intersectional sociology, and clinical psychology.

The SKELETON ARMY will expose organizations that do not follow best practices in treatment and shame them.

The SKELETON ARMY believes that people seeking assistance during crises should never have their bodies or freedoms violated, or identities distorted, by abusive or untrustworthy actors motivated by religious extremism or other prejudicial beliefs.
 

Skeleton Army Members, December 2019

 
 

 

 Don’t take our word for it

The Salvation Army has responded to criticism for its stance against non-heteronormative identities. Their defense of their actions is more damning than anything we could write about them.

This public statement supports many of the accusations against them, justifying these actions with claims of “religious liberty” and clarifying that while they may engage in these activities, they don’t interpret these activities as discrimination. The Salvation Army does not deny that religious persuasion takes place at its facilities while providing services to those in need, it merely asserts that “our position statement could not be more emphatic – our Mission is to ‘preach the Gospel of Jesus Christ and meet human needs in his name without discrimination.’” They don’t seem to grasp that the unrequested preaching and the prejudice go hand in hand.

When answering the question: “In 2012, Did a Salvation Army officer in Australia suggest in a radio interview that the Army’s theology calls for gays and lesbians to be put to death?” The Salvation Army clarifies that yes, this did happen, but that “In this instance the scripture was, unfortunately, misinterpreted.” Hopefully their officials have stepped up their critical reading skills.

The same document addresses whether the Salvation Army discriminates against employees with same-sex spouses. The organization makes it clear that they stand for “the traditional definition of marriage,” but that they will provide health benefits to relevant families of employees “which may include same sex partners according to applicable law.” The Salvation Army does not claim to be non-discriminatory against its own employees, but they won’t make it their official policy to break state or federal law in the pursuance of doing so. How charitable of them…

 
 

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