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====Gay rights issues==== In particular, the anti-homosexual rhetoric that they publicized through fundraising letters and [[Christian broadcasting]] had higher contribution rates than other topics. While not explicitly anti-gay in their public platforms during the 1970s, their internal mobilization as "shared anti-gay sentiment aided in solidifying a collective set of grievances and ideologies, in establishing a collective identity of constituents, and in constructing a hostile enemy against which the conservative Christian activists were to fight".{{Sfn|Fetner|2008|p=60}} The Moral Majority refrained from directly speaking out against gays, feminists, and pro-abortion parties and instead used "pro-family" rhetoric to articulate their point. For example, instead of coming out directly against homosexuality and gay families, leaders of the Moral Majority defined a family as "two heterosexual parents", which appealed to many conservatives.<ref name="Banwart" /> Later, as the organization gained more influence in the 1980s, their rhetoric became more explicit in their stance on [[gay rights]] as they characterized the movement as an attack on the American family. [[Jerry Falwell Sr.]] expressed that because gay people were [[Social exclusion|rejected by most of society]], they had no choice but to prey on the young and were therefore a threat to children and families. Various Moral Majority members also expressed more extreme opinions, such as Moral Majority commentator Charlie Judd, who argued that "There are absolutes in this world. Just as jumping off a building will kill a person, so will the spread of homosexuality bring about the demise of American culture as we know it".<ref name="Banwart" />
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