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eHarmony Shakedown

CityGirl

Silver Member
http://www.gopusa.com/commentary/mmalkin/2008/mm_11212.shtml
The eHarmony Shakedown
By Michelle Malkin
November 21, 2008

Congratulations, tolerance mau-mauers: Your shakedown of a Christian-targeted dating website worked. Homosexuals will no longer be denied the inalienable "right" to hook up with same-sex partners on eHarmony. What a landmark triumph for social progress, eh?

New Jersey plaintiff Eric McKinley can now crown himself the new Rosa Parks -- heroically breaking down inhumane barriers to Internet matchmaking by forcing a law-abiding private company to provide services it was never created to provide. "Men seeking men" has now been enshrined with "I have a dream" as a civil rights rallying cry of the 21st century. Bully for you, Mr. McKinley. You bully.

Neil Warren, eHarmony's founder, is a gentle, grandfatherly businessman who launched his popular dating site to support heterosexual marriage. A "Focus on the Family" author with a divinity degree, Warren encourages healthy, lasting unions between men and women of all faiths, mixed faiths or no faith at all.

Don't like what eHarmony sells? Go somewhere else. There are thousands upon thousands of dating sites on the Internet that cater to gays, lesbians, Jews, Muslims, Trekkies, runners, you name it.

No matter. In the name of tolerance, McKinley refused to tolerate eHarmony's right to operate a lawful business that didn't give him what he wanted. He filed a discrimination complaint against eHarmony with the New Jersey Division on Civil Rights in 2005.

To be clear: eHarmony never, ever refused to do business with anyone. The company broke no laws. Their great "sin" was not providing a politically correct service that a publicity-seeking gay plaintiff demanded they provide. For three years, the company battled McKinley's legal shakedown artists -- and staved off other opportunists as well. The dating site had been previously sued by a lesbian looking to force the company to match her up with another woman, and by a married man who ridiculously sought to force the company to find him prospects for an adulterous relationship.

This case is akin to a meat-eater suing a vegetarian restaurant for not offering him a rib-eye, or a female patient suing a vasectomy doctor for not providing her hysterectomy services. But rather than defend the persecuted business, the New Jersey attorney general intervened on behalf of the gay plaintiff and wrangled an agreement out of eHarmony to change its entire business model.

The company agreed not only to offer same-sex dating services on a new site, but also to offer six-month subscriptions for free to 10,000 gay users, pay McKinley $5,000 and fork over $50,000 to New Jersey's Civil Rights division "to cover investigation-related administrative costs." Oh, and that's not all. Yield, yield to the grievance-mongers:

Additional terms of the settlement include:
-- eHarmony, Inc. will post photos of same-sex couples in the "Diversity" section of its website as successful relationships are created using the company's same-sex matching service. In addition, eHarmony, Inc. will include photos of same-sex couples, as well as individual same-sex users, in advertising materials used to promote its same-sex matching services;
-- eHarmony, Inc. will revise anti-discrimination statements placed on company websites, in company handbooks and other company publications to make plain that it does not discriminate on the basis of "sexual orientation";

-- the company has committed to advertising and public relations/ marketing dedicated to its same-sex matching service, and will retain a media consultant experienced in promoting the "fair, accurate and inclusive" representation of gay and lesbian people in the media to determine the most effective way of reaching the gay and lesbian communities.

I have enormous sympathy for eHarmony, whose attorney explained that they gave in to the unfair settlement because "litigation outcomes can be unpredictable." The recent mob response to the passage of Proposition 8, the traditional marriage measure in California, must have also weighed on eHarmony management's minds. But capitulation will only yield a worse, entirely predictable outcome: more shakedowns of private businesses that hold views deemed unacceptable by the Equality-at-All-Costs Brigade.
Perhaps heterosexual men and women should start filing lawsuits against gay dating websites and undermine their businesses. Coerced tolerance and diversity-by-fiat cut both ways.

---
Michelle Malkin is author of "Unhinged: Exposing Liberals Gone Wild." Her e-mail address is malkinblog@gmail.com.
COPYRIGHT 2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
 
This case is akin to a meat-eater suing a vegetarian restaurant for not offering him a rib-eye, or a female patient suing a vasectomy doctor for not providing her hysterectomy services. But rather than defend the persecuted business, the New Jersey attorney general intervened on behalf of the gay plaintiff and wrangled an agreement out of eHarmony to change its entire business model.
So outrageous. This reminds me of the 6 or 7 steps that a nation goes through, and reenforces the idea that we are on step 6.
PC correctness is killing us. I hope we, as a nation, wake up before it's to late.
 
I think we had this same argument some time ago when Walmart Pharmacy was forced to sell the "Morning After" pill against their own wishes.
 
A tad off topic, but you might enjoy this.

A few months ago I got an "electric coupon" delivered to my spam-trap to take a free eHarmony quiz. My wife and I sat down and answered every question as if I was "Norman Bates" from the movie "Psycho." I even signed my name as 'Anthony Perkins.'

For example, in one of the spaces used for personal responses, I stated that my best quality was, "A boy should love his mother." I listed 'amateur taxidermy' as a hobby, and that I was very proud that I had a spacious fruit cellar.

When it came time to send the test, I pressed 'enter.'

I got an immediate rejection--and I mean immediate. My wife told me that the response popped up almost as fast as I touched the key.
 
I'm sorry, I'd tell them to kiss my ass!! :furious: All judges and lawyers involved in this travesty should be hanged in the town square and their heads put on a pike!
 
Aren't organizations entitled to their own beliefs and values? What's next?

Mark my words, within the next five years a homosexual male or female will sue to become pastor in a Baptist or other evangelical Christian church, and there will be a judge that finds in their favor.

I'm actually disappointed in E-Harmony for not standing up for their values. Catholic Charities was told they had to start providing adoption services in the state of Massachusetts to gay couples, and instead of caving in to something they didn't believe in, Catholic Charities simply stopped adoption services in that state.
 
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I would like Chrysler to produce sailboats. Awww, screw the 'would like' part, I'm gonna insist. Eh, forget about the insist part as well, I'm gonna sue their bigoted anti-wind power arses!! I demand my rights!! :glare: :rolleyes:



Oops, just hoid that I gotta move to New Joysey to make that happen. Fuggetaboutit. :nono2:
 
This case is akin to a meat-eater suing a vegetarian restaurant for not offering him a rib-eye, or a female patient suing a vasectomy doctor for not providing her hysterectomy services. But rather than defend the persecuted business, the New Jersey attorney general intervened on behalf of the gay plaintiff and wrangled an agreement out of eHarmony to change its entire business model.







I have enormous sympathy for eHarmony, whose attorney explained that they gave in to the unfair settlement because "litigation outcomes can be unpredictable." The recent mob response to the passage of Proposition 8, the traditional marriage measure in California, must have also weighed on eHarmony management's minds.
Says it all in a nutshell.
 
I'm actually disappointed in E-Harmony for not standing up for their values. Catholic Charities was told they had to start providing adoption services in the state of Massachusetts to gay couples, and instead of caving in to something they didn't believe in, Catholic Charities simply stopped adoption services in that state.
Me too Andy.
Yup :D
 
I'm actually disappointed in E-Harmony for not standing up for their values.


Sometimes in business you have to weigh out the costs of fighting and the cost of giving in. It is not just the money but the time, worries and disruptions that goes with it. If it was me as this is being a moral issue I would have closed Eharmony. Gave all your existing customers an new account under a new Corporation. Then the process would have had to start all over again. Or set up your computers so that while it may accept gays but it won't find any matches for you. It's all bull shit and there isn't a thing we can do about it.
 
Legally speaking isn't there a precedent to fight this? The Boy-Scouts. Didn't they win in the supreme court? But I guess it take money to fight. And the homo-mafia has plenty of money.

In the next four years we will get the superiority of the homosexual and islamic lifestyles crammed down our throats, 24-7. They have willing accomplices in the media and the moronic left in this country.



Remember, all you sheeple out there, America does have borders, a language and a unique culture. Only you can prevent it's extinction.
 
My only concern here is that any loser who needs a computer to find a mate is still within child bearing age. Yikes, if it wasn't for tornadoes, this country would be rife with trailor parks and diaper pails.
 
My only concern here is that any loser who needs a computer to find a mate is still within child bearing age. Yikes, if it wasn't for tornadoes, this country would be rife with trailor parks and diaper pails.



That's a low blow. I know of a few people, good people that have used dating services. My sister in law was one of them that actually used Eharmony. It brought her together with another person a few states apart. She ended up quitting her job and moving to his state and now they both have moved to another area and started a bakery together and doing well. They have been married 5 years.

murph
 
My only concern here is that any loser who needs a computer to find a mate is still within child bearing age. Yikes, if it wasn't for tornadoes, this country would be rife with trailor parks and diaper pails.

Yeah! And what about those losers that meet their mates in grocery stores or church groups or walking their dogs? What a buncha losers! Why doesn't anyone meet their mate the normal way any more? You know. In bars!
 
I know of at LEAST 3 people who meet people on the internet and are now married. Anyhow, EHarmony didnt want to keep spending the money to fight the evil ACLU. So they opened a queer site.
 
Yeah! And what about those losers that meet their mates in grocery stores or church groups or walking their dogs? What a buncha losers! Why doesn't anyone meet their mate the normal way any more? You know. In bars!

I did!!:w00t::w00t:

I know of at LEAST 3 people who meet people on the internet and are now married. Anyhow, EHarmony didnt want to keep spending the money to fight the evil ACLU. So they opened a queer site.


Now Sushi has a dilemma.... keep using the site that is not finding him a female match, but might be able to find him a boyfriend... or.....well hell.. does Sushi have an option? :poke:

I agree that this sux, but I can't say I am surprised. It's the America we live in now.
 
That's a low blow. I know of a few people, good people that have used dating services.

But why? In actuality you are letting total strangers with dissimilar skills and a financial agenda make life changing decisions for supposed adults with free will. That's my beef. Yikes, grow up.

In that regard, there is no real difference between a computer and a dart board.

If you were to ask me about the one specific thing that disgusts me about modern man, it would be the ease in which he is talked out of his enumerated rights.

Let me give you and example. I have no respect--none at all--for mall rent-a-cops. In another forum I stated the obvious. A mall ninja has zero rights as an enforcement officer. Any loser that touches me gets a life time supply of bandages and a lawsuit.

Natch, I heard from mall ninjas. I asked the simple questions. One, are they sworn officers. Two, if not, show me a Writ of Mandamus granting you enforcement powers. No one--not a single individual--could provide any documentation of anything, despite the fact the thread ran for over 14 forum pages.

It was a shell game, a scam, a shadow pretending to be something it is not.

So just who are these geniuses behind the computer at eHarmony? Are they licensed doctors or therapists, or just interns so poor at their jobs that they cannot even get a job with Dr. Phil?

I ask the same question here. Who is better at finding you a life partner? Is it you making poignant decisons about your own life and direction? Or is it a hacker in his mom's basement crunching numbers and playing WarCraft?
 
In actuality you are letting total strangers with dissimilar skills and a financial agenda make life changing decisions for supposed adults with free will.

I ask the same question here. Who is better at finding you a life partner? Is it you making poignant decisons about your own life and direction? Or is it a hacker in his mom's basement crunching numbers and playing WarCraft?

I dunno.... based on US divorce rate supposed adults with free will aren't doing such a great job with these poignant decisions. Might be better off with the hacker in mom's basement.
 
I dunno.... based on US divorce rate supposed adults with free will aren't doing such a great job with these poignant decisions. Might be better off with the hacker in mom's basement.

Damn. can't give you reps for that yet.. have to spread them around...
 
So just who are these geniuses behind the computer at eHarmony? Are they licensed doctors or therapists, or just interns so poor at their jobs that they cannot even get a job with Dr. Phil?

I ask the same question here. Who is better at finding you a life partner? Is it you making poignant decisons about your own life and direction? Or is it a hacker in his mom's basement crunching numbers and playing WarCraft?

I'm not sure what mall security guards have to do with this. Surely you are being sarcastic about the geniuses at e-harmony and just trying to be funny.



Here is some info about them that I found at www.wikipedia.com

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eharmony


Although eHarmony is less than 10 years old, eHarmony has begun to track its success stories. In 2004, eHarmony's research director, Dr. Steve Carter, Ph.D. presented a paper at the 16th Annual American Psychological Society (APS) meeting. In the paper presented, Carter compared eHarmony couples married for more than five years with a control group, using the Dyadic Adjustment Scale(DAS), a measure of couple satisfaction. The results showed that "over 90% of eHarmony couples had marriage quality scores which were above average when compared to couples who had begun their relationships elsewhere. eHarmony couples were more than twice as likely to be in highly successful marriages than non-eHarmony couples... Not only are eHarmony couples 35% more likely than other married couples to report that they enjoy spending time together, but we found they are nearly twice as likely to report that their marriages are "extremely happy" or better versus other recently married couples." [10]
 
You know.. it's funny.. if they did not expect us to pay, Princess and I have thought about making legit profiles and see if they match us up or not. We are some of the lucky ones. I can think of no one who has a better marriage than we do. We truly like to spend our time together even though it usually means one of us is NOT doing what we want to do....:thumb:
 
Now Sushi has a dilemma.... keep using the site that is not finding him a female match, but might be able to find him a boyfriend... or.....well hell.. does Sushi have an option? :poke:

I agree that this sux, but I can't say I am surprised. It's the America we live in now.

Im gonna shave your mustace and eyebrows off :glare:
 
You know.. it's funny.. if they did not expect us to pay, Princess and I have thought about making legit profiles and see if they match us up or not. We are some of the lucky ones. I can think of no one who has a better marriage than we do. We truly like to spend our time together even though it usually means one of us is NOT doing what we want to do....:thumb:


AMEN my friend and congrats. My wife and I met thru 'singles adds' in the local paper...........we talked on May 6th, 1992, met on May 8th (she had a date), and we hit it off really great. Been together everyday since. We got engaged about a month later, married September 25th 1992, and still together today. We each knew what we wanted in a spouse and something must have been right.........
 
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