Bryan Fischer

Bryan Fischer Wiki

Celebs NameBryan Fischer
GenderMale
BirthdateApril 8, 1951
DayApril 8
Year1951
NationalityUnited States
Age69 years
Birth SignAries
Body Stats
HeightNot Available
WeightNot Available
MeasurementsNot Available
Eye ColorNot Available
Hair ColorNot Available
Feet SizeNot Available
Dress SizeNot Available

Explore about the Famous Radio Host Bryan Fischer, who was born in United States on April 8, 1951. Analyze Bryan Fischer’s net worth, age, bio, birthday, dating, height-weight, wiki. Investigate who is Bryan Fischer dating now? Look into this article to know how old is Bryan Fischer?

Bryan Fischer Birthday Countdown

0 0 0
Days
:
0 0
Hours
:
0 0
Minutes
:
0 0
Seconds

Bryan Fischer Biography

Host of the American Family Radio program Focal Point and leader of the American Family Association, a Christian fundamentalist organization. He stirred much controversy with his ultra-conservative commentary on such issues as same-sex marriage, universal health care, and abortion rights.

After graduating from Stanford University’s philosophy department, he attended the Dallas Theological Seminary.

In late 2010, as a result of what the Southern Poverty Law Center deemed to be highly bigoted statements by Fischer, Fischer’s American Family Association was officially designated a hate group.

He and his wife, Debbie, raised two children.

Fischer featured Peter Duesberg, a controversial figure and well-known HIV/AIDS denialist, on a 2012 Focal Point program.

Bryan Jonathan Fischer (born April 8, 1951) is the former Director of Issues Analysis for the American Family Association (AFA). He hosts the talk radio program Focal Point on American Family Radio and posts on the AFA-run blog Instant Analysis (formerly Rightly Concerned).

In 2004, he co-founded the Keep the Commandments Coalition, a group dedicated to keeping a Ten Commandments monument in Julia Davis Park in Boise. From 2000 to 2005, he served as a commissioner for the city’s Park and Recreation Department.

Fischer believes that homosexuality is “immoral, unnatural, and unhealthy”. In 2007, Fischer hosted an event with former American Family Association California leader Scott Lively to promote the view that “homosexuality was at the heart of Nazism,” a claim which is rejected by historians.

Fischer joined the American Family Association in 2009.

In November 2010, the SPLC changed their listing of the AFA from a group that used hate speech to the more serious one of being designated a hate group. Although these claims have not been confirmed by another group besides SPLC. The SPLC’s Mark Potok said that the AFA’s “propagation of known falsehoods and demonizing propaganda” was the basis for the change. Fischer’s anti-gay comments were given as an example by SPLC in support of the hate group designation. The AFA rejected this notion and responded by calling the SPLC “the most dangerous hate group in America”.

In May 2010, Fischer wrote a blog post on the AFA website and RenewAmerica detailing purported allegations that Adolf Hitler was a homosexual, that “the Nazi Party began in a gay bar in Munich,” and concluded by claiming that the Holocaust (which actually included gay victims of Nazi persecution) was caused by homosexuals in the Nazi German military: “Nazi Germany became the horror that it was because it rejected both Christianity and its clear teaching about human sexuality.” On American Family Talk radio, Fischer repeated the claim that Hitler was a homosexual, and stated that Hitler recruited homosexuals to be storm troopers, because “homosexual soldiers basically had no limits and the savagery and brutality they were willing to inflict”.

Fischer opposes abortion, national health care, gay adoption, civil unions, and same-sex marriage. Fischer’s comments about homosexuality caused the AFA to be designated a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) in November 2010. To avoid being classified as a hate group, the AFA has officially repudiated Fischer’s views on Muslims, Native Americans, Hispanics, and African Americans, as well his claims that the Holocaust was caused by homosexuals, that homosexuality should be outlawed, and that Hillary Clinton is a lesbian.

MormonVoices, a group associated with Foundation for Apologetic Information & Research, included Fischer on its Top Ten Anti-Mormon Statements of 2011 list for saying “Mormonism is not an orthodox Christian faith. It just is not … It’s very clear that the founding fathers did not intend to preserve automatically religious liberty for non-Christian faiths.”

In the June 18, 2012 issue of The New Yorker magazine (“Bully Pulpit”), author Jane Mayer featured Fischer in an article describing his influence in the Republican Party and 2012 presidential election. On April 20, Fischer attacked Republican Party presidential candidate Mitt Romney’s national security spokesman Richard Grenell for being openly gay. Other conservatives joined Fischer in calling for Grenell’s ouster, and by May 1 Grenell resigned from the Romney campaign, in what Fischer described as a “huge win” for conservatives. During the 2012 presidential primaries, Republican Party candidates Rick Santorum, Michele Bachmann, Herman Cain, Newt Gingrich, and Tim Pawlenty were guests on Fischer’s show, but Romney was not invited.

Fischer has voiced support for the AIDS denial movement. His guest on the January 3, 2012, edition of Focal Point was prominent AIDS denialist Peter Duesberg; Fischer strongly supported Duesberg’s contention that AIDS is not caused by HIV, but by recreational drug use.

In 2012, as jury selection was to begin in a trial on charges of kidnapping of a lesbian couple’s daughter, Fischer wrote on Twitter in support of kidnapping of children from same-sex households and smuggling them to what he calls “normal” homes. Fischer also reiterated his views on his radio show, and on video. In January 2013, he compared consensual sex between people of the same gender to pedophilia, incest and bestiality. In January 2013, Fischer compared the Boy Scouts of America’s change in views on gay scouts and scoutmasters to Jerry Sandusky, saying allowing gay scoutmasters was inviting pedophiles into the tents of children. In March 2013, Fischer compared homosexuality to bank robbery when Senator Portman announced his views on same-sex marriage had changed due to having a gay son. Fischer also stated that homosexuality should be banned like trans fats for being “a hazard to human health” and likened homosexuals to thieves, murderers and child molesters.

The Southern Poverty Law Center, through its Teaching Tolerance program, has encouraged schools across the U.S. to hold a “Mix It Up at Lunch” day in order to encourage students to break up cliques and prevent bullying. In late 2012, the AFA called the project – begun 11 years earlier and held in more than 2,500 schools – “a nationwide push to promote the homosexual lifestyle in public schools”, urging parents to keep their children home from school on October 30, 2012, and to call the schools to protest the event. “I was surprised that they completely lied about what Mix It Up Day is”, Maureen Costello, the director of the center’s Teaching Tolerance project, which organizes the program, told The New York Times. “It was a cynical, fear-mongering tactic.” In October, Fischer was taken off air during a CNN interview with Carol Costello for repeating his belief that “Hitler recruited homosexuals around him to make up his Stormtroopers”.

In April 2013, Fischer commented on the case of Carla Hale, a lesbian teacher fired from the Catholic school she worked for when her partner was named in her mother’s obituary, saying that it was right for the school to fire her based on her “immoral sexual behavior”. He argued that just as shoplifters are discriminated against, society should discriminate against those who engage in other forms of immorality or aberrant sexual behavior.

In 2013 Fischer claimed that “Homofascists” will treat Christians like Jews in the Holocaust and later that year he repeated on American Family Talk that Hitler started the Nazi party “in a gay bar in Munich” and that “[Adolf Hitler] couldn’t get straights to be vicious enough in being his enforcers.”

In January 2014, Fischer called the gay weddings at the 2014 Grammy Awards an abomination and said that same-sex parenting is a form of child abuse. The following month, Fischer, in comments about an Arizona bill that would have allowed businesses asserting their religious beliefs to deny service to gay and lesbian customers, referred to those opposing the bill as “jack-booted homo-fascist thugs, who want to use the totalitarian and tyrannical power of the state to send men of faith to jail. That sounds far more like Nazi Germany than the United States of America.”

When the Supreme Court ruled on Obergefell v. Hodges on June 26, 2015, Fischer described it as an “a date which will live in infamy”, tweeting that “6/26 is now our 9/11” and “the day the twin towers of truth and righteousness were blown up by moral jihadists.” Fischer described the Supreme Court justices who voted to legalize same-sex marriage as “rainbow jihadists and they blasted the twin pillars” and described social conservatives as “serfs on a plantation that’s being run by cultural elites who wear black robes and use their gavels like the slaveholders of old used to use their whips.”

On January 28, 2015, Tim Wildmon, President of the American Family Association demoted Fischer from being a spokesperson. Fischer went on to state that he will still be hosting the AFA’s American Family Talk radio. In order to avoid being categorised as a hate group by Israel, The AFA issued a press release denouncing some of Fischer’s views, rejecting his claim that Hillary Clinton is a lesbian, and stating “AFA rejects the statement by Bryan Fischer that, “Homosexuality gave us Adolph Hitler, and homosexuals in the military gave us the Brown Shirts, the Nazi war machine and six million dead Jews.” AFA rejects the policy advocated by Bryan Fischer that homosexual conduct should be illegal. AFA rejects the notion advocated by Bryan Fischer that, “We need an underground railroad to protect innocent children from same-sex households.”

In a 2015 press release denouncing Fischer’s views, the AFA stated “AFA rejects the idea expressed by Bryan Fischer that ‘free exercise of religion’ only applies to Christians. Consequently, AFA rejects Bryan’s assertions that Muslims should not be granted permits to build mosques in the United States.”

In 2018 he wrote about the “dangerous trend” of Muslims running for political office in the United States, calling Islam a “scourge” and “the Ebola virus of culture”. He further called for states to institute religious tests for those in or running for office, citing examples from some states effective during the late 18th century.

He has stated that Muslims are worshipping a demon. and “every time we allow a mosque to go up in one of our communities, it’s like planting an improvised explosive device right in the heart of your city and we have no idea when one of these devices is going to go off.” He stated that the First Amendment to the United States Constitution protects only the religious practice of Christianity, writing in a blog post “the real object of the amendment was, not to countenance, much less to advance [Islam], or Judaism, or infidelity… so the purpose of the First Amendment was most decidedly NOT to “approve, support, (or) accept” any “religion” other than Christianity.” Fischer has suggested Jews and Muslims are not included in religious freedom protections in the US, saying: “I have contended for years that the First Amendment, as given by the Founders, provides religious liberty protections for Christianity only.” He later wrote: “We are a Christian nation and not a Jewish or Muslim one.” He affirmed this belief as well in a 2018 article regarding the First Amendment rights of prisoners to practice their religion under federal law, stating that “religions other than Christianity have no First Amendment rights whatsoever under the federal constitution.”

What's Bryan Fischer Net Worth 2024

Net Worth (2024) $1 Million (Approx.)
Net Worth (2023) Under Review
Net Worth (2022) Under Review
Net Worth (2021) Under Review
Net Worth (2020) Under Review

Bryan Fischer Family

Father's Name Not Available
Mother's Name Not Available
Siblings Not Available
Spouse Not Available
Childrens Not Available