'Intolerance Bad for Business' Say Major Companies Decisions are Made as Paramount Controversy Grows |
Compiled By GayToday
The message was written by Alessia Johnson, customer contact specialist for More.com, in direct response to a customer concerned about Schlessinger's anti-gay statements. "We certainly do not want to give our valued customers the wrong idea about more.com," Johnson continued. "We do not support her views and we refuse to advertise with her again."
The pair of former Schlessinger advertisers is unique, one a 90-year old insurance company and the other an aggressive "dot.com." Amica (www.amica.com) is the oldest mutual insurer of automobiles in the nation, while More.com offers health, beauty and wellness products online. Amica is headquartered in Providence, Rhode Island, and More.com is based in San Francisco, California. "These companies recognize that intolerance is bad business," said John Aravosis, a spokesman for StopDrLaura.com. "Paramount should come to the same conclusion, and drop plans to give Schlessinger a national platform for her anti-gay rhetoric." Schlessinger has labeled homosexuality "deviant," called gays "biological errors," and has claimed that a "huge portion of the male homosexual populace is predatory on young boys." Schlessinger claimed on February 24 that she "never made an anti-gay commentary," then issued a heavily couched "apology" on March 11, but then recanted the apology days later. Schlessinger told a reporter for the Boston Herald that her statement was not an apology, but a "clarification." |