Twitter Troll Bryan Fischer Reportedly Canned, But Trolling To Carry On

Anti-LGBT Group Funding RNC Trip To Israel Comes Under Scrutiny
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** ADVANCE FOR WEEKEND OF FEB. 17-18 **Former Boise Minister Bryan Fisher stands with the Idaho Statehouse dome high above inside the rotunda Thursday afternoon, Feb. 15, 2007 in downtown Boise, Idaho. Fischer is a conservative Christian lobbyist for the Idaho Values Alliance which he started in 2005. Fischer is among a fervent corps of religious-minded lobbyists in statehouses across America extending their work beyond traditional "values issues" such as abortion or gay marriage. (AP Photo/Troy Maben)

Forced to choose between battling the radical homosexual agenda and supporting Israel, which some motivated evangelical Christians believe will be central to Judgment Day, one Christian group has made its choice clear: Surrender to the agenda.

A conservative, anti-LGBT group has fired its longtime spokesman and issue-analysis director Bryan Fischer after the group's sponsoring of a Republican National Committee trip to Israel drew attention to his views -- though it's not as if his views weren't widely known already.

Fischer, who regularly trolls Twitter with outlandishly bigoted comments, is unabashed. Rachel Maddow first reported on MSNBC Wednesday that the American Family Association's dismissal of Fischer follows reports that the group would be footing the bill for about 60 members of the RNC to travel on a "spiritual" trip to Israel through its American Renewal Project subsidiary.

Fischer has suggested the Nazi Party was founded by gay people, that Adolf Hitler intentionally recruited gays to the party, that the First Amendment only applies to Christians, that homosexuality should be criminalized and that an underground railroad is needed to protect children from gay parents. He has also said that African American welfare recipients are “people who rut like rabbits."

He will remain the host of his AFA-sponsored radio show. On Thursday, Fischer denied that he had been fired, saying on his radio show that he had given up his role as spokesman because the multiple positions were sowing confusion about the the organization's official stances. He did not immediately respond to a direct message on Twitter requesting clarification.

Coverage by the Israeli newspaper Haaretz and letters sent by the civil-rights group the Southern Poverty Law Center to the RNC may have invited Fischer’s firing by putting political pressure on the committee. In an article published Thursday, Haaretz noted that the SPLC designates the AFA as a hate group.

The SPLC sent a letter to RNC officials earlier this month asking it to not participate in the Israel trip because of the Fischer's comments about Jews, LGBT people, Hispanics, African-Americans and women. On Wednesday, AFA's general counsel responded to the SPLC and said the organization rejects Fischer's views.

While the Christian activist who is running the trip, David Lane, told Haaretz he organized it out of evangelical love for Israel and that Israel's "best friends" are American evangelicals, the group may find Israel's record on LGBT issues rather intolerable.

Israel allows LGBT people to serve openly in the military, recognizes same-sex marriages performed outside the country and has outlawed employment discrimination based on sexual orientation. The country is so progressive minded toward the LGBT community, and so outspoken about it when under pressure from the international community, that critics of Israel's occupation of the West Bank and Gaza argue that the country uses LGBT rights as a public relations tool -- otherwise known as "pinkwashing" -- to obscure human rights issues relating to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Since marriage is an exclusively religious institution in Israel, however, and is dictated by anti-gay marriage, ultra-Orthodox rabbis, LGBT people are not yet able to marry within the country, and housing discrimination against gay couples, even in liberal Tel Aviv, appears to be common.

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Before You Go

10 Incredible Improvements For LGBT People Since The First State Legalized Gay Marriage
Massachusetts Becomes The First(01 of10)
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Massachusetts became the first state to welcome gay marriages in 2004. Since then, 17 states and Washington, DC have followed their lead and now allow same-sex couples to tie the knot. (credit:Darren McCollester via Getty Images)
Increase In Support Of Marriage Equality(02 of10)
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Only 37 percent of Americans supported marriage equality for same-sex couples in in 2003. Now, in 2014, 59 percent of individuals support this right. (credit:Jose Luis Pelaez Inc via Getty Images)
DOMA(03 of10)
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The Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) passed in 1996, barring same-sex couples from marrying at the federal level. The Supreme Court struck down the core of this legislation in 2013, ensuring 1,100+ federal protections for gay couples. (credit:AP)
Protections For Transgender Minors(04 of10)
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The American Psychiatric Association announced in December 2012 that identifying as transgender is no longer considered a disorder, 38 years after removing same-sex attraction from its list of disorders. (credit:Alistair Berg via Getty Images)
Obama Supports Marriage Equality(05 of10)
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President Barack Obama made history in 2012 when he came out in support of marriage equality for same-sex couples. The decision made him the first American sitting president in history to make such a move. (credit:John Churchman via Getty Images)
LGBT Allies In Hollywood(06 of10)
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Over the past ten years we've seen an explosion of support for the LGBT community in Hollywood, from LGBT celebrities themselves like Lady Gaga and Ellen DeGeneres, to non-queer allies like Brad Pitt and Anne Hathaway. (credit:Mark Sullivan via Getty Images)
Serve Openly In The Military(07 of10)
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President Barack Obama signed the repeal of "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" in September 2011, reversing President Bill Clinton's 1993 legislation that barred lesbians and gays from serving openly in the military. Transgender individuals, however, are still not allowed to openly reveal their gender identity while serving. (credit:Jose Fernando Ogura/Curitiba/Brazil via Getty Images)
Opposition: No Longer Relevant(08 of10)
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Anti-gay organizations such as the National Organization for Marriage and Family Research Council are becoming increasingly silent and slowly losing funding. The Catholic Church has also begun to show a shifting away from anti-gay attacks, particularly with Pope Francis' iconic "Who am I to judge?" proclamation. (credit:Franco Origlia via Getty Images)
Hospital Visitation Rights(09 of10)
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In 2010, President Obama ordered that hospitals receiving Medicare and Medicaid payments must grant patients the right to designate who can visit and consult with them, enabling hospital visitation rights for same-sex couples. (credit:Sebastian Rose via Getty Images)
Marriage Equality Court Cases(10 of10)
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Couples fighting for the right to marry are continuing to legally challenge their right to marry at the state level. There are currently more than 70 active cases in approximately 30 states. (credit:YOSHIKAZU TSUNO via Getty Images)