The headline's nothing new, but it doesn't make it any less insane.
We start with NOM, who enthusiastically posted an article from National Review about the importance of marriage.
The article said:
But with study after study showing that children, families, and now even states benefit from strong and stable married families, the job of those who would seek to deny that marriage and family structure also play an important role — the family-structure denialists — is getting harder and harder.
Any sane person would realize that this is an argument for marriage equality, not against it, but NOM just can't help themselves:
In recent years, there's been an attempt to deny that reality and convince people that children raised by gay or lesbian parents are somehow exempted from the realities of family life, claiming there are "no differences" in outcomes for these kids or even sometimes suggesting they do better than children raised by a married mother and father in the home. Increasingly, social scientists have been examining this "no differences" claim and, as you might suspect, find it without merit.
And one other thing: of course, the article does not discuss same-sex parenting once, but that doesn't get in the way of them comparing the absence of a man in a single-parent family and the absence of a man in a two-parent family.
Next, we stay at NOM, this time examining their support for the notoriously transphobic campaign in Houston against their civil rights ordinance:
Campaign for Houston is a campaign to reject the Houston special rights initiative and is the leading campaign to reject the special rights ordinance in Houston. NOM strongly urges you to support their efforts. The City Council has passed a notorious ordinance, pushed by the city's lesbian mayor, that gives special legal rights to people claiming to be "transgendered" — including men who claim to identify as women — the right to use the restrooms reserved for the opposite sex.
Later in the very same blog post, just three paragraphs later, they say:
We are the only group in America that is solely focused on preserving marriage and supporting the rights of children to receive the love of their mother and father.
Anti-discrimination laws are a completely separate issue, NOM. It says a lot that you claim to only be against marriage equality but can't help yourself from attacking them as well.
Finally, Mission America's Linda Harvey is not a fan of sex reassignment surgery for transgender youth, saying it violates their true nature:
Real life is a trick and fantasy is a treat, the sexually confused youth believes.
[...]
Demonic spirits are hard at work in the souls of many confused, defenseless children, seducing them to embrace nightmares of mutilated identity and dehumanizing sexual practices.
[...]
What I wonder is how these parents are going to explain to their adult children, some of whom will change their minds, why they were allowed to permanently disfigure themselves through amputation of healthy body parts.
But her attitude towards "therapy" to change sexual orientation is completely different:
Yet homosexual advocates like the Human Rights Campaign want to ban “conversion therapy” because they maintain it would be cruel to encourage a teen with same-sex attractions to veer toward heterosexuality.
I told my family of my sexuality on November 22, 2013. If I am to be honest about what happened that night, I would have to say that for that night alone, my parents didn't take it very well. Now, this has to be strongly prefaced and qualified with an emphasis that ultimately, they could not have been more loving and caring and accepting. My parents couldn't be less homophobic if they tried, and they are both strong and unequivocal supporters of marriage equality. I truly think I am one of the luckiest people who could be in this position. But for that night alone, I can't say it went great. Not because of any prejudice, absolutely, of course not, but just because it was a bit of a shock.
One of the things that contributed to this was something my mother said: "Try to get interested in girls." The reason she said this was not because of any prejudice, but simply because she was worried I would have a difficult life if I was gay. I knew that, but I still didn't like it. I thought "Well if I'm not, there's nothing I can do." So I cannot imagine what it must be like to be even more encouraged to be something you're not, like being forced into "therapy" to cure something that's not even an illness.
I know, Linda, that Christian conservative bigots think that the way they think things should be is the way they are, and that actual reality must be assimilated to their bullshit reality, and not the other way round. But even with that in mind, it stuns me that you cannot even see that being in favor of "therapy" for same-sex attracted youth is exactly the attitude you accuse us of taking with transgender youth. When you support such therapy, you are the one that tries to make them something they're not. And no, I'm not a hypocrite for taking the reverse position. If someone is indeed transgender, sex reassignment surgery can be very good for them. I don't know what gender dysphoria is like and nor do I want to.