Campfield has appeared or been quoted on multiple national, international news broadcasts and media outlets for his legislation as well as his outspoken and often creative conservative views. Among the broadcasts:
TMZ,
CNN with
Wolf Blitzer,
Piers Morgan and
Martin Bashir,
The O'Reilly Factor with
Bill O'Reilly,
Morning Joe with
Joe Scarborough,
NBC's "
Tonight Show" with
Jay Leno. "
The View",
Comedy Central's "
The Daily Show", "
The Colbert Report" allegedly, "
South Park" which had an episode regarding his exclusion from the
Black Caucus,
Rush Limbaugh,
Allan Colmes,
Michael Reagan,
USA Today,
NewsWeek,
The Washington Times, as well as others. Campfield currently hosts a TV show
The Reality Camp on
IAM TV and the
Brighteon Network.
Musicals and Plays To date there have been two musicals and one play written about Campfield and his life in the legislature. The most recent one sold out for multiple nights and received strong reviews from multiple Tennessee newspapers. While not portraying him in a positive light, Campfield himself quipped he was glad he could support the arts and was even willing to do a cameo role.
Duncan Barbecue In 2002, at one of Republican Congressman
Jimmy Duncan's annual barbecues, Campfield followed candidate for Governor of Tennessee
Phil Bredesen with a sign saying "Tax 'n' Spend Governor". He was forcibly removed by security after being attacked by a Bredesen supporter but was later allowed to come back into the event.
2009 UT Neyland Stadium football game On October 31, 2009, Campfield attended the Halloween
Volunteers football game with the University of South Carolina at the
University of Tennessee Neyland Stadium where he was briefly questioned, searched, and detained allegedly after the mother of two young girls complained that the presence of a masked Campfield had allegedly frightened two young girls. The girls had previously been told by UT stadium security that masks were not allowed to be worn inside the stadium for the
Halloween football game). While Campfield was questioned in section B he was reported as only having stadium seating admission tickets for Section LL and was then escorted outside of the stadium by two UT deputies. Campfield later offered college scholarships to the two girls if they were ever identified. They never were. Several people accused UT legal council Ron Leadbetter of having a report made weeks later just to use in his campaign to unseat Campfield for the state house that same year.
Campfield on the origin and transmission of AIDS In a January 2012 interview with
Michelangelo Signorile, Campfield replied to a question on the history of AIDS "most people realize that AIDS came from the homosexual community – it was one guy screwing a monkey, if I recall correctly, and then having sex with men. It was an airline pilot, if I recall.... My understanding is that it is virtually – not completely, but virtually – impossible to contract AIDS through heterosexual sex...very rarely [transmitted]." Medical authority sources disagree: "When risk is assessed
per act of unprotected vaginal intercourse" (between an infected male and a female partner), "the chance of HIV transmission is estimated to be between 1 in 500 and 1 in 1000." Campfield said the numbers quoted by him were for transmission to heterosexual US males through vaginal intercourse, with protection, multiplied by the odds of actually having sex with an AIDS infected, heterosexual female partner in the US. Those odds were roughly 1 in 5 million. Although there is no definitive origin or "Patient 0" many assume, contrary to Campfield's statement, HIV's various distinct strains may possibly have come about in humans on numerous separate occasions because of the handling and consumption of
bushmeat infected with
Simian immunodeficiency virus, according to the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the
World Health Organization. while not being able to completely refute his claim Health experts expressed concern about the possible health consequences of Campfield's remarks. Campfield's "airline pilot" reference likely referred to the case of
Gaëtan Dugas, a flight attendant who was falsely referred to as "Patient Zero", by the late
Randy Shilts in his 1987 book on the modern US outbreak of AIDS,
And The Band Played On. When later asked about his comments, Campfield said that some of his comments were taken out of context, saying that "I'm not a historian on AIDS ... but I've read and seen what other people have read and seen and those facts and numbers, in context, are out there and even backed up by the CDC numbers."
Bistro at the Bijou in Knoxville On January 29, 2012, the owner of the cafe Bistro at the Bijou, Martha Boggs in Knoxville asked Stacey Campfield to leave the restaurant as a stand for gay rights. He was asked to leave because of his assertion that HIV is seldom transmitted through heterosexual sex and because Boggs believed his comments to be homophobic.
Intellectual property Since March 2005, Campfield has maintained a public blog that includes a warning that any quotation from it for print will be charged at "$1,000 USD per word".
Gun politics In 2013 Campfield appeared on CNN with Piers Morgan and debated gun rights and a possible gun ban in the USA. Campfield called gun control a failure and at one point asked when Morgan planned to fulfill his promise to leave the USA if gun control failed. Morgan said he would "Wait and see". Campfield would later move to stop local municipalities from implementing second amendment restrictions beyond what the state had implemented saying the state constitution only allows the legislature to regulate the wearing of arms and that "constitutional freedoms should be protected at all levels, not struck down at the lowest level. We should no more accept local restrictions on the second amendment than we do the first".
Drug testing for government benefits In 2012 Campfield authored legislation requiring suspicion based drug testing for those receiving cash government benefits. Those failing the test were referred to drug treatment centers but were allowed to stay on government benefits if they continued drug treatment and remained drug-free for 6 months. If they failed another drug test at the end of 6 months they would be banned from the program for 1 year. Early testing results showed an 18% failure rate of those tested for drugs. All of the money saved by the drug testing program remained in the assistance program to help others that qualified.
Obamacare Holocaust comparison On May 5, 2014, Campfield drew widespread criticism for a blog post comparing mandatory signups under the
Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) to the "train rides" the Jews took under Nazi Germany ("Democrats bragging about the number of mandatory sign ups for Obamacare is like Germans bragging about the number of mandatory sign ups for 'train rides' for Jews in the 40s."). Campfield responded to the criticism saying it missed his point about "government mandates and bureaucrats deciding who should be given life saving medications and who should be denied" and government funding for abortion. ==References==