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Religion
Catholic League: Time to Slow Down America's Gay Agenda
Many years ago, Harvard sociologist Daniel Patrick Moynihan said he was stunned by the swiftness of cultural change that took place in the 1960s. In particular, he cited the overnight conversion to co-ed dorms on college campuses.
Lots of changes took place during this period, but fast as they were, their pace looks comparatively slow when measured against the lightening speed by which the homosexual agenda has proceeded in recent years. Indeed, it seems as though our culture is being driven by the Gay Express.
Estimated at only a few percent of the population, homosexuals project a larger presence partly because so many of them are strategically situated in the cultural command centers of the media, Hollywood, the professoriate, and the publishing world. The clergy do not lack for disproportionate numbers either, and I don’t mean merely in Catholic circles: the Episcopalian clergy, especially on the coasts, is heavily gay. But there aren’t enough homosexuals in society to score such dramatic gains all by themselves, which is why sympathetic heterosexuals are the real key.
The American people are not the problem, the elites are. In 32 states where voters have been asked to decide whether to expand the definition of marriage to cover homosexuals, none has agreed to do so. Even in California, one of the most liberal states in the nation, the people said no. In the few states where gay marriage is legal, the people were never consulted: either the state legislature, or a judge, granted two men the right to marry. And in places like New York State, lawmakers never even had a public hearing on the issue.
This fall things may change. The issue of gay marriage is on the ballot in four states, all of which have a reputation of being either liberal or decidedly independent: Maine, Maryland, Minnesota and Washington. Helping the pro-gay marriage forces are super-wealthy contributors to President Barack Obama and former Governor Mitt Romney. In fact, they are lavishing millions in the push for gay marriage in these states.
In the case of Obama, many of his most generous donors are big contributors to gay causes. The Human Rights Campaign, the most powerful gay advocacy group in the nation, is wedded to the Obama campaign. By the middle of August, they had already amassed over $5 million to spend on the November elections. And, of course, the Democratic Party platform broke new ground this year by endorsing gay marriage. Why not? The president has.
Leading the charge for gay marriage in the Romney camp are Paul Singer, Cliff Asness, Dan Loeb and Ken Mehlman. Singer is the founder of a $20 billion hedge fund called Elliott Management Corporation, based in New York; his son is a homosexual. Asness is co-founder of AQR Capital Management in Greenwich, Connecticut. Dan Loeb is the founder of the $8.7 billion Third Point LLC in New York. Both Asness and Loeb supported Obama in 2008, but are not happy with the way he is handling economic issues, so this time they’re supporting Romney. Mehlman was President George W. Bush’s campaign manager in 2004, and is the former chairman of the Republican National Committee. He announced he was a homosexual in 2010.
Now you know why neither Obama nor Romney said a word about the Chick-fil-A issue that exploded over the summer. All they had to do was to say that it is wrong for mayors to tell businessmen to take a walk just because they disagree with the politics of the owner. Moreover, Dan Cathy, the owner of Chick-fil-A, never uttered an anti-gay remark, yet gay activists and their elite heterosexual friends came thundering down on his head. Recall what happened.
“We are inviting God’s judgment on our nation when we shake our fist at Him and say, ‘We know better than you as to what constitutes a marriage.’” This unremarkable statement is what set off a culture war. Immediately, Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, whose city is in a state of warfare, had the audacity to speak for all Chicagoans: “Chick-fil-A values are not Chicago values.”
The mayors of Pittsburgh, San Francisco, and the District of Columbia also chimed in, but none sounded more ludicrous than Boston’s Tom Menino. After boasting, “we’re a city that’s at the forefront of inclusion,” he summarily decided to exclude Chick-fil-A. Fortunately, former governor and talk-show host Mike Huckabee called for Christians to step up to the plate, and thousands turned out to patronize local stores.
It is a bad sign when people like Rep. Barney Frank, who claims to be married to his boyfriend, as well as liberals like Alan Dershowitz and the folks at the ACLU, can summon the moral courage to denounce these censorial mayors, and yet neither presidential candidate has it in him to do likewise.
No one but a bully wants to punish homosexuals or to stop them from participating in American life free of intimidation. But that is not the issue: at stake is whether those who believe in marriage, traditionally defined, should be the object of punishment and intimidation. That’s how far the Gay Express has come. It’s time this train was derailed.
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Comments
"It appears that conservatism
"It appears that conservatism has pathological dimensions manifested in violence and distorted psycho-sexual development" (Boshier, 1983, p. 159).
This is supported by a study conducted by Walker, Rowe, and Quincey in which there was a direct correlation between authoritarianism and sexually aggressive behavior. An investigation done by Muehlenhard (1988) revealed that rape justification and aggression toward subordinate individuals was much higher in the "traditional" or conservative personality than others. As well, persons with a dogmatic belief in religion and who adhere to absolutist, perfectionistic religious groups are more frequently and more intensely emotionally disturbed than those who don't (Ellis, 1986). Religious fundamentalism is positively correlated with authoritarianism; significantly correlated to ethnic and racial prejudice, hostility and punitiveness(Wylie & Forest, 1992). According to Parker (1990), orthodox belief appears incompatible with high ethical acuity.
"Conservatism is not the doctrine of the intellectual elite or of the more intelligent segments of the population, but the reverse. By every measure available to us, conservative beliefs are found most frequently among the uniformed, the poorly educated, and the less intelligent" (McClosky, H. Conservatism and personality. American Political Science Review, 52, 27-45.).
The catholic church is a
The catholic church is a political organization used to control people and money. One only has to look at 2000 years of history. They can find a way to ignore scripture, deny reality and compromise values as needed to further their own agenda. They will overlook aiding and abetting pedophilia, divorce, and all manner of things if they can otherwise find relevancy in themselves.
> homosexuals project a
> homosexuals project a larger presence partly because so many of them are strategically situated... The clergy do not lack for disproportionate numbers either,
So you're trying to say that gays are represented in the clergy in larger numbers than they are in the general population? That they are flocking to join organizations that are antithetical to their well-being, happiness, and their very human rights? That makes as much sense as saying that a higher percentage of policemen are pedophiles than the general population.
Gay marriage existed in America for longer than it hasn't - the Native Americans even considered such people sacred. Look it up: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two-Spirit
It's a bad sign when people who claim to be drinking from the source of all morality insist on trying to lead us down the path of inequality and hatred for the sake of their twisted death cults.
No theres always been
No theres always been nutcases and fanatical cults cityboy, if your talking about the fanatics wanting control of government then yeah, that's not just a bad sign that's a crap your self and run sign.
I think if tensions get higher it might come to armed conflicts, because more and more religious people are starting to follow and convert to this BS spouting fanatics and zealots. I could be wrong though, hope I am that's just a feeling i get from all of this these days.
This is what religion is
This is what religion is becoming, a paradise for stupid ignorant people who want to live back in the 1800s and Medieval Dark Ages.
If it was up to the extremist Catholics and Christians, homosexual burnings and killings would be a public event. Happy to be an Atheist and can stand up for the rights of a group of people persecuted solely because of their sexuality.
Wow this article is more
Wow this article is more stuffed full of lies than an altar boys... well you get my point. I don't have the time to even cover every lie or misleading statement in this stupid article. But a salient one is CALIFORNIA DIDN'T SAY NO YOU JACKASS. YOUR CHURCH AND YOUR MORMON BUDDIES SHOVED PROP 8 DOWN PEOPLES THROATS LIKE A PRIEST ALONE WITH A... ahh almost derailed there. Seeing this kind of BS really ticks me off, apologies for the caps.
Also, Dan Cathy totally said anti gay remarks, but way to just mark that off like it was a given and he was victimized, you misleading liars. BS. Total BS. You didn't put the whole quote in there, and he said that this generation was prideful for trying to redefine marriage. I suppose it was prideful when "them uppity negroes wanted to marry whites". Get off your high-horses you bigoted, pedophile bast*r*s.
"How do you know so much about everything?'" was asked of a very wise and intelligent man; and the answer was "By never being afraid or ashamed to ask questions as to anything of which I was ignorant." - John Abbott (1821-1893)
Its time to curb the boy
Its time to curb the boy screwing club. Since the only two purposes of the catholic church is to enable pedophiles to screw children without fear of condemnation or legal problems and to steal money from the poor.
The catholic church is staffed entirely by thieves and pedophiles.
Those that can't or won't defend themselves can only be slaves.
NOTHING is happening to
NOTHING is happening to "traditional marriage" as it relates to people who are Straight (i.e. heterosexual). Let me reassure you: The marriage equality movement is not an effort to make homosexuality compulsory for everyone. Most people are Straight, always have been and always will be, and they will continue to date, get engaged, marry, and build lives and families together as they always have. None of that is going to be affected whether (or not) Gay couples are allowed to do the same.
Religious beliefs are irrelevant to this debate, because (1) the United States is not theocracy, and (2) churches will continue to be free to conduct or deny ceremonies to whomever they want.
Procreation and parenting are irrelevant, since (1) couples do not have to marry to have children, and (2) the ability or even desire to have children i...s not a prerequisite for getting a marriage license.
This is fundamentally an acknowlegment that Gay people exist, and that the only substantial difference between a married Straight couple and a married Gay couples is the sexual orientation of the two people who have made the commitment. Unless you think the 14th Amendment applies only to people who are heterosexual, there is simply no CONSTITUTIONAL justification for denying law-abiding, taxpaying Gay couples the same legal benefits and protections that Straight couples have always taken for granted. Whether you want to call it a "marriage" or a "civil union" makes little difference, as long as we are treated fairly.
I'd rather advance the
I'd rather advance the equality agenda than the bigot agenda. Sorry, "Catholic League", you don't get to force your hateful religious idiocy on everyone. Boohoo.