Thursday, November 20, 2008

Sonoma and Gomorrah

Ever since Proposition 8 passed in California making Gay Marriage illegal, Gay activists have had their panties in a bunch.

Blacks and Mormons have been the main targets of the gay activists’ anger. Seventy percent of blacks voted against gay marriage in California, so racial epithets were hurled at blacks in Los Angeles — not in black neighborhoods, by the way.

Blacks who just happened to be driving through Westwood, near UCLA, were accosted in their cars and, in addition to being denounced, were warned, “You better watch your back.”

Up until now homosexuals have gotten along just fine without the right to marry... Going along their merry way, sodomizing and fellating to their hearts' content. California even provided them rights and benefits under domestic partnership laws.

But that's not what it's about, is it...

And, Leftists don't accept losing... Even when they lose.

The California Supreme Court voted 6 to 1 on Wednesday to review legal challenges to Proposition 8.

I think we know where this is headed. Millions of people can go to the polls and make their choice, but the will of the people doesn't mean much as long as there is a tyrannical activist in a black robe somewhere willing to thwart it.

....

7 comments:

janice said...

Sad but true, Chris....

Christina said...

So much for tolerance (of other races and religions.)

This is just the beginning. The homosexual movement is poised to shove this in our faces in even more ways.

I went to my semi-annual movie last weekend and saw a preview for a movie entitled "Milk". (I think that was the title)

Basically, it's a movie that chronicles the journey of a bunch of homosexuals who try to get another homosexual man elected to office in San Fransisco (I think).

The way the preview framed it, the plight of the homosexuals is the same as that of the blacks in the civil rights movement.

The preview was absolutely sickening. I can only image the movie. It's coming and it's going to be shoved in our faces again and again until they get their way.

SkyePuppy said...

Christina,

(Working from memory, because I'm too lazy to fact-check right now) Harvey Milk was elected as one of San Francisco's first openly gay councilmen. He was shot to death on the steps of City Hall a long time ago and was a rallying cry for gay rights. I think this movie is coming out because people have forgotten who he was, and the gay rights community want people to remember his Great Courage again.

Should be a blockbuster...

Anonymous said...

Wow. All this H8 against gay people. Are you guys all torn up over the march of every other lgbt right?

Christina said...

Anonymous,

Give me one good reason why I should go against my Christian beliefs and accept homosexual behavior, and even more so, the literal shoving in my face of something that I believe to be a sin.

Simply being disgusted by a sinful behavior is NOT the same thing as hating a sinful person. I have never, nor will I ever, say that I hate a homosexual person. I don't. I happen to feel quite sorry for a person who has bought into the whole "if it feels good, it must be okay" theory. I feel sorry for the homosexual who engages in risky behavior and truly believes that there are no consequences. I feel sorry for him, I can still love him/her and hope that he decides to change his behavior, but under no circumstances do I have to condone, endorse or ACCEPT AS NORMAL something that I believe to be a sin.

How would you like it if I forced you to accept as normal something that you knew in your heart to be wrong? Would you sit there and take it and never speak up against it? I doubt it. Why the double standard?

I'm sick of being called hateful when I'm anything but. If you are a homosexual and you work with me, I will treat you no differently than anyone else. However if you try to force your lifestyle on me, in my face at ever single turn, then I do not have to simply go along. That's not hate. In fact hoping that a homosexual will change their destructive lifestyle to a safer one is more about compassion and love.

Love is a lot harder than hate...love will sometimes call for a person to say something the other person does not want to hear because love requires that you do not let someone do something destructive or dangerous without warning him.

Hate is letting a person do whatever they feel like, the consequences be darned, and never saying a word against it.

Malott said...

Anon,

I don't think any of us hate gay people. I don't respect them. I do feel sorry for them. And those who misbehave make me mad.

Settling on just one person with whom to practice perversion does not make a marriage.

Tsofah said...

The rights of the majority of the people should be upheld. No matter what you call a homosexual relationship - it will never be a marriage. Only when a non-altered male can impregnate another non-altered female without external interference and when a non-altered female can impregnate another non-altered female under the same circumstances will a true "homosexual marriage" be possible.

Homosexual relationships are not honored by G-d. They are sinful acts by hurting people. I've yet to personally meet a person, and/or hear a celebrity, in a homosexual relationship not have sexual abuse in some manner in their background.

It's sad, truly, that such abuse closes people off from the type of love that G-d established and ordained: love between a woman and a man.