Riley Roberts, 18-years-old, speaking to the Nevada
Assembly, asking for marriage equality for his two moms:
“My name is Riley Roberts and
my life is amazing. Thank you for the opportunity to talk to you about the
issue of gay marriage and how it affects my life. What issue? I see no issue. I
was born in Reno, Nevada 18 years ago and guess who was there? My mom Pamela
Roberts and Gretchen Miller, my loving parents. And who was there to watch me
take my first steps? Pamela Roberts and Gretchen Miller. And who was there when
I said my first words? My two loving parents. And who was there when I kicked
my first soccer ball? My two loving parents. And who can I talk to when I need
anything? My two loving parents. And who will be there to see me walk across
the stage next month and receive my honors diploma? My two gay loving parents
who have been together for 22 years."
How can anyone say that two women, or two men, cannot be
good parents, when it’s quite obvious, again,
that Pamela Roberts and Gretchen Miller raised an amazing son?
Madness, I tell you; that’s got to be the only reason.
Chelsea Clinton, on marriage equality:
"It just seems so fundamental to me. I'm able to marry
the person I wanted to marry. That's the fundamental human imperative. Those of
us who have been lucky enough should expand these rights to others."
Equality should be fundamental,
eh?
I mean, wasn’t there something that went something like ‘all
men are created equal’?
E.W. Jackson, GOP nominee for Virginia lieutenant governor,
standing by his declaration that gay people are perverted and sick:
"I
say the things that I say because I’m a Christian, not because I hate anybody,
but because I have religious values that matter to me. Attacking me because I
hold to those principles is attacking every church-going person, every family
that’s living a traditional family life, everybody who believes that we all deserve
the right to live. So I don’t have anything to rephrase or apologize for. I
would just say people should not paint me as one-dimensional."
See what he does there?
He attacks gay people by
calling them pedophiles and perverts and saying we’re sick, but when he gets
attacked for his views, he pulls out a Bible to hide behind.
Judge not, asshat.
"Today is a sad day for
the Boy Scouts of America. They have succumbed to political pressure and
abandoned their historic roots in what will prove to be a failed attempt to
appease gay activists and corporate donors. Unfortunately, what they have done
is said to the world that their oath no longer means much. Their decision to
admit openly gay scouts will end up sexualizing the organization. I am certain
that having changed their policy on homosexuality, it's only a matter of time
before courts order them to admit homosexual scout leaders. Meanwhile,
countless thousands of churches will very likely pull their sponsorship rather
than endorse homosexuality, and the entire organization will begin to collapse.
All of this is happening not because of a true grassroots demand of gay youth
to be part of the organization but by an orchestrated political effort by gay
activists who want to punish any group or organization that does not embrace
homosexuality. It's the beginning of the end for what once was one of America's
noblest organizations."
I love how Brown says that by
the Boy Scouts trying a little non-discrimination—at least until the scout
becomes eighteen years of age—that they are advancing the homosexual agenda, or
appeasing the homosexual community.
What they are doing,
halfp-0assed though it may be, is treating all kids equally.
Then, of course, they’ll
treat the gay adults as less than.
Bryan Fischer, AFA wingnut, on
why the Mormon Church ended up supporting the, as he now calls them because
name-calling works, the Boy Sodomizers of America’s decision to lift the ban on
gay scouts:
"The LDS leadership, these people are smart, they're
sharp, they're thinking all the time and I believe one of the reasons they may
have gone soft on the homosexual agenda is that they believe that the
homosexual agenda may be the secret to restoring polygamy to America and this
would vindicate Mormon doctrine from the very beginning."
So, the Mormon Church sees the idea of letting young gay
boys join an organization as a stepping stone toward legalizing polygamy.
Even for Fischer, who never met a lie he didn’t want to
spread around like horseshit, that’s a stretch.
Harvey Fierstein, on the war
against The Gays:
"The first prong is
political. When a politician like Marco Rubio is willing to sacrifice his
career defining immigration reform legislation solely to insure that gays and
lesbians are denied equal protection under the law, we have to admit that we're
under attack. This is not pragmatic politics at work. These are the policies of
bias, exclusion and unfairness.
The second wave is the steady
barrage coming from those who would call themselves moral leaders. Shielded
behind lecterns, they assign condemnation with impunity. Claiming to be
brimming with the love of their creator, they spew forth the cowardice of the
mob. Fundamentalism, whether raining down terror abroad or in homilies from our
home parishes, is the enemy. It is the death knell of tolerance, progress and
compromise. Fundamentalism is, in all practicality, nothing but an invitation
to bigotry.
And thirdly, when we excuse
homophobia as a matter of opinion instead of treating it as a destructive
social illness, we invite fear to explode into violence. How often are the
perpetrators of hate-crimes discovered to be self-loathing? Valued individuals
do not strike out against strangers."
Read those words.
As usual, Fierstein is
perfection.
Frank Rich, on LGBT
history:
"As
we just learned, a man can still be murdered for being gay a few blocks away
from the Stonewall Inn. But the rapidity of change has been stunning. The world
only spins forward, as Tony Kushner wrote. And yet as we celebrate the forward
velocity of gay rights, I think we must glance backward as well. History is
being lost in this shuffle—that of those gay men and women who experienced
little or none of today’s freedoms. Whatever the other distinctions between the
struggles of black Americans and gay Americans for equality under the
law—starting with the overarching horror of slavery—one difference is
intrinsic. Black people couldn’t (for the most part) hide their identity in an
America that treated them cruelly. Gay people could hide and, out of
self-protection, often did. That’s why their stories were cloaked in silence
and are at risk of being forgotten."
Just a reminder that, in
order to move forward, we need to look back, and honor and remember and
celebrate those who planted their feet in resistance to discrimination; those
who chose not to hide, but to step into the light and demand equality.
James Blake, hot American tennis
player, on becoming an Athlete Ally in the fight against homophobia:
“I am proud to be
affiliated with Athlete Ally because they do exceptional work that can actually
make a difference in the sports world and beyond. Inclusion doesn't have to be
a political issue, but more a human issue. As a mixed background person, I have
been told I could be hated by both sides. I have always tried to look at it the
opposite way as a positive that I could be accepted and included. I am
extremely lucky and feel that everyone should have the feeling of acceptance.”
It’s right in there: inclusion is a human issue. It defies
religion and faith and politics.
And if you analyze everything you have posted from the bigots, it's all rooted in Christian Fundamentalism, every last bit of it.
ReplyDeleteIt's time we start examining Christian beliefs in the disinfectant sunshine for when you do you find out the whole of Christianity and even God are purely figments of the imagination and nothing more.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-22727808
ReplyDeleteThe ex-Archbishop of Canterbury is spouting the ridiculous line that gay marriage can lead to polygamy. Clearly he is suffering from dementia; or has been reading the collected works of Bryan Fischer?
Riley Roberts is a good egg.
ReplyDeleteOMB, more asshats! do they even THINK before they open mouth and insert foot?
ReplyDeletethank dog for the young generation, like chelsea and riley. they see no "evil" in being gay.