I have written about the homo-fascist
agenda for the past two years, although pastors like Charles McDowell and Pat Robertson have alerted this county for
much longer. I listened then, but had no
reason to worry or do anything about it, until now.
Last year, Washington Post conservative columnist Charles
Krauthammer rightly called the radical gay agenda and destruction of reasoned
opposition “fascist”, specifically after Mozilla-Firefox
CEO had to step down for donating money to California Prop 8. Even here its
rising tide in California is flooding out individual liberty and freedom of
speech and conscience. In 2008, the majority of voters (even in the most
Democratic of districts) voted to recognize the definition of natural marriage.
How many years later, we witnessed a rogue Supreme Court overturn it. Today, because
of the extra-legal juggernaut and the seeming turn of public opinion, some of my
fellow California conservative have been telling me “Pick your fights. Waging
war on the radical gay progressives is a non-starter.” A respected academic,
whom liberal colleagues had forced out then restored to his research position
at UCLA, once told me: “Homosexuality is one of the most toxic issues out
there. Don’t try to fight it right now.”
Pop Psychologist Dr. Phil McGraw had taught me
otherwise: “When someone starts swinging their fists at you, you are in a
fight, whether you choose it or not.” That fight is happening right now, and
the unjust arrest and incarceration of Kentucky County clerk Kim Davis is
the face of the new persecution.
Time is the essence, and we should have gotten angry
sooner.
A well-connected contact in Rhode Island (already
receiving death threats for investigating corruption) shared with me about “The
Gay Mafia”, homosexuals intent on raping the public purse for private benefit.
The nation’s most notorious mayor, Buddy Cianci of Providence, Rhode Island, forced
firefighters to march in Gay Pride parades. Once again, “Forced” if you
missed already. To this day, a conservative Californian reminded me, my current
governor has never marched in a Gay Pride parade, let alone forced anyone else
to. Unfortunately, San Francisco’s youth
may have to learn about “LGBT” issues, even though education in the Golden
State has fallen so far below the state’s once golden standard. WaPo columnist George Will was right:
We have sore winners, and they want to make their opposition sore if they fight
back. The Gay Agenda is not gay, but tyrannical, an assault against life,
liberty, and property, including the free pursuit of happiness (well-being
based on individual choices and consequences, not an entitlement paid for
forcibly by someone else).
This is wrong. This is immoral insanity, and like
the bald-headed diet guru, it’s time to shout: “Stop the insanity!”
When the Supreme Court (which is not and never will
be the Supreme Being) decided to overrule natural law (actually, it cannot and
never will), I
wrote: “ The SCOTUS setback over marriage does not mean the fight is over.
The Supreme Court is not the final authority. We the People are.”
I received one nasty screed justifying the court’s
unseemly overreach, but also a profound statement: “Thank you so much for this
article! I have been downright depressed over this decision. Your column gives
me hope.”
The following people and their conscientious
objections are leading: Oregon
bakers Aaron and Melissa Klein, tens
of thousands of protests in Mexico, US Senator Ted Cruz,
US
Senator Rand Paul, Governor
Mike Huckabee, , judges
and clerks in North Carolina, and individual
citizens throughout the country, give me hope, too.
Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker could not have said
it better: “The bottom line in America is we are a nation of laws,” the
Presidential contender told The Blaze.
“But part of those laws — in fact, the most important of those laws — is the
Constitution. The Constitution is very clear about protecting freedom of
religion, and the freedom to be able to practice religious beliefs in this
country. I think it’s incredibly important those rights be protected in today’s
society.”
The Bill of
Rights are the essential contract for any branch of government. The Supreme
Court has ruled contrary to spirit and letter of our founding charter before.
Now is the time for civil disobedience. I stand with Kim, and I will be
standing for her before my city council on Tuesday to demand greater
recognition of her plight and demand respect for the rule of law, the highest
of which is the Constitution.
Of course, this freedom fight has its detractors,
many of whom tried to shame me into silence, claiming that I would have to
permit a Muslim civil servant from granting driver’s licenses to female
applicants. Yet like climate alarmists, the heated rage to treat homosexuality
as an identity and thus a protected class is losing steam, and the rising
populist push-back against judicial tyranny, regardless of individual
preferences, has awakened many. Even
libertarians , who have championed same-sex marriage, do not support its
imposed state sponsorship.
I am taking this fight to my own city, too. A member
of my city council, Tim
Goodrich, has tried to hide his support for this agenda. Slowly but surely,
conservatives in the city have exposed his true intentions – to win elections
in a moderate, non-confrontational city then springboard into higher office to
push a more aggressive, progressive agenda. My current Congressman, Ted Lieu,
did precisely that, and now embraces one of the most leftist, pro-gay agendas
of any sitting Congressman. Fortunately, we have stopped Goodrich’ Big Green
push. Now I want to focus on wider concerns, like protecting the essential
integrity of the family: natural marriage, which benefits all of us,
whether married or unmarried.
Unlike some who have caved, I will not. Davis
hasn’t. Mass Resistance didn’t. Let us heed Matt Barber’s exhortation
and become
one of millions like Kim , and declare to the world: “We’re as mad as hell,
and we’re not going to take it anymore.” I know and believe that more people
will join me.
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