The ongoing LGBT activism that has overtaken a large part of the United States puts us at a strange crossroads in our country’s history: for perhaps the first time in American history, a "civil rights" effort is in fact more authoritarian and intolerant than the structure of power against which it is rebelling.
Aided by media that are both incompetent and often transparently biased, along with a burgeoning corporate culture that has discovered the economic benefits of public moral preening, we have what Stella Morabito aptly terms the “LGBT mafia:” a profoundly illiberal social movement rather single-mindedly determined to stamp out even minor and inconsequential dissent from its orthodoxy. It’s not going anywhere. In fact, it’s getting worse.
Many of us were appropriately horrified a couple of years ago when Mozilla CEO Brendan Eich was ousted from his position for, years before, having opposed gay marriage legalization in California. Two years later, the controversy surrounding Eich’s downfall now seems rather quaint in comparison—some histrionics, to be sure, and a silly display of activist vanity from OKCupid, but that was mostly it. The dismaying episode was nonetheless quickly over, and perhaps many of us thought we’d seen the worst of it.
How wrong could we possibly get?
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5 comments:
This is not a civil rights issue.
It is an issue about mental health and certain groups are trying to discourage people from seeking help by normalizing their illness.
The sickos are simply getting tired of being arrested for the law finding child porn on their computers. Why risk jail when they can lust over the real thing in public bathrooms?
Got to thank Democrats for this.
Soddom and Gomorah!
NC's governor is already backtracking, so clearly boycotting is working. Hate walks when money talks.
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