Fake  “Conservatives” Embrace Homosexual “Monster”
Written by Cliff  Kincaid
19 February  2010
Kathleen Parker is the  “conservative” columnist liberals can count on to bash conservative  personalities and causes. This is why her column is syndicated by the Washington  Post and why she is featured on the Chris Matthews  show.
Now, Parker has done her  best imitation of lesbian MSNBC-TV commentator Rachel Maddow by writing  a column bashing Uganda’s  Christian majority for considering passage of a bill to toughen laws against  homosexuality. This has been a Maddow cause for months, and Parker is now on the  bandwagon.
When the MSNBC-TV host  isn’t attacking Christians here and abroad for opposing homosexuality, she is  promoting homosexuality in the U.S. military, as Post media critic Howard Kurtz  was recently forced to acknowledge in a story about her preoccupation  with this matter. But it’s really not surprising. Maddow’s show is an extension  of her lesbian lifestyle. She is gay and proud and given free rein at MSNBC  because of her role as the first “out” lesbian to host a show on a national  cable news network.
It’s another “first” for  the homosexual lobby and the media, which seem to go  together.
Parker’s interest in the  issue is not as clear but it may stem from her eagerness to please those who  syndicate her column and quote her approvingly in the liberal press. This is how  “conservatives” become mainstream media stars. However, her column is even worse  in its accusations and charges than what we can find in the hysterical gay  press. Parker finds those Christians opposed to homosexuality in Uganda and who  base their opposition on the Bible to be in favor of  “genocide.”
Losing complete control of  her senses, Parker states that a proposed law against homosexuality constitutes  “state genocide of a minority [that] is proposed in the name of  Christianity...”
Once again, as we have  documented on so many occasions, the death penalty in the bill is only one  provision and is for “aggravated homosexuality” or serious crimes mostly  involving homosexual behavior targeting children and spreading disease and  death.
The potential genocide in  Uganda is the AIDS epidemic that the government and Christian leaders are  successfully combating. They understand, although Parker apparently does not,  that homosexual behavior promotes the spread of  AIDS.
There is a myth that AIDS  in Africa has been spread exclusively through heterosexual conduct. But the  internationally acclaimed medical journal The Lancet last August published the  first scientific study showing that male homosexuals are more often than not  infected with HIV than the general adult population in sub-Saharan Africa. The  study is titled, “Men who have sex with men and HIV/AIDS in sub-Saharan Africa.”  
Here, all of this is out  in the open and well-known. Indeed, the Cato Institute held an event on  Wednesday in which HIV-positive writer Andrew Sullivan strode to the podium  during a conference on “gay conservatives” with ashes on his forehead from  having attended a Catholic Church Ash Wednesday service. Sullivan was caught  soliciting a partner for dangerous “bare-backing” sexual practices and has since  “married” another man. This is “conservative?”
Like Kathleen Parker, he  is still considered a “conservative” by some and was introduced by Cato  executive David Boaz, a member of the Independent Gay Forum and pro-marijuana  activist. Like Sullivan, Cato is also misleadingly described in the media as  “conservative” too many times to mention.
Today, as the Conservative  Political Action Conference (CPAC) gets underway in Washington, D.C.,  participants will find a literature table established under official CPAC  auspices from a homosexual Republican group calling itself GOProud. CPAC  organizer David Keene, whose lobbying activities have been an embarrassment to  the conservative movement, approved letting the gay rights organization  officially attend the conference, despite complaints from traditional  conservative groups such as Catholic Families for America.  
Talk of tolerance and  diversity aside, male homosexuals constitute most of the HIV-AIDS cases and they  are still prohibited from donating blood because of their propensity to come  down with various life-threatening diseases. Facts are facts. But don’t expect  to see this information analyzed and reviewed by the mainstream media when  considering such issues as allowing active and open homosexuals into the Armed  Forces and into close quarters with normal  heterosexuals.
Gay activists complain  that thousands have been forced out of the military because of their  homosexuality. The evidence, in the form of opinion polls and letters from  former military officers, suggests that many thousands more will leave if the  military brass force acceptance of homosexuality-and the diversity training that  will inevitably go along with it-on the military rank and  file.
The purpose of the Ugandan  bill, quite clearly, is to keep homosexuality in the closet, where it used to be  in this country. The country’s literal survival may depend on passage of this  legislation, after it undergoes hearings and some  revisions.
The bill will likely have  more of a deterrent effect than anything else. Some of the controversial  passages, such as restrictions on “touching,” are included for the purpose of  defining homosexual behavior. It may sound strange to Americans who are  accustomed to in-your-face homosexuality on national television and almost  everywhere else in society, but Uganda is serious about avoiding a return to the  time when a notorious homosexual king was ruling the country and tortured and  killed young Christian men who resisted his homosexual  advances.
Ironically, Parker makes  reference to this terrible period, but only to contrast it with a frightening  future in which she speculates that gays will be offered up by authorities in  Uganda as martyrs for the gay rights cause. To drive the point home, a gay  rights group recently held a news conference in Washington, D.C. featuring an  alleged gay rights activist from Uganda wearing a paper sack over his head. It  was a good publicity stunt, designed to generate sympathy and attention for  people who only want the “right” to celebrate a behavior that is a documented  public health hazard. 
Hedge fund manager George  Soros, who is behind the campaign to homosexualize Uganda, doesn’t wear a bag  over his face and doesn’t need to. He operates mostly out in the open, in the  name of promoting his version of an “open society” here and abroad. The problem  is that most of the liberal media agree with his policies and proposals and  therefore don’t shed light on what he is doing in terms of interfering in the  affairs of not only the U.S. but other nations of the  world.
In fact, the Ugandan  legislation seems designed to send a message to Soros and his minions in the  foreign homosexual lobby to keep their hands off Uganda’s families and kids.  Soros funds efforts to legalize homosexual behavior and prostitution in Uganda  and other African nations. It’s too bad Parker didn’t notice and condemn that.  But such a reference might provoke criticism from the left, and she wants to  avoid that so she can keep going on the Matthews show.  
The eminent historian Paul  Johnson, who was recently on C-SPAN taking questions from viewers, has something  to say about this. His book The Quest for God laments that Western society made  a huge mistake by decriminalizing homosexuality and thinking that acceptance of  the lifestyle on a basic level would satisfy its practitioners. Instead, he  wrote, “Decriminalization made it possible for homosexuals to organize openly  into a powerful lobby, and it thus became a mere platform from which further  demands were launched.” It became, he says, a “monster in our midst, powerful  and clamoring, flexing its muscles, threatening, vengeful and vindictive towards  anyone who challenges its outrageous claims, and bent on making fundamental-and  to most of us horrifying-changes to civilized patterns of sexual  behavior.”
Today, this monster makes  even more demands and inroads, especially into our government, as President  Obama appoints subversives such as homosexual activist Kevin Jennings to the  Education Department, and some poor mixed-up “transgendered” person to a post at  Commerce. Plus, adding to our health care problems, he has lifted the ban on  AIDS-infected foreigners from traveling to and living in the  U.S.
His gays-in-the-military  proposal would not only make the Armed Forces a laughingstock but would end its  value as a fighting force capable of defending us against foreign threats.  Indeed, a homosexualized military could itself become a threat, just like it was  in the Nazi period.
Instead of finding a  “monster” in a gay rights movement that wants to impose itself on all of us,  including our children in the schools, Kathleen Parker finds the monster to be  the Christians in Uganda who want to spare their children from a lifestyle that  too frequently ends in premature death. She accuses them of “genocide” for being  patriots and good parents. Shame on her.
Parker’s “conservatism” is  a farce and a fraud. But it seems to be in fashion at CPAC this  year.
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Gill  Rapoza
Veritas  Vos Liberabit

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