"As a gay conservative woman, I supported Arizona’s religious freedom bill, which was just vetoed this week by Gov. Jan Brewer.
I supported it because it embodied the values every American civil
rights movement stood for: the freedom to live our lives without being
punished for who we are. In this case, it was a bill making sure people
of faith would not be forced to violate their religious beliefs in the
event someone demanded they do so.
This bill, like others across
the country, was thought necessary because of the emergence of business,
large and small, being attacked by the gay left for either espousing
Christian values or acting on their Christian faith. Ranging from a
bakery to a photographer, individuals were being sued for refusing to
violate their religious beliefs. Having been a liberal “community
organizer” in my past, I immediately recognized the strategy being
employed. This is an effort to condition the public into automatically
equating faith with bigotry. To make faith in the public square illegal
and dangerous, you need legal cases and publicity. Voila, lawsuits
against small business resting on the notion that acting on genuinely
held faith is bigotry per se.
Under these rules, freedom of
conscience is squashed under the jackboot of liberals, all in the
Orwellian name of “equality and fairness.” Here we are dealing with not
just forcing someone to do something for you, but forcing them in the
process to violate a sacrament of their faith as well. If we are able to
coerce someone, via the threat of lawsuit and personal destruction, to
provide a service, how is that not slavery? If we insist that you must
violate your faith specifically in that slavish action, how is that not
abject tyranny?
Of all the people in the world who should
understand the scourge of living under constant threat of losing life,
liberty or the ability to make a living because of who you are, it’s
gays. It has been disgusting to watch supposed gay “leadership” drag
young gays and lesbians through an indoctrination that insists that in
order to have equality, you must force other people to do your will,
make them betray who they are, and punish them if they offend you.
Horribly, the gay civil rights movement has morphed into a Gay Gestapo.
Its ranks will now do the punishing of those who dare to be different
or dissent from the approved leftist dogma. To all the young gays who
tweet and email me that this is about “equality,” how exactly? Forcing
someone to do something against their faith has nothing to do with
equality for you, has nothing to do with bigotry and has everything to
do with a personal, spiritual understanding of right and wrong. In other
words, I tell them, not everything is about you.
This reaction to
the Arizona bill surprised people, but it shouldn’t have. Keep in mind,
the legal targeting of people of faith has been ongoing, with the Obama
administration leading the charge. We see it in the Obamacare birth
control mandate, which is also determined to force people of faith to
abandon their belief under legal threat. The attack on Chick-fil-A
because its CEO dared to espouse a faith-based view on gay marriage is
another example of the attempt to intimidate people of faith.
That
targeting of Chick-fil-A was a massive failure, which is why, I
contend, the left shifted its focus to smaller, local businesses that
could more easily be intimidated and threatened.
Why would the Gay Gestapo suddenly need to convince everyone that any act of faith must be viewed
suspiciously as discrimination and “hate?” Forcing a bakery, Hobby
Lobby, Chick-fil-A or a photographer to either violate their religious
beliefs or be destroyed is simply a test run. The real target is the
church and temple. If the left can convince our society to force people
of faith to violate their sacraments in the name of “equality,” why
would we allow that to stop at the church door?
This is why bills
like Arizona’s protecting individual Christians from lawsuits will have
to return, because the left has a mission, and this is only the
beginning. It was clear Mrs. Brewer had no choice but to veto the bill,
considering the left had completely smeared the state in the process of
its media frenzy. Add to that the fact that liberals would like nothing
better in this election year than to have this be the discussion in the
media instead of Obamacare and the economy. Still, it will have to be
confronted eventually if we are keep tyranny from eating away at the
fabric of our culture.
Ultimately, the Arizona bill had nothing to
do with gays and everything to do with protecting the right of
individuals to live their lives in ways that may not include others, or
may even offend certain groups. As Americans, we did not go through the
growing pains of the civil rights movements only to capitulate to 21st
century bullies who have the gall to use the importance of minority
rights as a weapon to extinguish those with whom they disagree.
We
can have both equality and religious freedom, but only if the bullies
on the left are confronted about the truth of their agenda."
Tammy Bruce is a radio talk-show host, New York Times best-selling author and Fox News political contributor.
h/t Andy Parks and The Washington Times
I'm sure she'll be under attack shortly for not being "authentically" gay. Is it possible to be a gay "Uncle Tom" or is that too gender specific?
ReplyDeleteI don't know what sort of name they'll call her, except maybe the b one.
DeleteCue the Gay Gestapo in 3,2,1
ReplyDeleteOh, yes.
DeleteSorry for the "off topic" but I wanted to drop you a note of thanks here for the support in the loss of our Barkley the Lab last Monday. It was much appreciated.
ReplyDeleteBrigid
I was so sorry to hear about his loss. We'll miss him, too.
DeleteNot everybody walks in lockstep. But the vocal ones are generally the ones we here about.
ReplyDelete