Thursday, October 28, 2010
ELLEN DEGENEREES' LEAVEN
Yes, Ellen, Jesus taught us to love and not hate. And He is also the one who taught us to beware of the "leaven" of the Pharisees! The "leaven" of the Pharisees essentially refers to their teaching. This, in essence, knocks the wind out of ...your great grandstanding "on behalf" of Jesus... We will embrace your appeals 'on behalf' of Jesus when your homosexual centric agenda groups stop shoving down our throats the "pharisaic" fallacy that being homosexual is not a choice but an unpreventable inclination.
The great paradox here, is that the same groups that claim same sex urges are unavoidable and unchangeable also claim that pederasty and child molestation are incurable. Yet they demonize and villanize child molestation while glorifying homosexuality. They say everyone is free to choose who to live with and yet they scream that a child cannot help but be who he or she has been meant to be! This is great reasoning, no? Or is it murky self contradictions?
What about people with deep seated incestuous urges? Are they completely helpless or incompletely helpless? Should we then allow them to go on and have their fill of their daughters, sisters, mothers, brothers, fathers and sons? After all they could actually be helpless, or - judging from all these noises coming from these Anderson Cooper Friendly Groups - even exercising their 'god-given' rights to choose what is natural and acceptable to them. Or does it depend on what wind of manipulation is wafting out of your group's temporary agenda? Teach us... Teach us out of your leaven, Ellen.
Also help Anderson Cooper to 'out' clearly his sexual preferences since you spoke clearly about yours on his show! At least we know who you are. Anderson tries to cast himself as a "man without parochial biases".
And I still love you all in Jesus Name.
Thursday, October 21, 2010
RUNNING THE GAY AGENDA GAMUT
Bullying. Cyber bullying, school yard bullying, street bullying, prison yard bullying, office bullying, home bullying, church pulpit bullying, bullying of all shades and hues – bullying is bullying. And bullying is despicable. And pathetic. The hollow chamber of a bully’s soul is a sulfuric cesspool of insecurity and resentment. There is a seething rage deep in the bully’s soul incited by secretly perceived disadvantages and usually masked in a veneer of exuberance and self confidence. Oh yes, bullies do not want you to know there’s a huge blind swath of smoldering territory inside. They put on a façade saying: everything’s alright by me! But the opposite is always the case. And so they go on about and resent everything around them, but only venture so far as to take out their bitterness on weaker vessels - i.e. those weaker than themselves whether human beings or animals. They would never step forward in an evenly matched situation lest they embarrass this mask of ‘everything’s fine in my world’, bruising an ego already damaged by hidden twisted insecurities. That, in part, is why cyber bullying is so attractive to bullies. You get to do your bullying from a safe distance and rarely get called out to defend your actions in an evenly matched field – either by authorities or friends and relatives of the bullied.
Recently, however, bullying has turned out to be a solely homosexual-centric issue. When you flock to those bright lights of mass education known as The TV, especially cable television, you would get a sense that anybody who has ever been bullied is as a result of being a homosexual or, as they say, ‘gay’. I am no statistician and I do not have the statistic data to put up in defense of my position, but rarely a day goes by without the issue of gays and bullies as well as gays and their untold sufferings, being squeezed into discourses, whether conveniently or inconveniently relevant. As I said earlier, I’m no statistician. Yet the evidence deluging my eyes and my ears tells me that the volume and frequency are enough to alert me into questioning whether there is, in fact, an aggressive onslaught of subliminal messaging campaign aimed at foisting a specific agenda on the vast viewership, whether suspecting or unsuspecting.
At the forefront of this push is Anderson Cooper, the platinum stud of CNN – and I mean no slight by the description put forward here. It’s just the way he carries himself on the little screen. He possesses that dignity which bothers on the vain, as all news anchors all over the world are known to possess. And then he prides himself unswervingly in the uncompromising integrity of his work as a journalist and an anchor. He always lets you know that he’s covering the facts as they’re presented by all parties without taking sides. And his ‘digging deeper’ sessions are devoted to unrelentingly dogging a story till it yields the truth. But Jon Stewart at the Daily Show disagrees with him on a number of this journalistic pride thing, as do Rosie O’Donnell. In fact, Jon Stewart once devoted a significant session of his show dealing with the “we’ll leave it at that” syndrome going on at CNN, and guess what, Mr. Cooper was at the center of it.
"I was sitting in a movie theater over the weekend and there was a preview of a movie, and in it, the actor said, 'That's so gay,' and I was shocked that not only that they put it in the movie, but that they put that in the preview, they thought that it was okay to put that in a preview for the movie to get people to go and see it. I just find those words, those terms, we've got to do something to make those words unacceptable cause those words are hurting kids. Someone else I talked to recently said that the words people use and the things people say about other kids online, it enters into their internal dialogue. And when you're a kid, it can change the way you see yourself and the way you think about yourself, and the worth that you give to yourself. I think we need to really focus on what language we're using and how we're treating these kids."
Anderson Cooper
Mr. Cooper has basically maintained a position that most deaths and suicides associated with bullying have been as a result of taunting children who have homosexual tendencies, to the extent that a forum was constituted to deal with this scourge, to be anchored by Anderson Cooper himself and Ellen DeGeneres. The LGBT groups in the US have been pushing a radical message requiring teachers in American public schools to espouse, openly, knowledge relevant to sexual orientations, maintaining that this will bring down violent deaths and suicides related to bullying. Anti-gay groups disagree. They disagree, as far as I know, on the grounds that bullying is the problem and not sexual orientation – which truly is a messed up and complex topic to be espousing before children of kindergarten and elementary school age. I agree totally. And anyone who says different craves my impatience and disrespect.
It is unpardonable for these groups to use a serious issue as bullying to demand incorporating this type of pervasive campaign into the education curriculum of young children. They may have been inadvertently right in identifying loneliness – judging by the support they are trying to roll out for the children taunted for ‘being gay’ - as a major reason for suicides but they have not identified ‘it’ as a great underlying reason. And of course, the most heart-wrecking cases of bullying suicides have not always had to do with ‘gay taunts’. I remember Megan Meier. She was cyber bullied into committing suicide by a neighbor who incidentally happened to be the mother of someone in her close circle of friends. She was autistic or had some mental issue, if I don’t remember correctly.
So when certain interest groups start demanding aggressively that kindergarten children be taught about issues relating to homosexuality as a way to curb bullying suicides, it opens doors for urgent questions to be asked about the agenda behind these types of campaign.
When I was in elementary and junior high school, I was bullied. It was not because something was extremely wrong with me, as I came later to understand clearly, but because someone was trying to gratify some innate urge to do harm and malice.
It was really tough to deal with but I took on it with a sense of impatience and outrage. And I'm not speaking figuratively. I walked up to about two or three guys in separate incidents and called them out to their faces. "you are a bully", I said on one occasion. "And that's because you are afraid... deep inside of you". Surprisingly, it worked. Observers - yes, there are always observers on every occasion an act of bullying is committed - acknowledged my courage and this took the oxygen out of the bully's fun. The bully in this case? Well, he became my friend and in fact ended up crafting a popular nickname that stuck with me for the rest of my Junior and High school years.
Recently, however, bullying has turned out to be a solely homosexual-centric issue. When you flock to those bright lights of mass education known as The TV, especially cable television, you would get a sense that anybody who has ever been bullied is as a result of being a homosexual or, as they say, ‘gay’. I am no statistician and I do not have the statistic data to put up in defense of my position, but rarely a day goes by without the issue of gays and bullies as well as gays and their untold sufferings, being squeezed into discourses, whether conveniently or inconveniently relevant. As I said earlier, I’m no statistician. Yet the evidence deluging my eyes and my ears tells me that the volume and frequency are enough to alert me into questioning whether there is, in fact, an aggressive onslaught of subliminal messaging campaign aimed at foisting a specific agenda on the vast viewership, whether suspecting or unsuspecting.
At the forefront of this push is Anderson Cooper, the platinum stud of CNN – and I mean no slight by the description put forward here. It’s just the way he carries himself on the little screen. He possesses that dignity which bothers on the vain, as all news anchors all over the world are known to possess. And then he prides himself unswervingly in the uncompromising integrity of his work as a journalist and an anchor. He always lets you know that he’s covering the facts as they’re presented by all parties without taking sides. And his ‘digging deeper’ sessions are devoted to unrelentingly dogging a story till it yields the truth. But Jon Stewart at the Daily Show disagrees with him on a number of this journalistic pride thing, as do Rosie O’Donnell. In fact, Jon Stewart once devoted a significant session of his show dealing with the “we’ll leave it at that” syndrome going on at CNN, and guess what, Mr. Cooper was at the center of it.
"I was sitting in a movie theater over the weekend and there was a preview of a movie, and in it, the actor said, 'That's so gay,' and I was shocked that not only that they put it in the movie, but that they put that in the preview, they thought that it was okay to put that in a preview for the movie to get people to go and see it. I just find those words, those terms, we've got to do something to make those words unacceptable cause those words are hurting kids. Someone else I talked to recently said that the words people use and the things people say about other kids online, it enters into their internal dialogue. And when you're a kid, it can change the way you see yourself and the way you think about yourself, and the worth that you give to yourself. I think we need to really focus on what language we're using and how we're treating these kids."
Anderson Cooper
Mr. Cooper has basically maintained a position that most deaths and suicides associated with bullying have been as a result of taunting children who have homosexual tendencies, to the extent that a forum was constituted to deal with this scourge, to be anchored by Anderson Cooper himself and Ellen DeGeneres. The LGBT groups in the US have been pushing a radical message requiring teachers in American public schools to espouse, openly, knowledge relevant to sexual orientations, maintaining that this will bring down violent deaths and suicides related to bullying. Anti-gay groups disagree. They disagree, as far as I know, on the grounds that bullying is the problem and not sexual orientation – which truly is a messed up and complex topic to be espousing before children of kindergarten and elementary school age. I agree totally. And anyone who says different craves my impatience and disrespect.
It is unpardonable for these groups to use a serious issue as bullying to demand incorporating this type of pervasive campaign into the education curriculum of young children. They may have been inadvertently right in identifying loneliness – judging by the support they are trying to roll out for the children taunted for ‘being gay’ - as a major reason for suicides but they have not identified ‘it’ as a great underlying reason. And of course, the most heart-wrecking cases of bullying suicides have not always had to do with ‘gay taunts’. I remember Megan Meier. She was cyber bullied into committing suicide by a neighbor who incidentally happened to be the mother of someone in her close circle of friends. She was autistic or had some mental issue, if I don’t remember correctly.
So when certain interest groups start demanding aggressively that kindergarten children be taught about issues relating to homosexuality as a way to curb bullying suicides, it opens doors for urgent questions to be asked about the agenda behind these types of campaign.
When I was in elementary and junior high school, I was bullied. It was not because something was extremely wrong with me, as I came later to understand clearly, but because someone was trying to gratify some innate urge to do harm and malice.
It was really tough to deal with but I took on it with a sense of impatience and outrage. And I'm not speaking figuratively. I walked up to about two or three guys in separate incidents and called them out to their faces. "you are a bully", I said on one occasion. "And that's because you are afraid... deep inside of you". Surprisingly, it worked. Observers - yes, there are always observers on every occasion an act of bullying is committed - acknowledged my courage and this took the oxygen out of the bully's fun. The bully in this case? Well, he became my friend and in fact ended up crafting a popular nickname that stuck with me for the rest of my Junior and High school years.
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