Now, the Satanic UN wants our governments to come after us!
From The Bridgehead
By Jonathon Van Maren
Those of you who follow my weekly podcast
over at LifeSiteNews will know that Austin Ruse of C-Fam is,
hands-down, one of the most effective advocates for life and family on
the international level. While most of us ignore what is going on at the
United Nations, Ruse made the compelling point during our interview
that eventually, what gets decided at the top trickles down—and that
activists with no elected power can actually effect an incredible amount
of change without anyone ever hearing their names in the news or on the
radio. LGBT activists and abortion activists have been consistently
making use of these opportunities, and Ruse and a handful of his
colleagues have been fighting back.
With that context in mind, C-Fam’s latest report is very, very concerning:
A UN expert charged with promoting LGBT rights around the world
called on governments to take action against religions that don’t
embrace LGBT rights. In his latest report to the General Assembly,
Victor Madrigal-Borloz said, “States should adopt decisive action when
religious authorities, leaders or agents infringe on the rights of LGBT
persons through violence and discrimination, including hate speech.”
Hate speech, as you know, is now a term that encompasses virtually
everything that LGBT activists disagree with, including substantial
portions of Holy Scripture and the religious texts of all three major
monotheistic religions. “Born this way” is facing off with “ye must be
born again” and our new progressive secularism is appalled that any
person might be asked to refrain from any behavior by any religious
tradition. And so religion must be suppressed in favor of the new
rainbow dogmas—and censorship has a disturbing amount of support among
Millennials. More:
In his report Madrigal-Borloz, the UN Independent Expert on
protection against violence and discrimination based on sexual
orientation and gender identity, equates any kind of religious or
political narrative that does not endorse LGBT rights with incitement to
violence. He calls on governments to respond forcefully.
“There is abundant information about the dissemination of
expressions that constitute hate speech by representatives of churches
and faith-based groups, and incitement often leads to actions that
infringe on other rights, including the right to personal integrity,”
Madrigal-Borloz says in his report. Madrigal-Borloz adds that
“incitement and actual violence is enabled or carried out by religious
leaders or agents in many ways. In some contexts, it is religion that is
used as an explanation for the imposition of penalties that include the
death penalty for homosexuality.”
The report highlights only one case of what it characterizes as
religious incitement to violence against individuals who identify as
LGBT. An LGBT pride event was prevented from taking place in Tiblisi,
Georgia in 2013 after the Orthodox Patriarch asked authorities to block
it. When the government would not cancel the event, thousands of
protesters took to the streets to stop it. The UN report blames the
Orthodox Church for the confrontations that ensued at that event, and
that resulted in injuries to 17 people, including three police officers
and two journalists.
Madrigal-Borloz’s report also laments cultural expressions “that
can lead to increased psychological distress for LGBT persons” like
Jamaican dancehall music because it “often speaks of beating and
shooting gay men” and “appears to play a role in promoting anti-gay
violence.”
The report’s overall theme is social inclusion. It calls on
states to adopt a panoply of laws and policies to prevent discrimination
against individuals who identify as LGBT in a variety of contexts
including education, health-care, humanitarian interventions,
disabilities, and aging.
The report recommends including gender-neutral bathrooms in
humanitarian camps. It recommends the adoption of “comprehensive
sexuality education” that calls for kids to learn about masturbation and
homosexuality. The report also calls for the legal recognition of
same-sex couples in contexts such as housing an employment. And it calls
for reparations for past “pathologization, criminalization or any other
stigmatizing processes.”
The creation of Madrigal-Borloz’s mandate three years ago
resulted in a contentious vote in the General Assembly that nearly
abolished it. “Sexual orientation” and “gender identity” have never been
protected categories in international law. The establishment of the
mandate is a stepping stone to make that a reality. The mandate was
renewed this summer for another three years despite another contentious
vote. But resistance to the mandate has waned since 2016. It is unclear
if the mandate will be challenged again in the General Assembly as it
was three years ago when it was first created.
Now, obviously, there are many nations around the world that actually
engage in genuine persecution against people who identify as LGBT. Iran
is one prominent example, and there are thirteen countries
where engaging in homosexual behavior is punishable by death, an
appalling state of affairs (and one that almost always gets ignored at
the UN in favor of more condemnations of the State of Israel.) World
leaders should absolutely be speaking up and condemning such behavior,
and the Trump Administration has taken a firm stance on the global stage
against such practices.
But LGBT activists want far more than a condemnation of genuine
persecution, which, interestingly, is rarely brought up by activists in
the West—in fact, they are more likely to side with Palestinian groups
who despise them than they are with Israeli groups who support them (the
Left’s contradictions are both bewildering and never-ending.) This is a
very typical strategy on their part: Bring up legitimate persecution to
appear reasonable, and then insert a host of poison pills that allow
them to shut down their critics. They specifically want Christian
pastors and leaders to be silenced, Christian adoption agencies shut
down, and Christians driven out of the public square. They are using the
UN to accomplish this goal, and we should be watching the work of
Austin Ruse and C-Fam very carefully. Often, he is the only one pushing
back against the tide.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Comments are subject to deletion if they are not germane. I have no problem with a bit of colourful language, but blasphemy or depraved profanity will not be allowed. Attacks on the Catholic Faith will not be tolerated. Comments will be deleted that are republican (Yanks! Note the lower case 'r'!), attacks on the legitimacy of Pope Francis as the Vicar of Christ (I know he's a material heretic and a Protector of Perverts, and I definitely want him gone yesterday! However, he is Pope, and I pray for him every day.), the legitimacy of the House of Windsor or of the claims of the Elder Line of the House of France, or attacks on the legitimacy of any of the currently ruling Houses of Europe.