Showing posts with label president brack obama and homosexuality. Show all posts
Showing posts with label president brack obama and homosexuality. Show all posts

Saturday, 2 May 2009

READ THE AMAZING HISTORY OF AMERICAN PRESIDENTS MEN IN THE ADMINISTRATION LEVEL: PRAY & MAKE A DIFFERENCE....

Love it or hate it, America is getting a makeover. In a lightning-quick first 100 days, President Obama has arrested attention with his transformative responses to the economic crisis, as well as his brash foreign-policy moves and trips abroad.
Far less press, however, has been devoted to how the new administration is laying the groundwork for massive cultural shifts here at home.
Aided by a sympathetic Congress, the president is filling the executive and judicial branches with liberal activists whose effect on the nation could be incalculable. Consider a few of these individuals.

David Ogden, a lawyer, is a strong abortion-rights advocate. He has fought to give young teenage girls the right to abort without parental consent. He once argued for Planned Parenthood that “Abortion rarely causes or exacerbates psychological or emotional problems,” and that the few women who do have trouble “appear to be those with preexisting emotional problems.” He also defends homosexual rights and pornography. He worked to remove porn filters from the Internet in public libraries and infamously defended a child pornographer. And now, courtesy of the Obama administration, Ogden is America’s new deputy attorney general. The porn industry called his nomination “refreshing.”

The Washington Times calls Dawn Johnsen “one of the country’s most radical abortion proponents.” She opposes all limits on abortion, including parental notification for teenagers and bans on partial-birth abortion. In a brief she submitted to the Supreme Court on behalf of an abortion-rights organization in 1989, she called limits on abortions “disturbingly suggestive of involuntary servitude, prohibited by the Thirteenth Amendment”—which forbids slavery—“in that forced pregnancy requires a woman to provide continuous physical service to the fetus in order to further the state’s asserted interest.” By forbidding any type of abortion, she wrote, “the state has conscripted her body for its own ends.” She wrote a bill, the Freedom of Choice Act, that could force hospitals to perform abortions or risk losing federal funding—an act the new president has said he will sign. The Obama administration has nominated this woman to head the Office of Legal Counsel, chief adviser to its legal team. Hers is the voice that, if she is confirmed, will have the ear of the attorney general and the president on constitutional questions.

Former aclu leader and acorn fundraiser David Hamilton is a U.S. district judge well known for his judicial activism. He fought against the Children’s Internet Protection Act. He invalidated a law requiring that sex offenders be registered. He prevented enforcement of an Indiana law requiring a waiting period for abortions. He ordered the Indiana legislature to stop opening its sessions with a “sectarian prayer” because the references to Jesus offended him. Though the American Bar Association rates him as “not qualified” for his current post, Hamilton is the president’s nominee for a vacancy on the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals.
Harold Koh believes American courts should consult international law for help in interpreting the U.S. Constitution and making their decisions. Supreme Court justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas say this practice undermines U.S. sovereignty. Their concerns may grow if Koh’s nomination as the legal adviser of the Department of State is confirmed.

Elena Kagan booted military recruiters from the campus of Harvard Law and sought to do the same for all colleges that receive federal funds. She calls the military’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy “a moral injustice of the first order” because it discriminates against soldiers who want to be openly homosexual. Kagan is now America’s new solicitor general—the executive branch’s chief courtroom lawyer and adviser to the Supreme Court.

Morrell John Berry, during his tenure as director of the National Zoo, implemented several pro-homosexual employee policies. He wants the Defense of Marriage Act repealed and supports benefits for same-sex partners of federal employees. This month, Berry became director of the Office of Personnel Management, which puts him in charge of 1.9 million federal employees—and their benefits. He is the highest-ranking openly homosexual official ever to serve in the executive branch.

Harry Knox is a homosexual activist. Last month he called certain Catholic leaders “foot soldiers of a discredited army of oppression” for supporting California’s Proposition 8, which legally defines marriage as male-female. He criticized the Apostle Paul for being an “educated, rich heterosexual man” who “didn’t think [homosexuality] was natural because for him it must not have been.” The president apparently appreciates Knox’s view of Scripture, because he just appointed him to his Advisory Council on Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships.

John Holdren has written extensively on global environmental change. He has advocated population control measures such as mandatory abortions and encouraged declines in fertility to reduce stresses on the environment. He has warned of imminent catastrophe caused by global warming. He is now assistant to the president and director of the Office of Science and Technology.
These are only a few of the more notable of the alarming nominations and appointments of the past hundred days. Never has such an unruly cast of characters been so prominent in the affairs of state

Wednesday, 8 April 2009

OBAMA'S CHRISTIAN APPOINTEE TO FAITH BASED PROGRAMME ( HARY KNOX ) SAYS NEW TESTAMENT TEACHING ON HOMOSEXUALITY IS ' NOT TRUE "


"Harry Knox, a professed gay Christian who is director of the religion and faith program at the Human Rights Campaign, a homosexual rights group, was named to President Obama's Advisory Council on Faith Based and Neighborhood Partnerships on Monday. The advisory council gives federal grants to faith-based organizations. The appointment came after Knox criticized Obama prior to the Inauguration for selecting Warren, a California megachurch pastor and best-selling author, to deliver the invocation.
Writing in The Huffington Post blog, Knox said to Obama, “We don’t feel hopeful anticipation of a new day in our country, and we don’t feel optimism. We feel betrayed.”Knox said in the December article that Warren’s invocation would make the Jan. 20 Inauguration a “tainted” event because Warren supported the ballot initiative in California to amend the state constitution to define marriage as between a man and a woman.


On the PBS News Hour in December, Knox said that Warren “has in fact leveraged homophobia to get ahead in his career. … This is the worst possible choice the president could have made. This is a divisive choice. … We said to the president-elect today in very strong language, the strongest we can think of and be respectful of the office, you have really slapped us. And we want you to think about that and think very hard what your actions will be going forward because this very symbolic, early decision has sent the exact wrong message.”

Knox could not be reached for comment Tuesday.Knox is one of 25 members of the advisory board of the White House Office Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships. Obama announced the formation of the office in early February, a continuation of a similar office started by President George W. Bush to issue federal grants to faith-based, non-profit charitable organizations.Other members include Bishop Charles Blake of the Church of God in Christ in Chicago; the Rev. Peg Chemberlin, president-elect of the National Council of Churches USA; Dr. Frank Page, president emeritus of the Southern Baptist Convention; the Rev. Jim Wallis, president of the liberal Christian group Sojourners; and the Rev. Joel C. Hunter of Northland Church in Longwood, Fla.Knox has been a long-time gay activist focusing on the faith community.
He previously worked for the New York-based Freedom to Marry group, for Georgia Equality and Equality Florida. He has won awards from liberal religious organizations.In a debate with the Rev. Gino Jennings recorded Nov. 28, 2004 at the First Church of Our Lord Jesus Christ in Philadelphia, the two men sparred over various biblical verses references homosexual behavior.This included the Book of Romans, in which St. Paul wrote, “Therefore God gave them over in the sinful desires of their hearts to sexual impurity for the degrading of their bodies with one another. They exchanged the truth of God for a lie, and worshiped and served created things rather than the Creator—who is forever praised. Amen.
because of this, God gave them over to shameful lusts. Even their women exchanged natural relations for unnatural ones. In the same way the men also abandoned natural relations with women and were inflamed with lust for one another. Men committed indecent acts with other men, and received in themselves the due penalty for their perversion.” After reading the scripture, Jennings asked, “Do you believe that? That if a man lie with a man or a woman with a woman it is against nature?” “I do not believe it,” answered Knox, who at the time was the program director for the group Freedom to Marry. Jennings responded, “So this is a lie?” Knox affirmed, “That is not true.” “Paul did not have any idea of the kind of love that I feel for a partner when I am partnered. He didn’t know what that was about,” Knox said. “The straight man, the heterosexual man who got the privilege of writing the book, the educated, rich, heterosexual man, Paul, who got to write the book, didn’t think it was natural because for him it must not have been.” Jennings later responded that Paul was not the sole author of the writings. “So you are saying Paul was just closed-minded. I totally disagree because the book says this, the book tells us that all scripture, all of the scripture, not some of it, but all scripture are given by the inspiration of God,” said Jennings.
Before starting at the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) in 2005, Knox also worked as development director of Equality Florida and was the executive director of Georgia Equality. While in Georgia, his groups successfully lobbied corporations such as Coca-Cola, Bell South, Delta, and Cingular to extend same-sex benefits to employees.At the HRC, Knox established a weekly preaching resource that provides scriptural commentary to pastors interested in homosexual perspectives on the Bible. He also helped create a network of 22 “progressive state clergy coalitions” around the country, according to the HRC Web site. Knox has the potential to be a polarizing figure, said the Rev. Louis Sheldon, chairman of the conservative Traditional Values Coalition. “Everything he says will be front-page news,” Sheldon told CNSNews.com. “He will be a political liability to the president.
All the good that the faith-based office does will get buried by a loose cannon that fires over the bow. But that’s what Obama wants.” Last month, Knox was quoted in a gay newspaper criticizing the pope and the Catholic group Knights of Columbus, mainly because the Knights supported the traditional marriage amendment to the California constitution. Knox told the San Francisco-based gay newspaper the Bay Area Reporter, “The Knights of Columbus do a great deal of good in the name of Jesus Christ, but in this particular case, they were foot soldiers of a discredited army of oppression.” In the newspaper, he included among the “discredited leaders” Catholic bishops and Pope Benedict XVI, as “A pope who literally today said condoms don't help in control of AIDS."In a brief interview Monday with CNSNews.com, Knox stood by his comments on the pope.“The pope needs to start telling the truth about condom use,” Knox told CNSNews.com. “We are eager to help him do that. Until he is willing to do that and able, he’s doing a great deal more harm than good--not just in Africa but around the world. It is endangering people’s lives.”The pope’s comments were mischaracterized by Knox, said Catholic League President Bill Donohue. “When Pope Benedict XVI recently said that condoms are not the answer to HIV/AIDS, he was simply voicing common sense: the promiscuous distribution of condoms has coincided with a precipitous increase in HIV/AIDS,” Donohue said in a statement Tuesday. “But to gay activists like Knox, the pope is a liar. Indeed, he instructed the pope to ‘start telling the truth about condom use,’ holding the Holy Father accountable for ‘endangering people’s lives.’ He never explained how calls for abstinence could possibly jeopardize anyone’s life.”In 2000, Knox won the Cordle Award for Promoting God’s Diversity, and the Lancaster Theological Seminary’s 2005 Robert V. Moss Medal for Excellence in Ministry.