Tuesday, August 28, 2012

For better or perverse?


Whatever you may think about same-sex marriage you have to acknowledge our gay friends' total mastery of the PR process. For 1.5 per cent of the population (Office for National Statistics latest figure) to manipulate the remaining 98.5 per cent, including the Prime Minister, into accepting so cringe-worthy a concept is no small achievement.

The BBC and the Gaydian -- who you might say are already married in terms of a mutual relativist/atheist agenda -- should share the credit, if that's the right word. Thanks to their ongoing propaganda, homosexuals have whipped up a climate of mass hysteria in which anyone opposing their brand of unholy matrimony is labelled homophobic, hateful and worthy of social ostracism.

A Freedom of Information request some time ago revealed that the BBC placed over 90 per cent of its recruitment advertising in the Gaydian, so it's unsurprising that its staff should be heavily loaded in favour of the homosexual crusade. Of course, the Beeb indignantly denies any bias. Reading from a familiar script, a spokesman recently said: "BBC News works to the highest standards of balance and impartiality across the whole of its output. It's absolutely not true to suggest we follow any agenda." But of course. How hateful of us to suggest otherwise.

With the travesty of 'gay marriage' about to be inflicted on the nation whether we like it or not, the story of the Geordie about to emigrate springs to mind. When asked why he was leaving, he replied that 200 years ago homosexuality was punishable by death. One hundred years ago you were sent to prison for it. Now it had been made legal he was getting out before it became compulsory.