Pro-family Group Posts Detailed Expose On Brown In Bed With Gays
How Scott Brown caved in on "Don't Ask Don't Tell" -- ten-month campaign by homosexual lobby!
Scott Brown's radical change of position on homosexuality in
the military did not happen by accident. It was a coordinated
campaign by the homosexual movement in Massachusetts.
We (pro-traditional family group MassResistance) first got
wind of it at the GLSEN conference held in Somerville this past
March, where we had a person in attendance. (We are preparing a
full report on that conference.) There was a workshop on repealing
"Don't Ask Don't Tell". One homosexual serviceman talked about men
having sex with each other in the barracks, and the officers
looking the other way (a positive step, they indicated). They said
they will be targeting Scott Brown in every way possible to get him
to change his mind on the ban. "We will bombard Scott Brown's
office," he told the group.
In addition, the national homosexual organization
Human Rights Campaign appears to have been coordinating things in
Washington and helped arrange for Brown to meet with "gay"
servicemen. The ACLU was also involved, from at least one email of
theirs we've seen.
But the real grunt work was done by in Massachusetts by MassEquality, which even organized phone banks out of their offices to coordinate calls from across the state.
For example, here's an email that was sent out by MassEquality
to their supporters on Monday, Dec. 6.
COPY OF EMAIL FROM HOMOSEXUAL LOBBY
Dear XXX,
Thanks in no small part to your work, U.S. Sen. Scott Brown
announced on Friday that he will support the repeal of "Don't Ask,
Don't Tell."
Since March, you signed 2,262 postcards urging Sen. Brown to
vote for repeal of "Don't Ask, Don't Tell," and we delivered them
to Sen. Brown during visits to his Boston office.
You wrote 110 handwritten letters to Sen. Brown urging him to
support repeal of "Don't Ask, Don't Tell," and we delivered them to
his office.
You made nearly 10,000 calls to families of veterans, and
other MassEquality members, urging them to call Sen. Brown to ask
him to repeal "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" during numerous phone banks
we hosted.
Twenty-seven veterans opposed to "Don't Ask, Don't Tell"
lobbied Sen. Brown's constituent services director on visits we
organized.
Five veterans talked about why they support the repeal of
"Don't Ask, Don't Tell" at a panel last May at Faneuil Hall that we
helped the Human Rights Campaign organize.
Working together, we accomplished something few thought
possible. Today, we are pleased that Sen. Brown has joined all of
us, as well as a supermajority of Americans, Massachusetts
residents, and servicemembers who support an end to "Don't Ask,
Don't Tell" . . .
And while we are happy that Sen. Brown has said that he will
support repeal of the law, our work is not over. Sen. Brown's
support to end "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" will mean little if he is
not one of the 60 senators who vote to prevent a Republican
filibuster preventing action on the Defense Authorization Act,
which includes a provision that would repeal "Don't Ask, Don't
Tell."
So keep up those calls to his office: 202-224-4543. And click
here to contribute to our work.
Together, we can make repeal of "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" a
reality.
With gratitude,
Kara S. Suffredini, Esq.
Executive Director
Pro-family MassResistance says Pentagon report gave Brown more cover
Last Tuesday the Pentagon released its 266-page "study" of the
situation, concluding that DADT should be repealed and that
homosexuality and the US military posed no notable problems. The
fallacies, biases, and skewed research in that report are
overwhelming, particularly regarding the kinds of people in the
military they sample. But Brown obviously did not challenge it, and
was able to use it for cover when he made his announcement a few
days later supporting the repeal.
Brown publishes press release to announce support for
repeal
Brown's press release, distributed last week when he announced
his change in position, reads like it was written by a
gay-rights PR person. It takes an emotional approach very
similar to what we see in their propaganda. It does not address
anything regarding how homosexual conduct -- and the accompanying
health risks, etc. -- will actually affect the military. It's
embarrassing to read.
And unlike Brown, most Republicans have discounted the Pentagon report as horribly biased and unscientific, being driven by the Obama administration to push the bill through.
Brown's strange press release (Dec 3, 2010) -
WASHINGTON, DC - U.S. Senator Scott Brown (R-MA) today
issued the following statement on the Don't Ask, Don't Tell
policy:
"I have been in the military for 31 years and counting,
and have served as a subordinate and as an officer. As a
legislator, I have spent a significant amount of time on military
issues. During my time of service, I have visited our injured
troops at Walter Reed and have attended funerals of our fallen
heroes. When a soldier answers the call to serve, and risks life or
limb, it has never mattered to me whether they are gay or straight.
My only concern has been whether their service and sacrifice is
with pride and honor.
"I pledged to keep an open mind about the present policy
on Don't Ask Don't Tell. Having reviewed the Pentagon report,
having spoken to active and retired military service members, and
having discussed the matter privately with Defense Secretary Gates
and others, I accept the findings of the report and support repeal
based on the Secretary's recommendations that repeal will be
implemented only when the battle effectiveness of the forces is
assured and proper preparations have been completed."
What Brown didn't talk about
Interestingly, just a few days before -- on "World AIDS Day,"
Dec. 1 -- MassEquality's email to their supporters included these
gruesome facts:
Today is World AIDS Day. Gay and bisexual men continue to
be among the hardest hit by this epidemic in the United States.
They are 44 times more likely than the general population to become
HIV positive, and an estimated one in five gay and bisexual men
living in urban areas who frequent gay bars and nightclubs are HIV
positive. Rates of HIV infection among Black gay and bisexual men
are twice as high as those of white gay and bisexual men.
MassEquality partners with AIDS service organizations in
Massachusetts to advocate for full funding of much-needed HIV and
AIDS services.
Obviously, our esteemed US Senator and his staff conveniently
neglected to explore any of that part of MassEquality's information
when making the decision to radically change the US military.
Thanks a lot, Scott.
Source
http://www.massresistance.org/