Gay Agenda Unifies

So frequently "gay rights issues", and most recently marriage equality issues, are portrayed as divisive — needlessly divisive, since we schismatic homos could so easily stay tucked away in the closet where nature intended us to stay.
But wait! Here's validation of the gay agenda from, of all sources, the New York Times! ("Clerics Fighting a Gay Festival for Jerusalem".) Yes, it seems that if we try hard enough, the militant homosexual lobby can actually be a unifying force.
There are plans for a giant gay-pride festival to take place in Jerusalem. Really big. The major religions of the world are not happy about this.

International gay leaders are planning a 10-day WorldPride festival and parade in Jerusalem in August, saying they want to make a statement about tolerance and diversity in the Holy City, home to three great religious traditions.
Now major leaders of the three faiths – Christianity, Judaism and Islam – are making a rare show of unity to try to stop the festival. They say the event would desecrate the city and convey the erroneous impression that homosexuality is acceptable.

There you have it: proof that the homosexual agenda is really a unifying force. Can you name one other group that has been able to bring together representatives of Islam, Christianity, and Judaism with such a single-minded vision? Forget that Anglican schism crap — it's just a diversion from our major accomplishment here with "the three faiths".
There's even photographic confirmation, with a sheik, a couple of patriarchs, and a couple of rabbis, all in their most festive religious drag.
There is one point that I found curious about the photo, which shows these guys lined up behind a table pretending to like each other. Here's the caption:

Religious leaders met on Wednesday in Jerusalem in a united protest against a gay pride festival planned there in August. From left: Sheik Abed es- Salem Menasra, deputy mufti of Jerusalem; the Rev. Michel Sabbagh, the Latin patriarch; the Rev. Aris Shirvanian, the Armenian patriarch; Rabbi Shlomo Amar, the Sephardic chief rabbi; and Rabbi Yona Metzger, the Ashkenazi chief rabbi. The man at right was not identified.

This is the New York Times, and "the man at right was not identified"? Hey, that's really professional journalism, isn't it? You'd think that the Times people might have heard about cropping photos, but maybe they just liked the way his beard looked (although I don't think he's as hot looking as Rabbi Metzger).

Posted on March 31, 2005 at 13.45 by jns · Permalink
In: All, Splenetics

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