Tread carefully,
America. The skirmishes around the nation centered on rights for lesbians,
gays, bisexuals and transgenders are not really about rights for lesbians,
gays, bisexuals and transgenders.
They’re about the
decimation of the First Amendment and the destruction of traditional family.
And the latest local battle to drive a wedge in the national norm is in Utah,
where 25 groups dedicated to advancing the LGBT rights’ movement have signed on
to a
letter urging the Big 12, which is considering a team expansion, to turn a
blind eye on Brigham Young University.
Of the Mormon
school, the coalition wrote: “[BYU] actively and openly discriminates against
its LGBT students and staff. In fact, through its policies, BYU is very clear
about its intent to discriminate against openly LGBT students, with sanctions
that can include suspension or dismissal for being openly LGBT or in a same-sex
relationship. … Given BYU’s homophobic, biphobic and transphobic policies and
practices, BYU should not be rewarded with Big 12 membership.”
But that’s typical
special interest-driven bunk.
BYU, a private facility in
Provo that’s owned and operated by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints, does in fact have policies regarding homosexual relations. It also has
them – and curious, but the coalition’s letter doesn’t speak to this – for
heterosexuals. In fact, the school’s honor code, which speaks to the need of
students and staff to “demonstrate in daily living on and off-campus those
moral virtues encompassed in the gospel of Jesus Christ,” is specific in its
expectations for everybody who attends. It requires all BYUers to
“be honest,” to live a chaste and virtuous life,” and to “participate regularly
in church services.” It doesn’t even allow them to swear – or drink coffee or
caffeinated tea.
It’s in the
context of discussing the do’s and don’ts of proper BYUer behaviors that
homosexuality is brought up, in a special section that makes clear: “Homosexual
behavior is inappropriate.”
But before
cracking the “see, I told you so” whip wielded by the rabidly pro-LGBT rights’
crowd, read a little bit more. Simply professing same-sex attraction is not a
code violation.
“One’s stated
same-gender attraction is not an Honor Code issue,” the policy reads. “[BYU] will
respond to homosexual behavior rather than to feelings or attraction.”
That means an honor
code violation is only given in those instances when students or staffers act
on those sexual attractions. But here’s the part the LGBT agenda-drivers
conveniently overlook and ignore: BYU’s sex-based prohibitions apply equally to
homosexuals as well as heterosexuals. In other words: the honor code demands
chastity for all unmarried students and staffers, no matter their sexual
preferences.
If the whole LGBT
movement is aimed at demanding and receiving equal rights and equal treatment –
at getting the same types of societal benefits as heterosexuals – then the
reaction to BYU’s honor code should be this: Mission accomplished. But it’s
not. And that’s because the LGBT community’s clamor for rights at choice spots
around the nation in recent months has little to do with justice and equality
and everything to do with destroying societal roots, norms and standards.
In 2012, lesbian
activist Masha Gessen said in
a speech “it’s a no-brainer that the institution of marriage should not
exist” and that sanctioning a man and a woman as the legal caretakers of
children is ridiculous.
In 2013, the
far-left Nation published
opinions from LGBT activists Tamara Metz and Amber Hollibaugh who said,
respectively, the next step for the movement was to “disestablish marriage” and
to “queer” the country’s economy.
“I want a LGBTQ
movement that queers the reality of Walmart line jobs, sex work and homeless
shelters,” Hollibaugh wrote.
And in 2016, the Huffington
Post’s “Queer Voices” section blasted this headline in a story about
offering stock photographs of gays to wire services like Getty: “Redefining the
‘Traditional’ American Family in 7 Stunning Images.”
Meanwhile, the
battle over bathroom genders goes on, with entities from the White
House to Target
retail demanding men dressed as women be given access to female facilities, and
vice versa. But this BYU battle is a First Amendment religious freedom hit in
disguise. What the coalition of LGBT groups is in effect saying in their letter
is that Christian-based organizations have a right to their religious beliefs –
so long as those religious beliefs don’t conflict or oppose the LGBT agenda.
And they’re trying to steamroll that belief into the common culture via the
sports world. Americans, particularly those of Christian faith and patriotic
bent, take heed. BYU today; the local church tomorrow.
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