Tuesday, December 9, 2008

A Day Without A Gay

I just saw a news blurb about tomorrow's economic protest. The idea is to raise awareness about the passing of California's Proposition 8, Arizona's Proposition 102, and Florida's Amendment 2 in last month's election. Gays, Lesbians and their friends who support them in their sin will call in sick and not spend money tomorrow.

It is kind of sad that Gay marriage advocates think that raising awareness will solve their perceived problem. After all of the unruly protests, false accusations of hatred, chasing down donors, etc you would think that awareness of the issue is at an all time high.

What will A Day without a Gay prove?

Absolutely nothing. Gays and Lesbians and the other sexual deviants in America will eventually have to buy food and gas, pay rent and car bills, go back to work (assuming they still have jobs after irresponsibly calling in sick to prove a point). If anything it will only reinforce in the minds of Americans how annoying this group is, who can marry any member of the opposite sex (just like me, or any other single, consenting adult, i.e. they have the exact same right as everyone else) but wants special recognition and extra rights for their unnatural sexual practices.

What can be done to oppose A Day Without a Gay?

Buy gas for your car, even if you are 3/4 full. Take two minutes on the way home from work to fill up the rest. Eat out for either breakfast, lunch or dinner. Go grocery shopping. Buy a book on Amazon.

In short, spend money on the things you need. Just make sure that you don't wait till Thursday if you can buy it on Wednesday.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Eeeek! I think I got food poisoning from my dinner last night and I almost called in sick today. I had no idea the gay community was doing this today. I'm glad I came into work anyways!

Denise

Stupid Sheep said...

That's silly. It's not like we are trying to make them go away, just not take marriage from us.

My coworker called in. She's straight, but i wonder if that's what she's doing or if she's really sick. Our coworker who died last year, who she was good friends with, was bicurious.

Brandon said...

Why, as tax paying citizens, should those of the GLBT community help the economoy prosper when we are second class citizens as it is?

"Unruly protests"? Not ONE of these protests have been unruly. Yes, there has been a few arrested, but thats typical in EVERY protest.

"Taking away marriage from us (who is us, by the way?)"? Gay marriage has NOTHING to do with straight marriage. If gays were allowed to get married, you'd be able to get married also. Should GLBT people have the right to vote on heterosexual marriages? I think not.

Brandon said...

And unnatural practices? Where on Earth have you gotten your science?

Secondly, the GLBT community isn't wanting more rights that any other individual. We want the God-given freedoms that have been granted to anyone else in American society. To expect anyone to want anything less is ridiculously naive.

Glenn Hendrickson said...

Brandon, God disapproves of homosexuality (Romans 1:18-32). How do you conclude that he has given them special rights? Especially if those rights would encourage them in their sin?

Romans 1:26-27 clearly identifies male-male, and female-female sexual relationships as "unnatural." I may not be a scientist, but if you think about male and female parts and how they fit together... dude, its pretty obvious that they were designed to function in a specific way.

And if you go back on my blog I posted a video of a bunch of homosexual protesters shouting at a quiet elderly christian woman and stomping on her cross. They angrily yelled at her when she was merely trying to represent her belief that gay marriage is wrong. It was very unruly on the part of the homosexuals.

GLBT are not second class citizens. They can marry according to the law. A marriage is, and only can be, a union between a man and a woman and there is no law which prohibits any single, consenting, adult male from marrying a single, consenting, adult female. I have just as much right to marry as a gay man my age does, we are equal. I am just as much a second class citizen as they are (and, really, neither of us are second class citizens)