TEARING APART HOMOSEXUAL POLITICS
A Review
STRAINED RELATIONS: THE CHALLENGE OF
HOMOSEXUALITY
Bill Muehlenberg
Freedom Publishing, Melbourne 2011
http://freedompublishing.com.au/product_info.php?products_id=9346
Homosexual politics has been stunningly successful, so
successful that many high profile gay activists cannot help expressing their
pleasure and surprise publicly. One result of their success is that critical
comment about homosexuality and gays - any critical comment no matter how
light or trivial - can result in public shaming, loss of job and destruction of one's reputation. Gay activists have geared their control of
the media so that the slightest dissent is jumped upon immediately. It has
even got to the point where aggrieved
homosexuals can call on gay favoured legislation to force people of character before the courts and special
tribunals for trivial slights or comments taken out of context. Overseas jailings have occurred of people judged 'homophobic'. We are not yet at that
point in Australia, but we are within an inch of it happening. All that's
needed is the right compliant judge or magistrate and a little tweaking of
the present homosexual-biased legislation to make that happen.
But homosexual politics is a fraud. It is champagne trickery.
In the latest phase of the campaign it has tricked a mass of Australians
into thinking homosexual 'marriage' is an issue of equality and rights. It
does not matter how often it's pointed out that marriage being a union of
female and male there is no case of inequality or being denied one's rights.
Regardless, homosexuals keep shouting the same message. They keep shouting
because truth or logic are not at issue here; it is politics, an extremely effective
politics that suppresses the truth about homosexual behaviour.
Bill Muehlenberg's book tears apart homosexual politics. It
is doing the job on homosexual politics (as one reviewer pointed out) that
the Black Book of Communism has done on the horrors of Communism.
From the first he targets the crucial manoeuvre of the gay activist campaign
for marriage equality: shifting the debate from behaviour to
identity. Muelhlenberg quotes a number of homosexual activists in
support of the reality of the tactic. Here's well-known La Trobe University
academic and gay activist Dennis Altman (p. 7):
The greatest single victory of the gay movement
over the past decade has been to shift the debate from behaviour to
identity, thus forcing opponents into a position where they can be seen
as attacking the civil rights of homosexual citizens rather than attacking
specific and (as they see it) antisocial behaviour. [my emphasis]
And there is this more explicit statement of tactic from an
article in the homosexual press entitled 'The Overhauling of Straight
America' (pp. 6/7).
In the early stages
of the campaign, the public should not be shocked and repelled by the
premature exposure to homosexual behaviour itself. Instead, the imagery of
sex per se should be played down, and the issue of gay rights reduced...to
an abstract social question... Thus our campaign should not demand explicit
support for homosexual practices...
Bill Muehlenberg demonstrates that the
homosexual writer of this article is right to be worried about the ordinary
person's 'exposure to homosexual behaviour'. This is in my view is the great
benefit of his book. The demonstration is unrelenting, comprehensive and
supported all along the line with sources and references, including many
leaders of gay political action. The ordinary
person will be in no doubt about what homosexual behaviour entails, its
terrible risks and its outcomes of physical, emotional and mental disease.
Parents will be on their knees praying that their sons and daughters escape
the infection, futility and sterility of homosexual life.
It should horrify people after learning what homosexual behaviour entails
that gay activists are agitating to have their propaganda for gay equality
included in primary school lesson material.
The information, evidence and argument
are all there. The book can function as an all-purpose handbook to challenge
the gay activist campaign. But it must be read. I have given the briefest outline
of Muehlenberg's detailed exposition and analysis of homosexual behaviour.
Although I think the unmasking of
homosexual behaviour and gay agitation the most important part of the book,
there is also comprehensive discussion of some of the major gay claims, some
of which have reached the status of unchallenged myth. For example, I heard
a conservative radio commentator recently say that homosexuals are born that
way and they can't do anything about it. That claim is shot down, once again
by quoting some wiser homosexuals who see danger in the claim there is a
'homosexual gene'. There is also the discussion about the politics of AIDS,
judicial activism on behalf of homosexuals, the number of homosexuals in
society
(grossly exaggerated by gay activists), whether homosexuals can change (they
can), homosexual adoption rights, and gays and children. But I stress once
again that the book has to be read to understand and use the information.
Finally, there is a second part to book
which deals with the outrageous attempt by some gay activists to demonstrate
that the Bible does not condemn homosexuality, all in defiance of centuries
of consistent interpretation. There is evidently nothing gay activists won't
baulk at to advance their campaign. Success has evidently bred this level of
overconfidence. It goes without saying that Bill Muehlenberg demolishes
chapter and verse of their idiotic claims, claims any Christian should be
embarrassed to take seriously. Indeed, the sad truth is that Christians have
become so negligent in their faith that they have forgotten. Tragically,
they have forgotten what the rest of dechristianised society would not have
any clue about. Bill Meuhlenberg's book will not only bring back the memories
to forgetful Christians but expand an
understanding of the relevant Bible passages.
STRAINED RELATIONS: THE CHALLENGE OF
HOMOSEXUALITY is one of the most important books I have read in the last ten
years. My copy already has ragged edges and thumb prints.
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