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Thursday, September 04, 2008
Brian Fitzpatrick :: Townhall.com Columnist
Pro-Gay Journalist: Palin's Religious Worldview "Controversial"
by Brian Fitzpatrick
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In an obvious attempt to create a Jeremiah Wright-style scandal for the Republican presidential ticket – and to marginalize conservative Christian values – Huffington Post National Editor Nico Pitney is questioning the religious beliefs of GOP Vice Presidential candidate Sarah Palin and her former pastor.

A Sept. 2 Huffington Post (HP) article by Pitney and Political Reporter Sam Stein begins with an ominous headline: “Palin's Church May Have Shaped Controversial Worldview.” They write, “And if the political storm over Barack Obama’s former pastor Jeremiah Wright is any indication, Palin may face some political fallout over the more controversial teachings of Wasilla Assembly of God.”

Pitney and Stein label Palin’s worldview “controversial,” and quote snippets from Wasilla Senior Pastor Ed Kalnins’s sermons that paint him as extreme.  Wasilla Assembly of God church member Karissa Nelson told CMI what she thought of the HP story: “It’s sad how people twist your words.”

In his effort to marginalize Palin’s religious values, Pitney appears to be advancing a political agenda.  Just two weeks ago, the self-described “advocacy” journalist was scheduled to participate in a panel on opinion writing at the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association convention in Washington, D.C.  Pitney told CMI he is neither a homosexual nor a member of NLGJA, but he is clearly an ideological fellow traveler.

According to the NLGJA convention program, Pitney “oversees politics coverage and Huffpost’s original reporting unit.” Before joining the leftwing Huffington Post Web site, Pitney was deputy research director at a progressive think tank, the Center for American Progress (CAP).

In a revealing interview with the homosexual Web site Queerty, Pitney described his work at CAP as “opposition research on conservatives and conservative ideas, policies and figures.”  He said he moved to the HP Web site because, “…with Huffington Post, I have the ability to do some more advocacy oriented stuff if I want to and also I dig up new information through the journalism we do there…” 

Homosexual activists have long identified conservative religious believers as their greatest enemies in the battle to obtain their social and political objectives. Furniture magnate Mitchell Gold, who organized an NLGJA convention panel on religion reporting, said, “the single biggest [obstacle] to gays having equal rights in the country is religion.”  As reported earlier by CMI, Gold’s panel focused on reducing conservative religious influence on public policy.

In their HP article, Pitney and Stein criticize remarks Palin made during a June 8 speech at Wasilla Assembly of God, her former home church. Palin asked her audience, students graduating from a ministerial training program, to pray about foreign policy issues and Alaska’s efforts to build a gas pipeline.  According to the authors,

Palin’s address, much of which was spent reflecting on the work of the church in which she grew up and was baptized, underscores the notion that her world view is deeply impacted by religion. In turn, her remarks raise important questions: mainly, what is Palin's faith and how exactly has it influenced her policies?

To define Palin’s faith, Pitney and Stein quote what they describe as “provocative” and “eyebrow-raising” statements by Wasilla pastor Ed Kalnins.  The minister’s teachings, however, may not be as controversial as Pitney and Stein believe. The HP writers display a very poor understanding of conservative Protestant theology and language.

For example, Pitney and Stein quote Kalnins saying in 2004, “I’m not going tell you who to vote for, but if you vote for this particular person [Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry], I question your salvation. I’m sorry.”   As they understand the statement, Kalnins “questioned whether people who voted for Sen. John Kerry in 2004 would be accepted to heaven.” Their interpretation of Kalnins’s remarks conflicts sharply with the evangelical Protestant theology of salvation. Continued...

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About The Author

Brian Fitzpatrick, a writer, editor, and commentator on political and cultural issues, is the Senior Editor at Media Research Center’s Culture & Media Institute.

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con't
Double standards on that score are easily pointed out and constantly denied or ignored in this argument against gay civil freedoms.
What I'm observing is every ludicrous attempt to rationalize those double standards, instead of examining WHY they happen.

Fitzpatrick isn't the only one that sees a conspiracy of gay citizens to undermine instead of get along.
An irrational belief that challenging language that incites to violence and inferior treatment is wrong. A union of gay people is a union plotting to overthrow hetero institutions.

The utter irrational PARANOIA that seeps into EACH and EVERY article on gay people.
Most of you are a fight looking for an enemy that isn't there, and gay people are the easiest because they are the most DIFFERENT, but no less committed to serving their society in as competent a way as possible in SPITE of your efforts.

People of faith should be concerned with fairness and what that fairness will result in, not denial of fairness and making up bad reasons for it's denial as you go.

oh and ICE and the others
Gay people are not obligated for ANY reason to change, integrate your religion or be denied their humanity and social conscious to make YOU happy.

And the happiness of gay people does not come at the expense of what YOU want to believe, just what you try to control.
It's not YOUR right to control gay people or deny their access, as I said...to do the same things that are considered of merit when anyone ELSE does it. Nor should gay people be punished and denied for the list of 'sins' also committed by anyone else who isn't gay.
This destroys the merit in the foundation of the golden rule and the credibility of those who say their moral values are faith based.
They should be MERIT, goodness and EQUALITY based. And no protest should rise, nor new set of standards impossible to meet, when gay people challenge or exceed your own constantly moving bar of expectation.
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