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Monday, May 07, 2007
Harry R. Jackson, Jr. :: Townhall.com Columnist
Your Grandmother Could Be Next: The Hate Crimes Bills
by Harry R. Jackson, Jr.
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Last Thursday, I nervously entered C-SPAN’s Washington, D.C. Studios. The program format normally includes remarks from different points of view, call-in responses from its national audience, and commentary from its host. It was a great opportunity for me to speak to the nation concerning the encroachment that a new law, HR 1592 “Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act of 2007,” represents to our freedom of speech and freedom of religion. This law promises to grant protected status to “sexual orientation” and “gender identity” – essentially mandating unequal protection under the law, which will pave the way for criminalization of thoughts and religious beliefs contrary to politically correct ideology.

I was opposed to this legislation for two reasons. First, as a Christian I am aware that this kind of legislation has opened the door to the arrest, fines, or incarceration of Christians in Sweden, Australia, Canada, and the U.S. In fact, in Philadelphia in 2004 such an incident occurred during a protest rally at a gay convention. A 75-year old grandmother of three was arrested, jailed, and charged under existing state hate crimes law for attempting to share the gospel of Jesus Christ. Ironically, no one was hurt, wounded, or even intimidated by her actions. If anything, law enforcement officials sent the citizens of their state a message – “Gays can protest, intimidate and harass anyone anywhere but Christians had better not speak.” HR-1592 would embolden this kind of law enforcement.

My second reason for opposing this legislation is that sexual orientation will be elevated to the same status as race or gender. Surprisingly, the African leader I was set to debate was in agreement with this landmark step. He represented the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights (LCCR) founded in 1950 with over 192 national organizations. The LCCR has enjoyed the reputation of being the nation's premier civil rights coalition coordinating the legislative campaign for every major civil rights law since 1957.

Unfortunately, this powerful and formerly effective organization has been co-opted by the radical gay movement. Please read this excerpt from their website:

“LCCR, representing persons of color, women, children, labor unions, individuals with disabilities, older Americans, major religious groups, gays and lesbians, and civil liberties and human rights groups. Its mission: to promote the enactment and enforcement of effective civil rights legislation and policy.”

I was shocked to discover that the AARP, The American Association of University Women, and the American Federation of Teachers were organizational members of this group’s board. In my view, out-of-touch leaders have desecrated the memory of its founders. The three visionaries of this organization were A. Philip Randolph (founder of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters), Roy Wilkins, (Executive Secretary of the NAACP), and Arnold Aronson, (a leader of the National Jewish Community Relations Advisory Council).

With all this in mind, I entered the C-SPAN debate with a David-and-Goliath kind of feeling. This feeling was generated by the way Congress had fast-tracked the bill and was poised to vote on it later the same day. Further, Washington insiders predicted that the vote would go strictly along party lines. In addition, my side had not been called upon to give any input into this process until the eleventh hour. Even if I won the debate, we could not stop the process. As one of my friends put it, “The train had left the station.” I dutifully followed through with the broadcast, believing that we would stop this bill either in the Congress, the Senate, or by Presidential veto. I realized clearly that this was the beginning of a war for America’s soul that would be waged intensely for the next few months – perhaps years

The debate flew by. Their representative was articulate and skilled in the fine points of his argument, yet after a mile of legal rhetoric he gave me no evidence that Christians would remain free from prosecution. What is needed in our nation is a justice system that is truly color blind, handing out sentences and punishment appropriate for each crime. Continued...

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About The Author

Bishop Harry Jackson is chairman of the High Impact Leadership Coalition and senior pastor of Hope Christian Church in Beltsville, MD, and co-authored, Personal Faith, Public Policy [FrontLine; March 2008] with Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council.

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correction
This should have read, "All of us would be, and were, FTM, **horrified and angered** in a previous case, when a gay was beaten and murdered."

du
Sorry to take so long but here's my $0.02 worth.

"Fair point to make cad-man...but what alternatives are there when the states are DERELICT in their duty?"

The feds have stepped in before to deal with civil rights violations but on a case-by-case basis, not as the entity in charge at all times. Having the feds running the show in all cases is not desirable because then the feds have their agenda and it AIN'T protecting civil rights. Consider what is happening at the border: two Border Patrol agents were railroaded to prison for allegedly shooting a Mexican drug trafficker who regularly crosses the border illegally to deliver his cargo. Evidence that the bullet that hit him in the @$$ didn't come from either agent's gun was withheld and the criminal was given immunity from prosecution -- in spite of the fact that he continued to smuggle more drugs in. Reminded me of the Navy's vendetta against the skipper of the USS Indianapolis where the Japanese sub captain who sank the ship was brought in as a prosecution witness.

And then there is the case of the property owner who caught illegals sneaking across his property and held them for police. The Mexican government sued him and our federal govt turned its back on him and he had to sell his property to pay his legal fees. And guess what: the illegals wound up living in HIS house.

The feds can't be trusted to do the right thing.

"...decided to tap these thugs on the wrist for their brutal beating of three young white women, two of whom are still very injured and not recovered yet.

I am disgusted with that, and DESPITE the fact that THIS WAS a hate crime by it's definition AND one of the defendants has since committed another assault..."

BINGO!

"Now, just WHAT is going to happen now, to those defendents who commit a hate based crime against someone of the LGBT community, and the judge is equally derelict because he's got his own prejudice?"

That would be a federal judge and some of them are incompetent, to say the least. What passed for a trial in the Martha Stewart case is evidence of that. That judge should have retired long before while she still had some brain cells left.

"Pardon me, but it doesn't look like we can trust many of the people who post on this board to care about what happens to a gay victim. And their killers or bashers are usually very candid about their motives and plans precisely because of people LIKE Jackson."

You misjudge Jackson and the posters here. All of us would be, and were, FTM, in a previous case, when a gay was beaten and murdered. But murder is still murder regardless of sexual preference, race, religion or national origin. A federal "hate crime" law is unnecessary.



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