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Monday, October 29, 2007
Star Parker :: Townhall.com Columnist
ENDA, Obama and the cultural war
by Star Parker
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The House Democratic leadership delayed a planned vote this past week on ENDA, the Employment Non-Discrimination Act of 2007. The bill, introduced by gay Rep. Barney Frank of Massachusetts, makes employment discrimination against homosexuals and bisexuals illegal.

One reason that momentum on moving the legislation has stalled is because lesbian Rep. Tammy Baldwin from Wisconsin wants a provision covering transsexuals and transgenders, originally in, then removed, put back in.

President Bush has indicated that, if passed, he will veto this legislation. And he should.

There are a good number of reasons offered by the administration, and by others, why this bill is constitutionally problematic.

But beyond the bill's many technical constitutional difficulties, it's worth considering it in the context of the ongoing cultural war taking place in this country.

Those pushing ENDA would have us believe that this is about making our country more just, fairer, more free. But is this really what is going on?

Consider the uproar of recent days among Sen. Barack Obama's gay constituency about his hiring of gospel singer Donny McClurkin to perform in Obama's campaign tour through South Carolina.

This is a critical state for the Illinois lawmaker, with a huge churchgoing black electorate.

What could be a better idea than headlining a Grammy-winning gospel singer to perform as part of his swing through the state?

The problem is that McClurkin not only preaches the gospel of the straight and traditional life, but he himself was once part of the gay lifestyle. He says that he was sexually abused as a child, which set him on the trajectory of homosexual behavior.

But through prayer and resolve, McClurkin changed. And he insists that anyone can change, as did he.

When word of the decision of the Obama campaign to employ McClurkin got out, Obama soon heard from Joe Solmonese, president of the Human Rights Campaign, the nation's largest gay-rights organization.

According to press reports, Solmonese urged Obama to cancel McClurkin's appearance and subsequently expressed disappointment when this did not happen.

Now wait a second. Let's recap where we are.

We've got legislation moving through Congress, pushed by gay activists, that would make it illegal for an employer to not hire, or to fire, someone because of their sexual orientation. But the head of the nation's largest gay-activist organization asks Obama to fire a man because he is a Christian and an advocate of traditional values?

Freedom? Justice? Fairness? America?

What exactly has McClurkin done that justifies, in the eyes of Solmonese, that he be fired? Continued...

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About The Author
Star Parker is a nationally syndicated columnist through the Scripps Howard News Service and a regular commentator on CNN, MSNBC, and FOX News, as well as author of White Ghetto: How Middle Class America Reflects Inner City Decay.
 
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who is Parker to judge?
I don't know why heterosexuals continue to insist that 'gay people can change.' And clearly don't know how to associate a gay person's orientation with their own.
Nobody seems to have the courage to even THINK what it would take to make a hetero person gay.
Imagine what it would take...and you have your own answer and then the stupidity in arguing with a gay person wouldn't continue.
Donnie McClurkin (and I own several of his CD's) did not change.
He's not active. That's all.
And each one of you knows that if you were celibate the rest of YOUR lives, that wouldn't change YOUR orientation, would it?

Here's what I REALLY don't understand. Why do straight people want to compete romantically with gay people?
How many straight men and women ended up feeling all kinds of fool for not only thinking they could 'turn' someone, but how hurt and betrayed they felt when they were left by a gay spouse?
And yet, society insists they keep doing the same set up over and over again.
There is NO compelling reason for a gay person TO change. There is NO compelling reason for a gay person to marry heterosexually.
Now, it makes more sense for a gay person to be with another gay person.
Donnie McClurkin is an example of a person damaged by expectations for gay people from the outside, and not for himself.
He's going around speaking for a community he's not entitled to speak for. He's got an identity problem, and assumes ALL gay people do.
Not so.



To Noelegy
No need to apologize.
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