Obama is Sure About Something

Next he promised ENDA (the Employment Non-Discrimination Act) to punish moral objections to hiring of GLBT persons—even in schools, churches, private business and government offices. The next time you visit your child’s school, after it passes, you could be met by a male teacher in a skirt or a drag queen as the office secretary.

“There are still fellow citizens, perhaps neighbors, even loved ones—good and decent people—who hold fast to outworn arguments and old attitudes,” Obama continued.

I wonder if he had Rick Warren or the audience at Saddleback or the Christian world in mind. Surely that inference to a homosexual audience very clearly suggested that objections to homosexuality on moral grounds constituted those “outworn arguments” and “old attitudes.” What could be older than the Biblical prohibition against same-sex sex?

“I’m here with you in that fight…. My commitment to you is unwavering…. Do not doubt the direction we are headed and the destination we will reach,” the president promised to the applause of the crowd.

If he had only made promises that definitive to Rick Warren… But he did say this during that televised “debate” in the heat of the campaign: “I’m not somebody who promotes same-sex marriage.”

Really? He promised those at the HRC banquet he would overturn the Defense of Marriage Act. Ultimately he fought against Proposition 8 in California, a vote by its citizens to prevent same-sex marriage. And later he made sure he spoke in opposition to traditional marriage advocates in Iowa who were, with his help, defeated.

But the promises to the Human Rights Campaign didn’t end there. In spite of objections by the best military minds who have cautioned about the dangers to troop cohesion in the face of open sexuality of either gender, Obama declared defiantly, “I will end ‘Don’t ask, don’t tell.’ That’s my commitment to you!” Commitment to the homosexual activist community ... not so much to our troops in the field.

“My expectation is that when you look back on these years, you will see a time in which we put a stop to discrimination against gays and lesbians whether in the office or on the battlefield. You will see a time in which we as a nation finally recognize relationships between two men or two women as just as real and admirable as between a man and woman…I am committed to these goals….”

Indeed, I believe he is. For a man who is so uncertain on so many things, of the need to advance homosexual rights, he seems passionately convinced.