Last
year, my office in Washington had to temporarily close because of
threats when, in a cable TV interview, I equated the LGBTQ rainbow flag
to the confederate flag. From my point a view,
it's a totally reasonable assertion. As a black American, the
Confederate flag communicates to me that I am not welcome. As a
Christian American, the rainbow flag communicates to me that I am not
welcome.
According
to a recent Gallup survey, 41 percent of Americans identify as
evangelical Christians. Will the course of events in LGBTQ-controlled
America preclude them from shopping, working,
speaking, existing in our nation's public spaces?
Dana Mathewson tosses in his 2c:
Star
nails it -- as she always does. The Left wants to control everything. I
might point out that most gays (I can't speak for some of the other
people identified
by the other letters in that LGBTQ mashup) merely want to live their
lives and be treated like "everyone else," and are happy that they can
go into a Chick-fil-A (for example) and get a good meal and not be
hassled.
But
the alphabets who view everything through a political lens really seem
to want to control the world and bend it in their direction. I don't
think they're going
to succeed (Lord help them if they ever did -- they'd find they have
much, much more of a job on their hands than they bargained for), but at
the same time we have to push back -- with manners if possible --
whenever we can.
To
counteract that nutcase who apologized for eating at Chick-fil-A, we
should go there, get a sandwich and rave about the quality of the food
and the service on
their website --