Translating the "Obama's Gay Waffle" Article
One of the services that I provide the readers of this humblest of blogs is explaining and clarifying what inept journalistas are attempting to say. Now I shall tackle this editorial. My clarifications are in brackets below.
Pastor Rick Warren, the famous leader of Lake Forest's Saddleback Church, became a lightning rod in the [so-called] same-sex marriage controversy when he was chosen to deliver the invocation at Barack Obama's inauguration. Yet he didn't give his [hysterical] opponents anything to shout about Tuesday[, as if ever they need an excuse to shout like a bunch of howler monkeys], offering a prayer that was short, inspirational and above all [disappointingly] uncontroversial. That points up an uncomfortable truth for proponents of gay rights: Warren may not be as big a problem as the [heterosexual] President he blessed.
Warren, who has infuriated many by [allegedly] equating homosexual unions with incest, child molestation and polygamy, is entitled to his religious beliefs [i.e., the moral teachings which all traditional Christians hold]. President Obama is too, but on Tuesday he swore allegiance to a document quite separate from the Bible: the U.S. Constitution, which forbids all forms of discrimination[, as it is vaguely defined by those who endlessly repeat this word nowadays]. Obama showed how clearly he understood that in his inaugural address, when he said: "The time has come to reaffirm our enduring spirit; to choose our better history; to carry forward that precious gift, that noble idea, passed on from generation to generation: the God-given promise that all are equal, all are free and all deserve a chance to pursue their full measure of happiness."
It is impossible to adhere to those principles while also [supposedly] proposing that some citizens should have fewer rights than others for no better reason than the majority disapproves of their sexual preference. Obama claims not to support such discrimination[, a word which we now shamelessly hurl at our first black President], but his views on the issue are an embarrassing muddle [to the naive]; he opposed Proposition 8, California's same-sex marriage ban, yet says unequivocally that he believes "marriage" is strictly between one man and one woman. [It's almost as if Barack Obama wants to prove the rightwing claim that he is actually a politician disguised as the Second Coming!]
Obama is caught up in semantics[, as are gay rights people, albeit unconsciously], apparently believing that gays and lesbians [and bi-sexual and transgendered, transhumanoid beings] should be allowed to engage in civil unions with all the rights of marriage [besides baby-making], as long as they aren't called marriages. That's an evasion that was rightly rejected in May by the [activist] California Supreme Court when it overturned a previous ban on same-sex marriage, because such semantic distinctions tend to cast doubt on a union's legitimacy [for tax purposes].
At the time of Obama's birth in 1961, some states would not have allowed his interracial parents to have married. [(We're really trying to pretend we care about this―is anyone buying it?)] He, of all people, should know better. [And if he keeps this up, we all gonna diss him like we done Clarence Thomas.]
UPDATE: When I started this post, the title was "Obama's Gay-marriage Waffle". Now the headline has been changed to "Now, about gay marriage". Wonder what happened... did they get a call from the Obama White House? He's President now, bitches.
LOL! Well, it' refreshing to see the libs penning anything even mildly critical of The One. You should see the news headlines on the Yahoo home page: "Obama Brushes Teeth, Nation Watches in Adoring Wonder." "Michelle Shops Online for Gourmet Puppy Food for New Labradoodle." "Presidential Nose Blowing Marks Event; Audience Members Rush to Retrieve Souvenir Snot."
ReplyDeleteUgh. Please wake me up in four years.
OK, now we've just learned that Obama uses a BlackBerry. Be still, my beating heart!
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