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A few days ago, I wrote how former cabinet member of the Jimmy Carter administration, National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski, wanted to eliminate certain forms of free speech for offending Islam. In that piece, I also shared how acceptable this idea had become to the mainstream media. Well, the hits keep on coming. In a NY Times editorial that could have come out of George Orwell’s 1984 novel, they are advocating the idea that thoughts and opinions, if they are politically incorrect, be exempt from constitutional protection. Until last week, Kelvin Cochran was the chief of the Atlanta fire department. He wrote and self-published a book in 2013 for his men’s bible study group, Who Told You That You Were Naked?, where he shared his faith in God and expressed his views on such things as sex, marriage, and life. It was his desire to use the book to cultivate a culture that brought glory to God, but it ended in his termination. The reason? Well, according to the NY Times, the book contained “virulent anti-gay views.” And according to Atlanta’s mayor, Kasim Reed, the book contained homophobic language when it called homosexuality a “perversion,” compared it to bestiality and pedophilia, and said homosexual acts are “vile, vulgar, and inappropriate.” In reality, the […]
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