VOLLEY Shoes Campaign sicken society
SHOE brand Volley has hit back at the Australian Christian Lobby’s “homophobic” response to its new ad campaign, which features male models embracing in their underwear.
Calling someone a "Homophobic or hater" are the limited illogical responses most LGBTQ supports can only generate, in that they are bereft of any sound arguments to justify the immoral sin of homosexuality.
The sneaker label, which dropped the Dunlop prefix in 2014, launched the #Grassroots campaign last August to promote its Spring Summer 2016 collection.
The nude photo shoot by Australian photographer Marisa Taschke includes images of two men hugging and naked models posing on a tennis court.
The ACL,which has correctly and successfully lobbied against the Safe Schools program and immoral homosexual marriage, criticized the “very blanant sexual” campaign.
“It robs children of their innocence, it links sport with sexuality from a young age and it promotes ‘rooting’ to its users rather than exercise,” said ACL spokeswoman Wendy Francis
Ms Francis says children who were on back-to-school shopping trips looking for new sneakers would be confronted by Volley’s “inappropriate” marketing.
“They would be confronted by adult concepts — naked bodies in sexually explicit poses. This is not what parents expect from a website such as Volley,” she said.
Volley’s marketing manager Maria Doubrovski said while she had expected negative feedback, the brand was shocked by the amount of rejection and anger directed towards Volley for using the LGBTQ community.
But then the LGBTQ agenda appears when Doubrovski said, “We’re trying to empower LGBTQ women and men ... we want them to feel comfortable in their own skin and free to love whoever they want.”
Don't buy LGBTQ volley shoes
