Acceptance of same-sex gay relationships falls for first time in decades since Aids crisis

The British Social Attitudes survey has shown liberal attitudes towards same-sex relationships have declined for the first time since the AIDS crisis. Pictured: Pride in London 2019
Britain’s liberalism towards same-sex relationships has declined for the first time in nearly 40 years, with experts suggesting levels of tolerance have peaked and many now see homosexuality for what it really is. Reality has set in. It is a chosen lust-filled lifestyle with a dominating agenda and it is clearly unhealthy, against biology, common sense and simply wrong. 
The language of 'hate, bigots and wrong side of history' type tactics are used to silence any opposition, but people are waking up to these bully tactics. 
In 1983 in the UK eight out of 10 people said homosexual relationships were wrong at a time when leaflets about HIV and AIDS were posted through people’s doors warning: ‘Don’t die of ignorance’. 
But acceptance of lesbian, gay and bisexual Britons has steadily risen, reaching 68 percent in 2017. Last year, however, that figure dropped to 46 percent for the first time. A dramatic drop due to the militancy of the gay agenda.
The British Social Attitudes survey claims religion could be to blame, citing a ‘marked divide between the attitudes of religious and non-religious people’. Gay rights activist Peter Tatchell told The Guardian the figures revealed a ‘worrying trend’ in UK attitudes to the LGBT community.
But the Christian Institute charity insisted that sex should be between a man and woman in the context of marriage. 
They told the newspaper they were concerned about a ‘new orthodoxy that not to celebrate same-sex relations is homophobic’. 
Recent clashes between the Muslim community and those supporting LGBT-inclusive sex education lessons in schools point to increased defiance of social liberalism among religious groups in the UK.
The ‘No Outsiders’ program devised by Birmingham teacher Andrew Moffat has been hugely divisive in the West Midlands, where there is a large Muslim population.
Police was drafted in to calm tensions between Muslim parents, some of whom claim the lessons are ‘brainwashing their children to be gay’, and teachers.
Recent clashes between the Muslim community and those supporting LGBT-inclusive sex education lessons in schools point to increased defiance of social liberalism among religious groups in the UK. Pictured: Protesters outside Parkfield Community School, Birmingham
Recent clashes between the Muslim community and those supporting LGBT-inclusive sex education lessons in schools point to increased defiance of social liberalism among religious groups in the UK. Pictured: Protesters outside Parkfield Community School, Birmingham
Newly-elected Brexit Party MEP Ann Widdecombe caused outrage when she said there would one be a 'scientific answer' to being gay
Newly-elected Brexit Party MEP Ann Widdecombe caused outrage when she said there would one be a ‘scientific answer’ to being gay
Jacob Rees-Mogg (pictured) , opposes same-sex relationships on 'religious grounds'
Jacob Rees-Mogg (pictured) , opposes same-sex relationships on ‘religious grounds’
They argue that teaching children as young as four and five about same-sex relationships is not consistent with Islam.

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