Pro-LGBT Clinton previously defended marriage as ‘sacred bond’ of man and woman
Hillary Clinton in Hampton, NH (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
Like the Democratic U.S. president she is
trying to succeed, Hillary Clinton has done a 180-degree U-turn on the
legalization of homosexual “marriage”—going from a religious-minded foe of
genderless “marriage” in 2000 to a fervent crusader for it today as a supposed
“constitutional right.”
Most ominously in a post-Obergefell America that is increasingly hostile
to citizens who do not wish to participate in or validate same-sex “marriage,”
Hillary Clinton is now a vocal opponent of “religious freedom restoration” laws
like the one overturned in Indiana. These laws aim to preserve people’s right
to live out their support for natural marriage before God (a belief Hillary
shared pre-2013) and not to countenance sin.
She also openly expresses hostility to faith-based citizens who
refuse to bend their thinking on homosexual “marriage.”
In that vein, Mrs. Clinton touts the federal LGBTQ “Equality
Act,” which adds homosexuality and transgenderism to the 1964 Civil Rights Act
and which, in its present form, would explicitly negate the federal Religious
Freedom Restoration Act—which Congress passed to defend the religious liberty
and the First Amendment.
In 2013, Mrs. Clinton’s rather quick “evolution” on the issue
culminated in her making the switch to supporting “gay marriage.” Gone was talk
of the “sanctity of marriage”; she replaced that with calls for “marriage
equality” (adopting the LGBTQ activist euphemism). Two years later, she tweeted
that she was “Proud to Celebrate” the Supreme Court’s Obergefell decision that effectively imposed
radically redefined “marriage” on all 50 states-- including many whose citizens
voted overwhelmingly to preserve God-ordained marriage between husband and
wife.
Sounded like a Republican today
In 2000, Hillary Clinton—like most Democratic politicians during
that time—opposed not just homosexuality-based “marriage” but also legalizing
homosexual “civil unions” —a political stepping-stone to “gay marriage” that
gave recognition and marital benefits to same-sex erotic relationships but
without calling them “marriage.”
Said Hillary then, "Marriage has got historic,
religious and moral content that goes back to the beginning of time and I think
a marriage is as a marriage has always been, between a man and a woman,"
the Washington Post reported.
In 2004--arguing on the Senate floor against the Marriage
Protection Amendment, which would make natural marriage between man
and woman as inviolable in U.S. law—Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-New York) sounded
like many Republicans today:
I believe marriage is not just a bond but a sacred
bond between a man and a woman. I have had occasion in my life to defend
marriage, to stand up for marriage, to believe in the hard work and challenge
of marriage. So I take umbrage at anyone who might suggest that those of us who
worry about amending the Constitution are less committed to the sanctity of
marriage, or to the fundamental bedrock principle that it exists between a man
and a woman, going back into the midst of history as one of the founding,
foundational institutions of history and humanity and civilization, and that
its primary, principal role during those millennia has been the raising and
socializing of children for the society into which they are to become adults.
In 2000, Mrs. Clinton also said she would have voted for the
1996 Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA)—signed by her husband Bill in 1996—which
established the primacy of natural, man-woman marriage in the federal
government, and protected states who sought to preserve historic marriage
through their own laws and constitutions. The Supreme Court overturned the
former part of DOMA in 2013 (Windsor), and struck down the
latter part in 2015 (Obergefell).
Jump forward to 2015, when Hillary Clinton made a made a major
campaign speech at the Human Rights Campaign, the nation’s largest and most
powerful homosexual-bisexual lobby organization, where she trumpeted the Obergefell decision. She described
nationalized homosexual "marriage" as "real progress."
The Clinton presidential campaign has produced pro-LGBTQ
campaign ads that show people of the same sex kissing and extol homosexual
“married” couples. (Neither Donald Trump nor the Republican Party countered
such ads.)
Harsh words for dissenters
In a testy 2014 interview with NPR’s “Fresh Air”
host Terry Gross, who criticized her from the Left, Hillary Clinton
said she had rapidly “evolved” on homosexuality-based “marriage” since the
1990’s like much of the nation. Then, ominously, she took issue with the
principled, faith-based Americans who do not wish to compromise or “evolve”
like her on marriage. Reported Fox News:
Clinton
also criticized those opposed to legalizing same-sex marriage, saying they are
never open to change and live in an “evidence-free zone.” She said she believes
it is good for people to continuously change.
“One of my big problems right now is that too many
people believe they have a direct line to the divine and they never want to
change their mind about anything,” she said.
Just like her approach on the issue of abortion, it is becoming
increasingly apparent that on the entire homosexual and transgender agenda,
Hillary Clinton believes it is the role and duty of government and the courts
to compel those “divinely-connected” dissenters to override their own
conscience on moral issues.
Clinton’s advocacy for the federal “Equality Act” and other
legislation that criminalizes politically incorrect, biblically-based
viewpoints on homosexuality—such as a bill in Congress that would ban
pro-heterosexual therapy for homosexually-confused minors—could become the
political fulcrum she and fellow “progressives” use to turn their “evolving”
ideology into reality.