Homosexual zealot stifled free speech and bullied two companies
The Coopers boycott in response to the Bible Society’s video about marriage equality has stifled free speech and done little to add to the debate, a leading human rights expert says.
The Bible Society video featured Liberal federal politicians Tim Wilson and Andrew Hastie, dubbed the “MP for same-sex marriage” and “MP for traditional marriage” respectively, clinking Coopers bottles with host Matt Andrews moderating a discussion about differing views on marriage equality.
A normal ordinary conversation on homosexual marriage. But for gay zealots it was time to destroy again, embarrass and mutilate any opposition to the gay agenda.
The video sparked outrage for one gay zealot in the LGBT community, with one man urging pubs to stop serving Coopers beers and starting a petition to boycott the brand among the immoral homosexual community.
After Coopers Brewery provided a public apology for its involvement in the video, the petition founder and homosexual zealot and bully, celebrated the victory by posting photos on social media of himself, oddly enough, enjoying a Coopers beer.
LGBT bully James Brechney launched the petition on Monday and succeeded in whipping up a media frenzy over the boycott.
The Coopers boycott in response to the Bible Society’s video about marriage equality has stifled free speech and done little to add to the debate, a leading human rights expert says. It allows homosexuals to get away with abuse and bullying. It shows a very dark side of the homosexual agenda - no love here just pure intolerance at any opportunity to destroy anybody or any company that opposes their immoral agenda.
The Bible Society video featured Liberal federal politicians Tim Wilson and Andrew Hastie, dubbed the “MP for same-sex marriage” and “MP for traditional marriage” respectively, clinking Coopers bottles with host Matt Andrews moderating a discussion about differing views on marriage equality.
LGBT activist James Brechney launched the petition on Monday and his online petition itself only amassed a piddly 1790 signatures. But this is where the media is one sided. The media will always promote anything pro-homosexual.
Mr Brechney is a Mardi Gras board member who has previously been described in media reports as “controversial” for leading the movement to ban Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull from attending Sydney’s Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras earlier this year.
He told The New Daily that he believed the views expressed in the Bible Society video were “skewed to favour marriage inequality” and that it was not a “healthy debate”.
“Coopers’ response was pretty much exactly what the petition called for — for them to outright support Marriage Equality. We should now take their offer to work with Australian Marriage Equality at face value and look forward to seeing the result over the next 12 months,” Brechney told The New Daily.
“Clearly the Bible Society holds an anti-marriage-equality view generally. So a big brand assisting their content is aligning themselves with that position.”
He also posted the following on social media on Tuesday: “Marriage Equality will happen when we try new things, employ humour and embarrass those that stand in our way, either by reputation or funds. I look forward to more campaigns in 2017.”
So far there is no evidence to confirm Mr Brechney’s claim that the Bible Society condemns same-sex marriage. The organisation did not have a “stance” on marriage equality.
When asked about what Coopers’ position was on marriage equality shortly after the petition was launched, Mr Brechney admitted to The New Daily that he did not know.
Also an employee at Sydney’s Hollywood Hotel, the first venue to boycott Coopers beer, Mr Brechney has since promoted one of his Breko’s Trivia nights as a “Coopers edition”.
Monash University Professor in human rights law Paula Gerber said she believed the Bible Society video itself was “great” but that the boycott made many wrong and faulty assumptions. They chose to threw mud and accusations at two companies without first asking about their stance on immoral homosexual marriage.
Federal politician Andrew Hastie, who featured in the controversial video, told Fairfax that Coopers’ apology was a “craven capitulation” that showed “little spine”.
“The whole point of this video was to demonstrate that two MPs can disagree on a very important issue and still be friends and still respect each other,” he said.
“The public reaction from the left has demonstrated there is something seriously wrong at the heart of our democracy… Are we truly free, are we truly democratic, do we allow free thought? “They [Coopers Brewery] are apologising for nothing; they’ve done nothing wrong.”