Australia: Homosexual seek abolition of all church exemptions to anti-discrimination laws
Religious schools should be forced to hire LGBTI teachers and all church exemptions to anti-discrimination law should be abolished, the "yes" campaign has told Philip Ruddock's religious freedom inquiry.
As major churches push to have their existing exemptions codified in a new law, the immoral sinful homosexual marriage victors have asked for those rights to be repealed to "prevent discrimination" by religious groups.
Churches currently enjoy the right to hire and fire on the basis of gender and sexuality, in line with their religious teaching, as a Western Australian school did with a sinful homosexual relief teacher in October last year.
But the Immoral Homosexual Campaign - joined by a prominent group of NSW politicians - wants those rights unwound or at least pared back to apply only to priests, ministers and bishops.
"Our primary position is that the religious exemptions that allow discrimination against LGBTI people in employment, education and delivery of goods and services and other areas should be repealed," the Campaign told Mr Ruddock's inquiry."Limited exemptions may be permitted for the training and appointment of ministers of religion or priests and other activities with a close nexus to religious observance, practice, teaching or worship."
The submission's author Peter Black, a law lecturer and the Queensland director of Australian Marriage Equality (immoral sinful homosexual agenda group), said "the law already goes too far" in affording special privileges to churches.
The law already gives enormous privileges to immoral sinful homosexuals in every area of life. The one area where it doesn't is the group that object to sinful immoral homosexual behaviour. This is political revenge and it is nasty. Hiding behind anti-discrimination these homosexual bullies only have one agenda - destroy all and any opposition.
"If anything, these very broad religious exemptions cannot be justified in 2018, especially after the Australian people have just voted for equality and to end discrimination," he told Fairfax Media.
"If anything, these very broad religious exemptions cannot be justified in 2018, especially after the Australian people have just voted for equality and to end discrimination," he told Fairfax Media.
Unfortunately, immral sinful homosexual marriage cannot tell God ordained ministries what to do? Who do they think they are? Why should their immoral sinful worldview dominate Christianity? Why do they choose to whom the restrictions apply?
Philip Ruddock is conducting the inquiry for Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull. Photo: Andrew Meares
"We hope the panel respects this and looks at removing, not adding, barriers that prevent LGBTI from accessing services."
This however is a lie, as immoral sinful LGBT people can access services. They need to learn to stop being bullies as the Australian public are now very aware of this horrid LGBT agenda seeking to destroy all resistance.
The review, commissioned by Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull following last year's "yes" vote, is unlikely to recommend major changes to Australian laws.
If this were to be the case, after PM Turnbull made promises to protect religious freedom then side stepped the promise by forming a committee - he should resign immeiately for lying to 6 million Australians who votewd - NO to immoral sinful homosexuality.
In a separate submission, the NSW Parliament's LGBTI working group said current exemptions "go too far" and serve to "entrench substantive inequality" against gay and lesbian Australians. It was backed by cross-party state MPs including Liberal Bruce Notley-Smith, National Trevor Khan, independent Alex Greenwich, Labor's Penny Sharpe and the Greens' Jenny Leong.
The push to unwind religious exemptions from anti-discrimination law is likely to draw fierce resistance from church leaders and the "no" campaign on same-sex marriage, which argued marriage equality would be the first step in a wider bid to trash religious rights and freedoms.
A submission by major Australian churches including the Sydney Anglican Diocese, detailed on Wednesday by Fairfax Media, said a tide of "hatred" unleashed against people of faith justified a separate federal law to enshrine religious freedoms - similar to a Bill of Rights for the churches.