Posted by
Bob Atchisson on Saturday, April 25, 2009 10:17:12 AM
This week,
the national debate over gay marriage once again throttled up when, during the
Miss America contest, gossip blogger and contest judge Perez Hilton asked Miss
California for her thoughts
on gay marriage.
The question itself
seemingly turned no heads, however Carrie Prejean's answer did.
Hilton,
the
self-proclaimed "Queen of All Media", opened the lid of this pageant
Pandora's Box by purposefully challenging a contestant who happens to
attend a Christian
college. Miss Prejean also happens to
represent the state that recently passed the oft-discussed Proposition 8 which
reiterated the public's desire to see marriage remain recognized as between a
man and a woman. Hilton is no shrinking
violet and is both a well-known attention hound and admitted homosexual. That is part of his shtick and a large reason
for his devoted following. These
elements helped to create a kind of ideological perfect storm. The move was as calculated as its outcomes
were predictable.
When Hilton
asked her beliefs with regard to gay marriage, Miss Prejean's answer was sincere
and to-the-point, "We live in a land where you
can choose same-sex marriage or opposite. And you know what, I think in my
country, in my family, I think that I believe that a marriage should be between
a man and a woman. No offense to anybody out there, but that's how I was
raised."
In
theory, that should have been the end of it.
Question. Response. Next. But for so many torch-bearers of the gay
agenda, this constituted nothing less than a public flogging that should be
responded to in kind, and soon armies of homosexual activists and apologists
were mounted and on the charge.
In
the hours and days following the pageant, Miss Prejean was subjected to a
litany of insults by Hilton himself, media personalities, and vitriolic members
of the gay community on message boards and sound bites throughout the
country. Through the media, Hilton
spewed a slew of expletive-laden insults at the 21 year old college student. In addition to his vulgar tirades, he also
defaced her pictures on his web site, proudly announced he had given her a
score of "0"(essentially costing her the title), and said had she won that
he'd have run on stage and snatched her crown away. One of the co-organizers of the pageant,
Keith Lewis, said he personally was "saddened and hurt" by her comments while
another colleague, Shannon Moakler, supported his comments. CNN talking head
Jane Velez-Mitchell attacked her as part of a panel discussion on No Bias, No Bull. And increasingly irrelevant train
wreck-in-waiting Miley Cyrus, renowned thinker that she is, also chimed in with
her critique of Miss Prejean's answer, "That's lame."
Even
if one were to disagree with Miss Prejean's opinion, you could not legitimately
make the argument that her answer was hateful, mean-spirited, or even all that
inflammatory. She answered both honestly and according to the dictates of her
beliefs. The same cannot be said, though,
of the disproportionately vitriolic attacks on both the character and beliefs
of Miss Prejean. One need only scan the comments section of any on-line article
featuring the showdown to get a sample of the violent, unhinged, and often
anti-Christian sentiment being poured out at the expense of Miss Prejean's name
and faith.
It
is not as if she requested that question in order to manufacture some
nationwide platform, but one could reasonably draw the conclusion that Hilton,
no doubt upset by the success of Proposition 8 and a vested interest in the
cause, utilized his position as a judge to further push his own agenda. He is the one who injected the issue into the
evening. Miss Prejean, a Christian woman of faith, simply answered
accordingly.
Truth be
told, the question was an entirely plausible one. It is fair to ask about a social issue that was
hotly contested and debated. What is not
fair, though, is to politicize and event and then act outraged when someone
expresses a dissenting opinion. Hilton
went so far as to say that Prejean's answer ought to have been more "politically correct". Let's get this
straight, no longer are gay advocates content to force their agenda on the
public at large in a cultural rape, but they now want us to voluntarily agree
and say "Thank you for the service"?
Well, no thanks.
The public
has spoken repeatedly in large numbers that they believe that marriage is
between a man and a woman. Whenever this
comes up for a vote it is regularly beaten.
Only Vermont
can claim that the measure passed via legislation. All other instances -- Massachussettes, Connecticut,
and most recently Iowa -- saw the general will of the voters cast aside as judges legislated from their
benches and bullied the general populace into submitting to the whims and wills
of the ever-advancing homosexual agenda and its foot soldiers. More states are certain to follow suit. When elections are viewed as mere formalities
and the benches acknowledged as the true seats of power, the voters are
increasingly losing their political voice.
It seems
that Perez Hilton and his ilk now want them to lose their actual voice as
well. The egg of individual expression
is now being assaulted by acolytes of the gay movement. As evidenced by the outcry against Miss
Prejean, there are cracks already beginning to show in that shell. And all the
queen's horses and all the queen's men most decidedly do not want to see that
put back together again.