Bryan Fischer
Two lesbians commit biological fraud, get married in Mississippi
By Bryan Fischer
Follow me on Twitter: @BryanJFischer, on Facebook at "Focal Point"
If there is any one thing the Mississippi constitution flatly and emphatically prohibits, it is a "marriage" between two lesbians. When the issue was on the ballot, 86% of voters in the Magnolia State pulled the lever for natural marriage.
Two lesbians getting married could not possibly be more illegal and unconstitutional anywhere in the United States than in Mississippi.
So how did lesbians NLF (initials used to shield their identity) and JRW get married last week in Mississippi and get an official marriage license to proudly post on Facebook? They committed biological fraud, that's how.
"Natalie" (not her real name) is so sexually confused she apparently believes she is a man trapped inside a woman's body, despite the fact that her DNA is 100% female and will be until the day she dies. She is a woman in every, single solitary cell of her body. Her birth certificate identifies her as a female and will until the day she dies.
Sadly, according to the Los Angeles Times, 41% of transgenders – women like Natalie who think they are men – will attempt suicide at some point in their lives, nine times the rate that exists among the sexually normal population.
Natalie does not need to be enabled in this self-destructive path, she needs to be helped. Given the exceptionally high suicide rate among transgenders, she needs the kind of therapy that will help her reconcile her psychological identity with her biological one. She needs the kind of help that will enable her to leave the lesbian/transgender lifestyle altogether. Simple human compassion calls for nothing less.
But Natalie (she now goes by "Nate") was able to hoodwink Mississippians by pretending to be a man. She went to a doctor and asked to be put on hormone treatments. He gave her a shot, wrote a letter on her behalf, and she got a court order requiring the drivers' license bureau to issue her a license identifying her as a male. She got the license on June 16, 2014 and got "married" two months later, on September 18, to another woman.
The license itself was issued in DeSoto County, under the supervision of the circuit clerk. When I spoke with the circuit clerk and informed her of this lesbian trickeration, she did not sound happy about the way her office had been used and abused. While we were on the phone exploring what had happened, she contacted the drivers' license bureau which had issued the license. She discovered that the clerk Natalie approached was suspicious of her sexual identity, but when presented with a court order violating every known scientific and medical principle of biology and anatomy, she felt compelled to issue a medically fraudulent license.
Using the drivers' license rather than her birth certificate – which would have given the game away and prevented her from getting the marriage license – Natalie got the piece of paper she was looking for and got "married" the next day.
This clearly is not a "marriage" that is permissible in Mississippi. Mississippi authorities, including the governor and attorney general, should immediately step in and invalidate this license.
And Mississippi's policy on transgenderism, if it permits this grotesque caricature of marriage, must be immediately changed.
Other states with marriage amendments in place should be on notice that Big Gay has found a way to bypass the will of the people and the supreme law of the state through fakery and pretense.
If Mississippi doesn't deal with this quickly, I expect we will soon see this couple featured on the cover of magazines and the front page of newspapers all across the fruited plain. They will be celebrated as the lesbians who pulled off an amazing feat: convincing good-hearted Mississippians to violate their own constitution under the color of the law.
(Unless otherwise noted, the opinions expressed are the author's and do not necessarily reflect the views of the American Family Association or American Family Radio.)
© Bryan Fischer
September 24, 2014
Follow me on Twitter: @BryanJFischer, on Facebook at "Focal Point"
If there is any one thing the Mississippi constitution flatly and emphatically prohibits, it is a "marriage" between two lesbians. When the issue was on the ballot, 86% of voters in the Magnolia State pulled the lever for natural marriage.
Two lesbians getting married could not possibly be more illegal and unconstitutional anywhere in the United States than in Mississippi.
So how did lesbians NLF (initials used to shield their identity) and JRW get married last week in Mississippi and get an official marriage license to proudly post on Facebook? They committed biological fraud, that's how.
"Natalie" (not her real name) is so sexually confused she apparently believes she is a man trapped inside a woman's body, despite the fact that her DNA is 100% female and will be until the day she dies. She is a woman in every, single solitary cell of her body. Her birth certificate identifies her as a female and will until the day she dies.
Sadly, according to the Los Angeles Times, 41% of transgenders – women like Natalie who think they are men – will attempt suicide at some point in their lives, nine times the rate that exists among the sexually normal population.
Natalie does not need to be enabled in this self-destructive path, she needs to be helped. Given the exceptionally high suicide rate among transgenders, she needs the kind of therapy that will help her reconcile her psychological identity with her biological one. She needs the kind of help that will enable her to leave the lesbian/transgender lifestyle altogether. Simple human compassion calls for nothing less.
But Natalie (she now goes by "Nate") was able to hoodwink Mississippians by pretending to be a man. She went to a doctor and asked to be put on hormone treatments. He gave her a shot, wrote a letter on her behalf, and she got a court order requiring the drivers' license bureau to issue her a license identifying her as a male. She got the license on June 16, 2014 and got "married" two months later, on September 18, to another woman.
The license itself was issued in DeSoto County, under the supervision of the circuit clerk. When I spoke with the circuit clerk and informed her of this lesbian trickeration, she did not sound happy about the way her office had been used and abused. While we were on the phone exploring what had happened, she contacted the drivers' license bureau which had issued the license. She discovered that the clerk Natalie approached was suspicious of her sexual identity, but when presented with a court order violating every known scientific and medical principle of biology and anatomy, she felt compelled to issue a medically fraudulent license.
Using the drivers' license rather than her birth certificate – which would have given the game away and prevented her from getting the marriage license – Natalie got the piece of paper she was looking for and got "married" the next day.
This clearly is not a "marriage" that is permissible in Mississippi. Mississippi authorities, including the governor and attorney general, should immediately step in and invalidate this license.
And Mississippi's policy on transgenderism, if it permits this grotesque caricature of marriage, must be immediately changed.
Other states with marriage amendments in place should be on notice that Big Gay has found a way to bypass the will of the people and the supreme law of the state through fakery and pretense.
If Mississippi doesn't deal with this quickly, I expect we will soon see this couple featured on the cover of magazines and the front page of newspapers all across the fruited plain. They will be celebrated as the lesbians who pulled off an amazing feat: convincing good-hearted Mississippians to violate their own constitution under the color of the law.
(Unless otherwise noted, the opinions expressed are the author's and do not necessarily reflect the views of the American Family Association or American Family Radio.)
© Bryan Fischer
The views expressed by RenewAmerica columnists are their own and do not necessarily reflect the position of RenewAmerica or its affiliates.
(See RenewAmerica's publishing standards.)