Cliff Kincaid
Walmart, Comcast celebrate gay pride
By Cliff Kincaid
"Homo is Healthy" was one of the signs on the official gay pride website for the big march celebrating the Supreme Court's ruling on same-sex marriage on Sunday, June 28, in New York City. It was brought to you, in part, by Walmart, a high-level Platinum sponsor that happens to be America's largest private sector employer. The giant retailer was among a "Who's Who" of corporate America that also included sponsors Coke, Netflix, Hilton, PBS, Macy's, and Comcast Universal (NBC).
Peter LaBarbera of Americans for Truth covered the event, publishing photos of nearly naked men and a "leather" contingent on a truck, among other scenes of debauchery. He said hundreds of children could be seen either marching in or watching the parade. "This is the evidence of why gay marriage and gay parenting are wrong," LaBarbera told Accuracy in Media.
One photo showed a big rainbow flag being unfurled as the Walmart logo could be seen in the background.
LaBarbera said the scenes of nudity and vulgarity that he photographed at the pride march in New York City provided evidence of how the homosexual lifestyle is something America should not celebrate or make into a protected status under law.
For its part, Comcast celebrated June as gay pride month with short films targeting "LGBTQ youth" and "LGBTQ teens."
Comcast boasted, "In 2013, 2014, and 2015, the company earned a perfect score on the Human Rights Campaign's Corporate Equality Index and was named a Best Place to Work for the LGBT community."
Nowhere is homosexual influence more pronounced than Hollywood. However, a new film on homosexual influence in Hollywood, "An Open Secret," is having a hard time getting distributed, with those involved with the film saying that financial interests in Hollywood have been trying to suppress it. This film, however, does not celebrate "gay pride." Rather, it exposes victims of sexual abuse in the entertainment industry. The homosexual pedophiles exposed in the film include Marc Collins-Rector, a major figure in the entertainment business who is a convicted child abuser and now a registered sex offender. The film is directed by Amy Berg, who also directed the 2006 American documentary film about a pedophile Catholic priest, Oliver O'Grady, called "Deliver Us From Evil."
The decision by Walmart to embrace the homosexual rights movement is a case study of how the powerful interests who run the movement have worked their will on corporate America.
Quartz, a digital native news outlet, noted that "When Sam Walton started the company [Walmart] in 1962 in Rogers, Arkansas, he imbued the chain with a certain small-town conservatism. For instance, it long drew ire for its reluctance to sell music with explicit lyrics."
Although Walmart still portrays itself as family-friendly, LaBarbera points out that the company is now publicly pro-homosexual and has been giving major grants to homosexual/transgender events and organizations, including $50,000 in 2014 to the Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund, a group that helps elect "out" homosexuals to political office. (Most of them are Democrats.)
The group's 2011 annual report reveals that openly gay Obama ally, Terry Bean, co-founder of the major homosexual lobby the Human Rights Campaign, has been a major supporter of the Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund as well. Bean took a leave of absence from the Human Rights Campaign after he was arrested on sexual abuse charges involving sex with a minor.
Corporate supporters of the Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund in 2011 included Pacific Gas & Electric Company, Bank of America, Southwest Airlines, AT&T, Shell Oil Company, Microsoft, Wells Fargo, and the Nuclear Energy Institute.
Wells Fargo achieved notoriety this year by becoming the nation's first bank to run a national ad including a homosexual couple.
Labor union sponsors of the Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund included the Service Employees International Union, the National Education Association, and the AFL-CIO.
Meanwhile, open homosexuals in the media, such as Edward Snowden mouthpiece Glenn Greenwald, have opened fire on Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia for exposing the Court's gay marriage ruling as a "judicial Putsch" that stole the democratic system away from the American people.
Writing on the website of First Look Media, financed by billionaire French-born Iranian-American Pierre Omidyar, Greenwald hailed the ruling and noted that "Harry Hay created the Mattachine Society," the first homosexual rights organization in the U.S. However, Greenwald failed to point out Hay's membership in the Communist Party and support for the North American Man-Boy Love Association. Greenwald is one of several media figures on Out Magazine's list of "most influential LGBT people in American culture." Others include Anderson Cooper of CNN, Shepard Smith of Fox News, Robin Roberts of ABC, Don Lemon of CNN, Harvey Levin of TMZ, Rachel Maddow and Thomas Roberts of MSNBC, and Kara Swisher of CNBC.
On the conservative side, support for homosexual marriage seems to be growing – or at least coming out of the closet. Mary Katharine Ham, a Fox News commentator and editor-at-large of HotAir.com, has declared herself in favor of same-sex marriage. She has written a book with homosexual political commentator Guy Benson, a Fox News contributor who serves as political editor of the TownHall.com website.
HotAir and TownHall are owned by Salem Media Group, a Christian firm. Salem has refused to respond to questions about its employees becoming advocates for or activists in the homosexual movement.
© Cliff Kincaid
July 1, 2015
"Homo is Healthy" was one of the signs on the official gay pride website for the big march celebrating the Supreme Court's ruling on same-sex marriage on Sunday, June 28, in New York City. It was brought to you, in part, by Walmart, a high-level Platinum sponsor that happens to be America's largest private sector employer. The giant retailer was among a "Who's Who" of corporate America that also included sponsors Coke, Netflix, Hilton, PBS, Macy's, and Comcast Universal (NBC).
Peter LaBarbera of Americans for Truth covered the event, publishing photos of nearly naked men and a "leather" contingent on a truck, among other scenes of debauchery. He said hundreds of children could be seen either marching in or watching the parade. "This is the evidence of why gay marriage and gay parenting are wrong," LaBarbera told Accuracy in Media.
One photo showed a big rainbow flag being unfurled as the Walmart logo could be seen in the background.
LaBarbera said the scenes of nudity and vulgarity that he photographed at the pride march in New York City provided evidence of how the homosexual lifestyle is something America should not celebrate or make into a protected status under law.
For its part, Comcast celebrated June as gay pride month with short films targeting "LGBTQ youth" and "LGBTQ teens."
Comcast boasted, "In 2013, 2014, and 2015, the company earned a perfect score on the Human Rights Campaign's Corporate Equality Index and was named a Best Place to Work for the LGBT community."
Nowhere is homosexual influence more pronounced than Hollywood. However, a new film on homosexual influence in Hollywood, "An Open Secret," is having a hard time getting distributed, with those involved with the film saying that financial interests in Hollywood have been trying to suppress it. This film, however, does not celebrate "gay pride." Rather, it exposes victims of sexual abuse in the entertainment industry. The homosexual pedophiles exposed in the film include Marc Collins-Rector, a major figure in the entertainment business who is a convicted child abuser and now a registered sex offender. The film is directed by Amy Berg, who also directed the 2006 American documentary film about a pedophile Catholic priest, Oliver O'Grady, called "Deliver Us From Evil."
The decision by Walmart to embrace the homosexual rights movement is a case study of how the powerful interests who run the movement have worked their will on corporate America.
Quartz, a digital native news outlet, noted that "When Sam Walton started the company [Walmart] in 1962 in Rogers, Arkansas, he imbued the chain with a certain small-town conservatism. For instance, it long drew ire for its reluctance to sell music with explicit lyrics."
Although Walmart still portrays itself as family-friendly, LaBarbera points out that the company is now publicly pro-homosexual and has been giving major grants to homosexual/transgender events and organizations, including $50,000 in 2014 to the Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund, a group that helps elect "out" homosexuals to political office. (Most of them are Democrats.)
The group's 2011 annual report reveals that openly gay Obama ally, Terry Bean, co-founder of the major homosexual lobby the Human Rights Campaign, has been a major supporter of the Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund as well. Bean took a leave of absence from the Human Rights Campaign after he was arrested on sexual abuse charges involving sex with a minor.
Corporate supporters of the Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund in 2011 included Pacific Gas & Electric Company, Bank of America, Southwest Airlines, AT&T, Shell Oil Company, Microsoft, Wells Fargo, and the Nuclear Energy Institute.
Wells Fargo achieved notoriety this year by becoming the nation's first bank to run a national ad including a homosexual couple.
Labor union sponsors of the Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund included the Service Employees International Union, the National Education Association, and the AFL-CIO.
Meanwhile, open homosexuals in the media, such as Edward Snowden mouthpiece Glenn Greenwald, have opened fire on Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia for exposing the Court's gay marriage ruling as a "judicial Putsch" that stole the democratic system away from the American people.
Writing on the website of First Look Media, financed by billionaire French-born Iranian-American Pierre Omidyar, Greenwald hailed the ruling and noted that "Harry Hay created the Mattachine Society," the first homosexual rights organization in the U.S. However, Greenwald failed to point out Hay's membership in the Communist Party and support for the North American Man-Boy Love Association. Greenwald is one of several media figures on Out Magazine's list of "most influential LGBT people in American culture." Others include Anderson Cooper of CNN, Shepard Smith of Fox News, Robin Roberts of ABC, Don Lemon of CNN, Harvey Levin of TMZ, Rachel Maddow and Thomas Roberts of MSNBC, and Kara Swisher of CNBC.
On the conservative side, support for homosexual marriage seems to be growing – or at least coming out of the closet. Mary Katharine Ham, a Fox News commentator and editor-at-large of HotAir.com, has declared herself in favor of same-sex marriage. She has written a book with homosexual political commentator Guy Benson, a Fox News contributor who serves as political editor of the TownHall.com website.
HotAir and TownHall are owned by Salem Media Group, a Christian firm. Salem has refused to respond to questions about its employees becoming advocates for or activists in the homosexual movement.
© Cliff Kincaid
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