| 'Hate crimes' bill - bad news for
believers
A vote is looming this week in Congress on a bill that
one conservative activist warns would not only silence Christian
opposition to homosexuality, but also would legitimize deviant forms of
"sexual orientation."
Andrea Lafferty, executive director of the Traditional
Values Coalition, says the bill is a serious threat to religious
freedom.
"Your pastor could be prosecuted for conspiracy to commit a hate crime if
it passes and become law," she warns. "This so-called 'hate crimes' bill
will be used to lay the legal foundation and framework to investigate,
prosecute, and persecute pastors, business owners, Bible teachers, Sunday
School teachers, youth pastors -- you name it -- or anyone else whose
actions are based upon and reflect the truth found in the Bible."
TVC
says H.R. 1913 broadly defines "intimidation" -- and offers up this
example: "A pastor's sermon could be considered 'hate speech' under this
legislation if heard by an individual who then acts aggressively against
persons based on 'sexual orientation.'" Under those circumstances, says
the group, the pastor could be prosecuted for "conspiracy to commit a hate
crime."
The legislation has another "serious problem," the pro-family group says,
because Congress has failed to define the term "sexual orientation."
Consequently, says TVC, 30 sexual orientations (as defined by the American
Psychiatric Association) will "arguably be protected" under the
legislation. "Those 30 sexual orientations include behaviors that are
felonies or misdemeanors in most states or can result in death," notes
the group's website.
In addition, TVC argues the bill is based on a fraudulent
premise: that there is an epidemic of so-called "hate crimes" against
"lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender" persons that needs federal
involvement for local law enforcement officials.
Lafferty says unless Christians in America act, the hate crimes bill could
be on President Obama's desk in three to four weeks at the most.
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