'GAY' NATIONAL MONUMENTS TO REWRITE AMERICA'S HISTORY
The Liberty Bell center. Jefferson’s Monticello in Virginia and George Washington’s boyhood home. Mt. Rushmore. The Supreme Court building in Washington and the White House. Delaware’s “Old Courthouse.” The Daniel Webster law office in Massachusetts.
All protected by the federal government to preserve the nation’s heritage.
And soon, maybe a camera shop in San Francisco where once resided Harvey Milk, the homosexual city official who was described by a biographer as pursuing young boys most of his life and who once advocated for the leader of the Jonestown suicide cult, Jim Jones, as “a man of the highest character.”
The federal government has announced plans the set up an 18-member team within the National Park Service to consider locations of “significance” to the “history of lesbian, gay, transgender and bisexual Americans.”
Then they might be designated as a historical landmark, or placed in one of the other protected categories the federal government establishes and maintains.
Reports say Interior Secretary Sally Jewell’s appointees will “identify relevant sites” and then they will be considered for inclusion on National Register of Historic Places, among the National Historic Landmarks, or as a national monument.
Park Service Director Jonathan Jarvis said, “The Park Service is, in my view, America’s storyteller through place. It’s important that the places we recognize represent the full complement of the American experience.”
Among those locations that could be considered is Milk’s camera shop in San Francisco, where he developed into a controversial character on several fronts.
WND reported when, after state officials in California designated a “Harvey Milk Day” in public schools, family groups organized to encourage parents to send their children to private schools, homeschools or church schools instead.
A leader in the effort was SaveCalifornia.com, whose president, Randy Thomasson, said, “Boycotting Harvey Milk Day and pulling their children out of the imploding government school system is the only way for parents to protect their girls and boys.”
Read the story of Janet Boynes, in “Called Out: A Former Lesbian’s Discovery of Freedom.”
Lawmakers who adopted the special recognition for Milk didn’t make a point of highlighting Milk’s ties to Jones, leader of the massacred hundreds in Jonestown.
Jones moved his cult from San Francisco to the “Peoples Temple Agricultural Project” in Guyana in the 1970s. On Nov. 18, 1978, 918 people, including 276 children, died in a “revolutionary suicide” led by Jones. Hours before, five people had been murdered by Peoples Temple members at a nearby airport. One of the victims was Rep. Leo Ryan, the only member of Congress ever to die in the line of duty. He was investigating complaints from members who had left the cult of brutal beatings, murders and a mass-suicide plan.
Milk had spoken at several political rallies at the Jones Peoples Temple.
Only nine months prior to the mass killing, amid pressure to investigate Jones’ cult, Milk wrote a Feb. 19, 1978, letter of support for the Peoples Temple to then-President Jimmy Carter:
He said Jones was known “as a man of the highest character, who has undertaken constructive remedies for social problems which have been amazing in their scope and effectiveness.”
As WND reported, Randy Shilts, a homosexual San Francisco Chronicle reporter, wrote a favorable and telling biography of Milk called “The Mayor of Castro Street.”
Thomasson delivered copies of pages in the 1982 book to members of the California Assembly. The book describes Milk’s sexual relationships with a 16-year-old, a 19-year-old and other young men.
Federal officials said the study of possible sites is being funded by Denver homosexual activist Tim Gill, whose millions come from the Quark software empire, and who said, “LGBT history is American history.”
“While we take this important step to recognize the courageous contributions of LGBT Americans, we need to unite … to ensure we leave none of our fellow Americans behind,” he said.
More on this story right after the poll:
‘An increasingly despotic secularist movement’
The announcement immediately drew a warning from Ed Vitagliano, an official with the American Family Association, which has as constituents millions of American families and individuals.
He said, “The homosexual movement and its activists have been quite successful in pushing this ideology and now framing the debate.”
He said the shift to a “secular” nation was begun, and out of that came the “sexual revolution.” The results are a nation that “our Founders would not recognize.”
“The country is no longer being run by ‘We the People.’ The country is being run by activist federal judges, it is being run by a fairly lawless executive branch,” he said. “And there is really no real counterweight to that movement except for the church. And far too often the church remains quiet on this issue.”
He said the foundations of the nation were changed by the elite without permission of the people, and now there is “no stopping” the movement.
“The people will not be allowed to decide what is and is not right. They will not be allowed to decide what types of national sites will be honored. So the American people will become the subjects of an increasingly despotic, secularist movement.”
Hope?
Is there hope?
He said there is.
“The only hope our nation has to return to its origins and in our opinion to return to what made this country strong is a spiritual awakening, a revival that is unprecedented in human history since the first century. That’s the only way to change this nation,” he said.
“Whatever political and cultural changes follow, the prerequisite is that awakening.”
Homosexual activists have been working on the plan for a long time. Back in January, there were reports in San Francisco’s “gay” publications that the “lack of LGBT historic sites with federal recognition” was a problem.
“Looking for additional LGBT properties suitable for federal designation, staff from the National Register of Historic Places and the national Historic Landmarks Program hosted a webinar in October to discuss how LGBT community leaders can work with the National Park Service to locate, document, and protect sites associated with LGBT history,” the “gay” publication said.
The online meeting was described as a “coming out of sorts for the National Park Service LGBTQ Initiative.”
The Stonewall Inn, where homosexuals rioted against laws affirming morality, already has such a designation, as do a couple of other Eastern seaboard locations.
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