Todd Starnes: LGBT Activists 'Want to Shut Down Every Church in America' and Burn the Bible

 Article by Tyler O'Neil in "PJMedia":
In an exclusive interview with 
PJ Media at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) on 
Friday, bestselling author, radio host, and conservative commentator Todd Starnes
 warned against the nefarious impact of radical LGBT groups like the 
Human Rights Campaign (HRC), GLAAD, and the Southern Poverty Law Center 
(SPLC). He condemned them and their allies in the legacy media and the 
Democrat Party for fomenting a "demonization of people of faith," 
warning that if these activists take control, they would shut down every
 church in America and host Bible burnings in major cities.
"GLAAD
 and the Human Rights campaign want to shut down every church in 
America," Starnes, formerly with Fox News, told PJM in the interview. 
"If they had the right to do so, I know that’s exactly what they would 
do. And I would not be surprised, if they were in charge, that people 
like the Human Rights Campaign would actually have Bible burnings in 
cities across the country."
Starnes
 admitted that this may seem like a ridiculous fear, but he insisted it 
is far more likely than it appears. "You might say that’s absurd, that’s
 outrageous. But where do we get our teachings on marriage and human 
sexuality? We get those teachings from the Holy Bible. That’s what they 
want to destroy."
He warned 
that so many Americans — even in conservative media — are "terrified of 
these folks" and unwilling to speak out. "I’m just one of these guys 
that says, 'You know what, they’ve said everything they can say about me
 and they’re not gonna bully me, they’re not gonna badger me, and we’re 
just gonna tell it like it is.'"
"I
 think one of the most dangerous things that’s happening in the country 
right now is this demonization of people of faith, of people who hold to
 traditional Christian religious beliefs," Starnes said. "We have seen 
the mainstream media and we have seen the Democrats be really complicit 
in this effort to smear and to really slander Christian conservatives." 
He warned that "in doing so, they have literally put a target on the 
backs of every single Christian in America who adheres to traditional 
biblical beliefs on issues like sex and marriage and that’s a big 
problem."
When
 it comes to putting a target on someone's back, Starnes mentioned the 
attempted terrorist attack against the Family Research Council (FRC), 
which the SPLC accuses of being an "anti-LGBT hate group."
"The
 Family Research Council, I have very dear friends who work for that 
organization. A domestic terrorist used information obtained from the 
Southern Poverty Law Center to go and commit what would have been a 
massacre at FRC headquarters in Washington, D.C. Had it not been for a 
brave security guard who stopped the gunman and himself was shot in the 
process, it would have been a very different story," Starnes said.
"That’s
 how dangerous the Southern Poverty Law Center is. It’s a sham 
organization. Shame on them, shame on them... for going out there and 
smearing good and decent and honorable people in this country," the 
radio host added. "It’s absolutely appalling what these groups are 
doing, trying to stifle free speech every freedom-loving patriot ought 
to be standing up against the Human Rights Campaign and the SPLC." (For 
more on the SPLC's corruption, check out my book, Making Hate Pay: The Corruption of the Southern Poverty Law Center.)
"It really is a 
very dangerous time in America right now if you are a Jew or if you are 
an evangelical Christian who again holds to traditional beliefs on 
marriage," Starnes warned. He suggested the SPLC is "the hate 
group. They’re out there accusing people like the Family Research 
Council or American Family Association, they’ve even come after me, gone
 after me, and accused me of being a hateful person. They’re the ones 
that are spewing and fomenting hate and dissension in America."
The
 radio host warned that HRC, GLAAD, and the SPLC "want to shut down 
specific viewpoints" by branding any dissent from their opinions as 
"hate speech."
"All of a 
sudden, your opinion is hate speech. And if it’s hate speech, you’re not
 allowed to share your opinion anymore," Starnes explained. "I just 
don’t buy into that argument. I’m a First Amendment purist. I believe 
that everybody — I don’t care if you’re gay, straight, you’re a martian,
 or you’re from Venus, I don’t care! — you have a right in this country 
to live your life the way you want to live your life, you have a right 
to say what you want to say."
"I
 don’t have a right to tell you how to live your life," he continued, 
"but again, the Human Rights Campaign, they need to get this fundamental
 American truth down pat: you don’t have a right to tell us how to live our lives, either."
Starnes briefly touched on a few threats that LGBT activists and the Democrat Party pose to religious freedom in America.
He
 referenced Russel Vought, now acting director of the Office of 
Management and Budget, whom Sen. Bernie Sanders (S-USSR) — the current 
frontrunner in the Democratic presidential race — targeted for his 
religious beliefs.
Vought 
was "expressing his belief that salvation comes through a relationship 
with Jesus Christ. That may have unqualified him for public service in 
the eyes of Bernie Sanders," Starnes explained, referencing Sanders's remarks
 at a Senate confirmation hearing. "That ought to tell you all you need 
to know about the Democrats. Every single one of them believes the same 
thing Bernie Sanders does. And if they say otherwise they’re just 
lying."
"Just a few days 
ago, you had [former Mayor] Pete Buttigieg at a town hall meeting with 
Don Lemon suggesting that Christian universities should lose federal 
funding if they discriminate against gay people by not hiring them for 
positions. It’s appalling. If you are a Christian college, you should 
have the right to hire people who ascribe to the tenets of your 
religious beliefs, " the radio host added.
Finally, he brought up the religious battle over Business Leaders in Christ (BLinC),
 which insisted on restricting its leadership to Christians. The 
University of Iowa claimed this constituted "discrimination" and went 
after BLinC and other student groups.
"Some
 of these Christian clubs on public university campuses have literally 
been told, 'You are the Christian Journalist Society, you’re not allowed
 to have a Christian or mandate that a Christian be the leader of your 
organization.' That’s a load of hooie. That would be like going to the 
Gay-Straight Alliance and saying, 'You have to have someone who is 
anti-gay in charge of your organization.' That’s a load of hooie," 
Starnes said.
The radio host was right to warn about the threats to religious freedom and the animus that many LGBT activists harbor toward conservative Christians.
 However, it is extremely unlikely HRC, GLAAD, and the SPLC would try to
 shut down every church or engage in Bible burnings. Instead, LGBT 
activists work overtime to twist the Bible
 to support same-sex marriage and transgender identity, attempting to 
infiltrate the church with these teachings. (I have responded to one 
such HRC document here.) These activists are far too cunning to engage in such activity, but they will shut down organizations that promise freedom from unwanted same-sex attraction — and advocate for the removal of books expressing that hope. Perhaps they would burn those books, which express biblical truth.
 
 
 
 
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