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Senator’s Wife Says Anti-Gay Marriage Bill Created ‘To Protect Caucasian Race’ (Video)

Jodie Brunstetter, the wife of Peter Brunstetter, the state senator who authored Amendment One,  says her husband wrote the bill “to protect the caucasian race,” according to a reporter and poll workers present, as The New Civil Rights Movement reported yesterday. Amendment One is North Carolina’s anti-gay marriage constitutional amendment that would permanently write discrimination into their constitution.

Today we have a video that substantiates this conversation, and, below, comments from the state Senator, who says his wife “does not think like that.”

Via Igor Volsky at Think Progress:

Jodie Brunstetter, the wife of North Carolina state Sen. Peter Brunstetter, made the remarks “outside the early voting site at the Forsyth County Government Center in downtown Winston-Salem” while speaking to voters, Chad Nance, a Winston-Salem freelance journalist, reports. Nance heard about Jodie’s comments from an African-American poll worker who allegedly overheard Brunstetter say, “The reason my husband wrote Amendment 1 was because the Caucasian race is diminishing and we need to uh, reproduce.”

Asked to clarify her statement, Brunstetter reluctantly confirmed that she did in fact use the phrase “Caucasian.”

Responding to his wife’s comments, Sen. Brunstetter told ThinkProgress, “I know my wife does not think like that,” but admitted that “She got very flustered (she is not a political person) and then someone came up to her and started shooting questions at her. She noticed later that there was someone video taping without her knowledge.”

“My wife is one of the sweetest, most genuine people you will ever meet,” he added. “Her convictions on the marriage amendment are spiritual in nature, not racial. The individual in question had been quite abusive and intimidating. The Amendment is not racially motivated, is quite simple and straightforward and, in fact, is widely supported in many areas of the African American community.”

Jodie told the Winston-Salem Journal, “I seriously don’t remember.” “There was quite a bit of conversation … the reasons for the amendment is for there to be marriage between a man and a woman and it does not matter what race.”

Amendment 1, which goes to a vote on May 8, has already divided the African American community between leaders who argue that the Bible prohibits homosexual behavior and those who maintain that religious interpretations should not influence civil laws. The comments by Mrs. Brunstetter will likely interject more racial division into the debate.

http://vp.mgnetwork.net/viewer.swf?u=438a701ce5e0102f8fb5001ec92a4a0d&z=WSJ&embed_player=1

Image: Facebook

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