Connect with us

Lawmaker Pushes Bill To Allow Bullying Of Gay Students And Concealed Guns

Published

on

Kentucky religious Republican lawmaker Mike Harmon is pushing a bill that would allow students to bully other students for their sexual orientation or for their support of another student’s sexual orientation, and that would allow concealed weapons in schools. Harmon says, “Well if someone says ‘You know, I think homosexuality is a sin,’ well we don’t want that child to be bullied because they have a certain moral or religious belief.” Oh, no, it’s much better for the majority students to bully the minority students.

Harmon, who is a Baptist and a Deacon at his church, adds, “We certainly don’t want them to be labeled a bully, just because they have that particular belief.”

WATCH: Bigots More Concerned About Being Perceived As Bigots Than Whether They Are

Before moving ahead with this part, note that Harmon calls homosexuality a “sin,” several times in this report. Additionally, and worse, Harmon is also pushing for an amendment to allow concealed firearms on to school campuses. That’s right. Let’s bully the gays and then create a scenario where we can shoot them too!

Mike Harmon needs to lose the next election. Big time.

Harmon by the way is endorsed by the NRA (surprise!) an is anti-abortion. Do the math.

Herein lies the problem. Harmon believes it’s OK to make fun of and harass people just because of who they are, who they were born, and yet we must protect the people whose views are a choice.

You chose your religion. You chose what to believe. You don’t chose who you are: black, white, Asian, Hispanic, gay, straight. Or any combination thereof. You have no choice in the matter, yet it’s OK to protect those who chose to bully you for whom you are.

Brilliant!

Harmon’s colleague calls it “a very cynical amendment,” and says, “I would ask Mike Harmon, ‘What would Jesus do?'”

Jesus would not vote for this bill — or for Mike Harmon — that’s for sure!

https://youtube.com/watch?v=xQLCbVYvCm4%3Fversion%3D3%26hl%3Den_US

There's a reason 10,000 people subscribe to NCRM. You can get the news before it breaks just by subscribing, plus you can learn something new every day.
Continue Reading
Click to comment
 
 

Enjoy this piece?

… then let us make a small request. The New Civil Rights Movement depends on readers like you to meet our ongoing expenses and continue producing quality progressive journalism. Three Silicon Valley giants consume 70 percent of all online advertising dollars, so we need your help to continue doing what we do.

NCRM is independent. You won’t find mainstream media bias here. From unflinching coverage of religious extremism, to spotlighting efforts to roll back our rights, NCRM continues to speak truth to power. America needs independent voices like NCRM to be sure no one is forgotten.

Every reader contribution, whatever the amount, makes a tremendous difference. Help ensure NCRM remains independent long into the future. Support progressive journalism with a one-time contribution to NCRM, or click here to become a subscriber. Thank you. Click here to donate by check.

News

‘Enough Tacos for a Restaurant’: Trump’s Latest Iran Retreat Ripped for ‘Winging It’

Published

on

President Donald Trump is facing ridicule and accusations of “TACOing” after posting that he is delaying his threatened bombing of Iran’s energy plants by ten days. Earlier this week, he had delayed it by five days. Trump’s remarks came minutes after markets closed, with US stocks having their “biggest loss since the war with Iran started,” the Associated Press reported.

“As per Iranian Government request, please let this statement serve to represent that I am pausing the period of Energy Plant destruction by 10 Days to Monday, April 6, 2026, at 8 P.M., Eastern Time,” the president wrote Friday afternoon. “Talks are ongoing and, despite erroneous statements to the contrary by the Fake News Media, and others, they are going very well.”

“TACO,” coined in May of last year, stands for “Trump Always Chickens Out.” It was first used in relation to his tariffs, when he would threaten hefty levies but then back down from them, imposing smaller ones or none.

Trump has repeatedly insisted he is negotiating with Iran, although Iran denies the claim, saying that the U.S. is “negotiating with itself.” The administration sent Iran a 15-point peace plan proposal,  which Tehran rejected as “excessive.”

Some critics ridiculed the president, others suggested more substantive insights.

Talking Points Memo founder Josh Marshall wrote: “Enough tacos here for a New Mexican restaurant chain.”

Saying that Trump is “Resetting the TACO deadline,” Public Radio’s Kai Ryssdal asked, “Do we believe that?”

“At this point, it’s clear they are just winging it,” declared Alexander Langlois, a contributing fellow at Defense Priorities. “What are these deadlines? Can any of them be trusted? Zero transparency from this administration, especially on clear and obvious threats to commit war crimes against civilian infrastructure. What are we even doing?”

Bloomberg columnist Javier Blas asked if this is “Real diplomacy?” or “More oil jawboning?”

Numerous social media posters simply wrote, “#TACO.”

 

Image via Reuters 

Continue Reading

News

How Iran Hoodwinked Trump With America’s Own Strategies: Columnist

Published

on

Iran is using America’s playbook against the Trump administration. It has mastered long-standing strategies the U.S. used against Iran to its own benefit.

That’s according to author Edward Fishman, who writes in a New York Times opinion piece, “Iran has learned the lessons of American foreign policy. It has used the tools at its disposal to exacerbate risk, forcing private actors to become unwitting tools of its statecraft.”

Fishman says, “While the Trump administration’s war aims have vacillated between regime change, denuclearization and military degradation, it now has one overriding objective: reopening the strait.”

Iran appears to hold all the cards there.

Closing the Strait of Hormuz, analysts believed, “would require Iran to lay thousands of sea mines and render the strait physically impassable,” making it an unlikely move — especially as Iran also relies on the strait for shipping.

READ MORE: ‘Blank Check’: Trump’s Board of Peace to Get $1.25 Billion From State Department

But Iran, using America’s strategies, “has shown it can disrupt the strait at far lower cost.”

How?

Target just a small number of ships, and let others realize there is a possible threat — effectively shutting down traffic on the Strait.

Fishman explains that this is the same strategy the U.S. used against Iran for decades: threaten international banks to break with Tehran, sanctioning only a small number to convey a broader message.

“By threatening to cut off foreign banks from the dollar unless they severed ties with Iran, they effectively isolated the country from the international financial system,” Fishman explains. “The United States rarely had to follow through on its threats. In a strategy one U.S. official described as ‘killing the chicken to scare the monkeys,’ Washington deployed these so-called secondary sanctions sparingly. On the few occasions they were applied, everyone else got the message. Sanctioning a single Chinese bank was enough to shift the risk tolerance of the rest.”

What happens if other countries adapt this approach?

“If the world deals with the United States by fighting back, rather than negotiating,” Fishman writes, “stability will be harder to achieve — and more costly once won.”

READ MORE: Trump Unleashes Unhinged Early Morning Tirade Targeting Enemies and Allies

 

Image via Reuters

 

Continue Reading

News

‘Blank Check’: Trump’s Board of Peace to Get $1.25 Billion From State Department

Published

on

President Donald Trump’s Board of Peace will be receiving $1.25 billion from the U.S. State Department, taxpayer funds that had been designated for international disasters and peacekeeping, Semafor reported in an exclusive.

Trump’s Board of Peace has drawn criticism for its highly centralized structure, under which Trump serves as chairman for life and controls who succeeds him. He also wields unilateral control over the organization’s actions, including where and how it spends its funds.

U.S. Senator Catherine Cortez Masto (D-NV) is introducing legislation that would redirect $1 billion of the $1.25 bill to the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program.

“Instead of giving President Trump a $1 billion blank check to fund a ‘Board of Peace’ that has offered no transparency about how it is investing its money, let’s focus on helping American families afford their monthly power bill,” Cortez Masto told Semafor.

READ MORE: Trump Unleashes Unhinged Early Morning Tirade Targeting Enemies and Allies

Trump has pledged the U.S. will provide the Border Patrol of Peace a total of $10 billion.

Trump has sole discretion on which nations are invited to join, and he is requiring a $1 billion payment to the Board of Peace for permanent membership. The president rescinded his invitation to Canada after its prime minister indicated Canada would not pay the $1 billion fee.

According to reports, the organization could be filled with authoritarian leaders, and it is being seen as a possible rival to the United Nations.

“The Board of Peace has had a rough landing,” reported Bloomberg News’ UK political editor Alex Wickham in January, noting that “it’s been criticized by Israel, questioned by Europe and has Russia’s friends celebrating.”

READ MORE: Trump Is So Desperate to End the War He Doesn’t Even Want to Call It One: Columnist

 

Image via Reuters 

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2020 AlterNet Media.