Thursday, January 05, 2006

Why the UK is FUBAR

Wow, in this one article I can demostrate in 5 ways what is wrong with the UK:
  1. The lack of moral fiber. When 7 year olds are being taught about homosexuality, something is wrong. The church and morality are absent.
  2. Taxpayer money is easily wasted on this nonsense to the tune of £23,000. Wasteful government spending by bureaucrats goes unpunished. Even the nearly £500 million Scotish parliment, was the focus of some grumbling and complaining, but not ONE bureaucrat was punished.
  3. The police department can sponsor this "event" that it has no business spending its money on. Another indication of no oversight.
  4. The police can waste £840,000 on "diversity advisors." Tax revenue is wasted on useless do-nothing positions. Why does a diversity advisor do? Why do you need 24 at £35,000 each. A graduate engineer only makes about £21,000 and the GDP/capita is about £12,000. About 1 in 4 Britians are employed by the government, i.e. they are overhead.
  5. Open Communist ties are ignored. Remember #26 of the 1963 communist goals.... Present Homosexuality, degeneracy, and promiscuity as "normal, natural, and healthy".
  6. It is apparently acceptable to distort history and falsely label people as gay.

Children as young as seven could be taught gay history (Daily Mail -UK) in a campaign that urges teachers to introduce pupils to sexual and swear words. The organisers also want historical figures labelled homosexual - even if there is no evidence they were gay.

The Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender History Month is backed by Scotland Yard and Government departments. Is there any need for an LGBT month? Tell us below on reader comments. It aims to "celebrate" gays and their lifestyles and end an alleged "silence" about homosexual issues in schools.
Metropolitan Police Chief Sir Ian Blair approved the use of a police headquarters in West London for a reception of LGBT History Month campaigners in November.
The history month also has the support of Education Secretary Ruth Kelly. Her department is understood to be contributing £20,000 towards it.
The Metropolitan Police Authority has given £3,125 to the history month.
The Department of Health is also a sponsor. Schools do not have to adopt the recommendations of LGBT History Month. But support from the Department for Education and the Met provides respectability. This will put pressure on heads to take notice of the event.
"Peddling poison" Author Lynette Burrows accused organisers of "peddling poison" and distorting history. Mrs Burrows, from Cambridge, was warned by a Scotland Yard officer last month of being involved in a "homophobic incident" after criticising gay adoption on a BBC programme.
She added: "The police have no business getting involved in this. It is as if the Archbishop of Canterbury were to launch a crimebusting campaign." Days after she was warned, the Mail revealed that a Christian couple in Lancashire were told by police they were "walking on eggshells" after complaining to their council about its gay rights policies. Sir Ian has promoted gay rights since becoming the Met's chief. He has appointed 24 diversity advisers on £35,000-a-year salaries and spoken at gay events. The LGBT History Month is in February. It recommends lessons for primary school pupils that include asking children to repeat sexual and swear words and write them on a blackboard.
Pupils are then asked to discuss the real meaning of the word. For older pupils, there are lessons in "gender variance". The lessons claim "people are not always simply male or female" and that one in 100 people are affected by "intersex variations".
The campaign also aims to identify homosexuals from history to provide role models. But organisers say where evidence of homosexuality is missing teachers should still label figures as gay. Publicity material for the campaign said: "History has conspired to keep our lives hidden. "Often in correcting this we rely to some degree on circumstantial evidence." Shakespeare outed Among figures labelled gay is Shakespeare, of whom it is said: "It seems likely that some of the greatest love poems in the English language were written by one man to another."

The campaign is run by activists linked to the Schools Out organisation of homosexual teachers. One organiser, Sue Sanders, a lesbian activist who works as a diversity teacher for the Metropolitan Police, said: "Schools have been completely silent on this issue. "This will encourage people to start looking more closely at the white, male, heterosexual way in which history is presented to us." Another organiser, Paul Patrick, is a former teacher who has contributed to the Trotskyist Socialist Worker newspaper. A spokesman for the Met said: "Engaging with communities is not optional but a clear business reality upon which the successful policing of London depends. "Events like this are an opportunity to increase the trust and confidence of the LGBT community in the police."

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