U.N. Adopts Latin American Homosexual Resolution
By Julio
Severo
The United
Nations Human Rights Council Friday adopted a resolution, by a 25-14,
against anti-LGBT “violence” and “discrimination” that was pushed forward by Argentina,
Brazil, Chile and Colombia — nations mostly Catholic, but relentlessly affected
by Liberation Theology and other forms of socialism. Brazil is the largest
Catholic nation in the world.
Stern correctly understood
that this resolution is just the tip of iceberg for the expansion of gay rights
around the world.
According to NBC
News, the Latin American resolution was passed at the UN “with strong support
from the U.S.,” formerly the largest Protestant nation in the world.
Secretary of
State John Kerry said: “We have a moral obligation to speak up against
marginalization and persecution of LGBT persons. We have a moral obligation to
promote societies that are more just and more fair, more tolerant.”
Marginalization,
persecution, violence and discrimination of LGBT persons are terms that were
largely used in connection to the Russian laws banning homosexual propaganda to
children and adolescents. Even though these laws aim at protecting children and
adolescents, the Western media and governments portray them as sources of
violence. Their attacks were especially strident
during the Sochi Olympic Games in Russia earlier this year when the U.S. media, Obama and his diplomats made a mockery of Russians and their country.
So it is hard to
believe that the Latin American resolution is not intended to discourage other nations
from protecting children and even their societies from the harmful influence of
the homosexual agenda.
Latin America is
not the only Catholic region to fall prey to the homosexualist illusion.
Italy and Ireland
— both predominantly Catholic countries where homosexuality was not socially
accepted in the past — voted for it.
Cuba and
Venezuela, which are usually opposed to U.S.-backed resolutions, sided with Brazil
and other Latin American nations, whose left-leaning governments have made
radical strides in homosexual laws.
Chile argued
that voting against the resolution would effectively condone violence against “millions
of people around the world on the basis of sexual orientation.”
Nevertheless, Russia
— which in the Soviet era was the first nation to have a liberal stance on
homosexuality, but today is experiencing a revival of its Christian Orthodox
religion — chose to vote against its trade partner — Brazil — and its
resolution that would effectively destroy the Russian laws against homosexual
propaganda. Other partners of Brazil in the BRICS chose not to challenge Brazil
so directly. India and China abstained, but South Africa voted for it.
Islamic nations
voted against it.
Both Uganda and
Nigeria — where homosexuality is illegal — condemned the resolution as an attempt
to influence their peoples’ culture.
Other nations
accused the resolution of “cultural imperialism.”
Effectively, the
resolution turns the U.N. into a tool to denounce governments opposed to
homosexuality. Brazil, U.S. and the European Union can now, with the support of Cuba and Venezuela, make more mockery and attacks at nations that protect their children and societies.
With
information from TeleSurTV, Washington Blade, NBC News, Glaad, U.S. State
Department and Reuters.
Portuguese
version of this article: ONU adota resolução homosexual latino-americana
Source: Last
Days Watchman
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