British Military Opens Ranks to Homosexual Agenda
by Chad Groening
February 24, 2005
(AgapePress) - A conservative military pundit thinks Great Britain made a serious mistake in not challenging the ruling from an international court mandating that homosexuals be allowed to serve openly in the British military.
It's a new day in the UK. According to London's Times newspaper reports, Britain's Royal Navy has actually turned to a homosexual lobby group for advice on how to recruit and retain homosexual sailors. And, for the first time, the British have advertised for recruits in a homosexual publication called the Pink Paper.
Elaine Donnelly, president of the Center for Military Readiness, says these developments demonstrate why British government officials should have put up a fight when the European Court of Human Rights were them ordered to change their policies and admit professed homosexuals. "They should have fought that ruling," she says. But they did not.
As result, Donnelly believes the British authorities are reaping the rainbow whirlwind for failing to resist the European Court's pro-homosexual directive. "Instead they complied with it," she says. "Now you have an admiral pursuing what can only be described as an extreme strategy to take the admission of professed homosexuals in the military to what he sees as its logical progression -- and that is to have [homosexual] high-level officials being in charge of the Navy and, of course, the Royal Air Force and the Army as well. That is a social agenda. It has very little to do with a military objective."
The Center for Military Readiness spokeswoman says the British made a serious error in judgment in pandering to the radical homosexual agenda. And America, Donnelly warns, had better take learn from their mistake.
"Those who advocate this agenda see no bounds, no limits; and I think we could look forward to seeing the same thing happen here if the law was ever successfully challenged in court, as it was in Britain," she says. Center experts say a real threat is posed by activists seeking to challenge America's ban on homosexuals in the military by citing foreign court decisions and policies in an attempt to override the U.S. Constitution.
The Center's analysts also report that homosexual activists are continuing to use the vague "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" concept to mislead homosexual young people about their eligibility to serve. According to CMR, such tactics could prove even more harmful if a lack of clear policy from the Bush administration enables activist lawyers to overturn a law that enjoys widespread public support.
Chad Groening, a regular contributor to AgapePress, is a reporter for American Family Radio News, which can be heard online.