-Caveat Lector-

Excerpts:

"Some groups include apocalyptic Christianity in their ideology and believe
we are in, or approaching, a period of violence and social turmoil which
will precede the Second Coming of Christ."

"Their goal is to get sexual orientation included. Once they do that, this
is laying the foundation for law enforcement to take care of those people
that they consider to be members of the hate group. Churches, pastors, the
whole nine yards.



Christians a 'hate group'
By: Mannix Porterfield, Staff
September 02, 2001

http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=2302935&BRD=2086&PAG=461&dept_id=34840
6&rfi=6


Quietly, behind the scenes, an assistant attorney general has been, for
several years, teaching police across West Virginia a course in hate crimes.

Even though lawmakers twice in as many years have repulsed efforts to graft
"sexual orientation" into West Virginia's so-called hate crime statute,
Paul Sheridan covers this controversial aspect in his classrooms.

His teaching manual, crafted by former U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno
partly with his input, by definition is "aimed at a law enforcement
audience."

Much of the manual prepared by President Bill Clinton's attorney general,
already used to indoctrinate an untold number of law enforcement agencies
in this state, has stirred disquiet in the ranks of the West Virginia
Family Foundation, an affiliate of the American Family Association.

Led by Kevin McCoy of Charleston, the state group finds sections of the
curricula especially disturbing and perceives in them a sinister
undercurrent. Ultimately, he suggests, it could be employed to muzzle men
of the cloth.

Under "hate group ideology" identification, for instance, it is written,
"Homophobia recently has been added to their agenda."

"There goes 95 percent of West Virginians," McCoy said last week in an
interview.

"I believe, by and large, the majority of West Virginians oppose the
homosexuality of our society, our state. Unless the senior assistant
attorney general would like to give us a different definition of what
homophobia means, my contention is this applies to anybody who has a
problem with homosexuality."

The same section identifies some hate-mongers as those who "blame the
federal government, an international Jewish conspiracy or communism for
most of this country's problems."

What disturbs McCoy and people like him most is the next sentence:

"Some groups include apocalyptic Christianity in their ideology and believe
we are in, or approaching, a period of violence and social turmoil which
will precede the Second Coming of Christ."

Unless Reno and Sheridan can show otherwise, McCoy takes this to mean
anyone with a literal interpretation of the Bible, especially in regard to
scriptures on prophecy, is part and parcel of a hate group.

Two pages later in the manual, Reno speaks of "exceptions" to the U.S.
Constitution's free speech guarantees under the First Amendment.

A statement McCoy finds curious reads:

"Words expressing discriminatory animus may serve as evidence of the
prohibited conduct (e.g., to prove reason for failure to promote) or may
constitute the prohibited conduct itself."

McCoy feels this is ominous, "laying the foundation for certain types of
speech that are not politically correct and how they could be possibly
perceived to be not appropriate within the law enforcement community ..."

"If this curricula is continued to be taught to law enforcement in this
state, it will not be long before they roll out the big guns and start
cracking the whip," McCoy says.

Could this mean preachers would be hauled off to the courts to face hate
crime violations?

"What they're waiting for now is to get 'sexual orientation' into West
Virginia's hate crime law," McCoy said.

"Their goal is to get sexual orientation included. Once they do that, this
is laying the foundation for law enforcement to take care of those people
that they consider to be members of the hate group. Churches, pastors, the
whole nine yards.

"I don't think there will be any group left untouched when their agenda is
finally completed."

If that's not the case, he reasons, then why did Reno use as part of her
brain trust the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force and the Human Rights
Campaign, the Simon Wiesenthal Center, the International Association of
Chiefs of Police, the National Association of Attorneys General and
National District Attorneys Association?

Yet another paragraph in the Reno curricula states, "Organized hate groups
focus on issues of concern to middle America as a method for cloaking and
marketing their hate philosophy (i.e., "government interference, cheating.")

Under motivation, the manual says hate crime offenders feel led by "a
higher order," and, in parenthesis as examples, God is grouped with Adolf
Hitler and the Imperial Wizard.

"Has a sense of urgency about his/her mission; believes he/she must act
before it is too late," the manual says of those who commit hate crimes.

Re-ordering America?

McCoy says "hate crime" legislation is a public relations effort to mask
the hidden agenda of homosexuals - a re-shaping of America to make their
lifestyle acceptable.

"The hate crime law is being used across the country by homosexual
activists," he said.

"The reason they're doing it is they want to be able to use hate crime laws
as a club against anyone that opposes their radical agenda, which is really
re-ordering a society into the fashion that they desire to re-order it.

"And this is what the curricula is doing - laying the foundation to be able
to accept that agenda."

The West Virginia Hate Crime Task Force, the vehicle through which Sheridan
conducts his workshops, distributes a red, white and gray brochure that
states, "Hate crimes may be committed because of race, religion, sexual
orientation, disability, ethnicity or sex."

It also says such offenses "usually" involve violence, intimidation or
vandalism because the targeted victim is "different."

Fragmented newspaper headlines appear in the brochure as subliminals, and
the phrase "neo-Nazi" is prominent.

To conservative groups such as McCoy's, cleverly linking Nazis and Klan
groups or others backgrounded in violence with opponents of homosexuality
is an old tack harking back to the "big lie" method of the Third Reich.

In this year's legislative session, McCoy said, a group of children from a
Charleston-area church paid a visit to a senator's office to voice
opposition to SB23, the hate crime measure which easily cleared the upper
chamber before it died in a House committee.

McCoy described a scene that followed as one that left a pastor and some
young members of his flock in disbelief.

"He (the senator) ran them out of his office, and said, 'you're a bunch of
Nazis,'" McCoy said.

"We're not Nazis, we're Christians," the children protested.

"Then your whole church is Nazis," the senator shot back.

McCoy said the lumping of hate crime law opponents with Nazis and Klan
groups is advocated by homosexuals in a book, "The Overhauling of Straight
America."

"It is evident that our elected representatives are falling into the
militant homosexual propaganda campaign by linking homosexual opponents to
Nazis and the KKK," he said.



Domestic terrorism?

Another catch phrase which has crept into the vocabulary of hate crime law
advocates is "domestic terrorism."

An 8-hour course, billboarded on the West Virginia State Police Academy, is
titled simply "Domestic Terrorism," and topics advertised are "philosophies
of hate and anti-government groups," and threats such people pose.

Again, groups such as McCoy perceive this as propaganda attempting to link
any opponents of homosexuality, including those who use biblical teachings
as their guide, as "terrorists."

In reality, McCoy says figures provided by police and homosexual groups
themselves show the threat of violence among homosexuals is 50,000 times
greater than the threat of hate crimes caused by those outside their ranks.

FBI figures disclosed this year revealed only 1,317 "hate crime" episodes
nationwide inspired by opposition to homosexual behavior, he said.

"Yet, despite the overwhelming evidence that homosexuality is a deadly
lifestyle, and despite the fact that a majority of West Virginians oppose
special protection for this chosen behavior, we have our own attorney
general and the West Virginia Human Rights Commission propagating this big
lie that homosexuals are targeted for violence and deserving of the
protected status," McCoy said.

"On both sides of the House, there is a trend with legislators becoming
more and more sympathetic to the homosexual agenda as well."

So what is domestic terrorism?

McCoy feels the phrase leaves little doubt where Reno and those swept up in
the hate crime movement want to take America.

"If you follow Janet Reno's curricula, it probably would be those that
follow in the 'hate group ideology,' such as apocalyptic Christians and
homophobes."

McCoy is vowing an all-out campaign to counter the seminars and the attempt
by some legislators to embrace the homosexual lifestyle in the protection
of the hate crime umbrella, officially section 6-6-21 of the State Code.

To accomplish its goal, the Family Foundation plans an intense networking
with members of Congress, along with state and local authorities in West
Virginia.

"It might be impossible to reverse," McCoy acknowledged, "but we can try to
slow it down."




[Forwarded For Information Purposes Only - Not
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"Our laws and our institutions must necessarily be
based upon and embody the teachings of the
Redeemer of mankind. It is impossible that it should
be otherwise; and in this sense and to this extent
our civilization and our institutions are emphatically
Christian ... this is a religious people. This is historically
true. From the discovery of this continent to the
present hour, there is a single voice making this
affirmation ... we find everywhere a clear definition
of the same truth ... this is a Christian nation."
(Church of the Holy Trinity vs. United States,
143 US 457, 36 L ed 226, Justice Brewer)

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