PeterZ wrote:I see. If a party merely demonizes their opponents, then that party can claim the demonized party actually positioned itself the way they were portrayed. Christians do not hate gays.
They do enact an awful lot of laws to reduce the equality between heterosexuals and people of other orientations though. They also oppose treating non-hetero orientations as a valid lifestyle (inasmuch as being gay is a lifestyle). These are all positions republicans have supported, in speeches and in legislation.
Your assertion to the contrary reflects more than a bit of bigotry. While Christians might disagree with the gay lifestyle and view it as sinful, Jesus enjoins us to love our fellow men regardless of the actions, sinful or otherwise, they take. Christians who follow God's will, will love gays as they love themselves even if they disagree with the lifestyle.
And the rejection of gay marriage follows from this how exactly?
I suspect there is more than a tad of mental blinders at work here.
There is. One of those mental blinders, for example, surrounds the rights of transgender people. Another exists for gay marriage, the rights of gay people to adopt, the rights of gay people to the same sort of priviledges hetero married couples enjoy, etc etc.
The republican party has never really reached out to the gay community in any meaningful way (except, of course, when it comes to hiring gay escort services). Instead, republican spokespeople all over the country have done their dead best to demonize and antagonize them.
Face it, PeterZ, you guys have abandoned those demographics, assuming you ever tried to win them over.