Saturday, February 20, 2010

Martin Ssempa is in favor of Gay Porn.



Martin Ssempa, a Ugandan pastor, has shown hardcore pornography to a crowd gathered in a Kampala church in an effort to stir anti-homosexual sentiment, AFP reports.

"The major argument homosexuals have is that what people do in the privacy of their bedrooms is nobody's business but do you know what they do in their bedrooms?," he told the crowd of 300, which included children.

Ssempa's actions came after Ugandan lawmakers tabled a bill that would enforce various punishments, including death penalties, for homosexual practices.

While popular in Uganda, the bill provoked international outrage, with President Barack Obama calling it "odious"

While showing graphic pornographic pictures to the crowd, Ssempa described the images. "This one is eating another man's anus," he said of one, before going into more graphic descriptions.

"Is this what Obama wants to bring to Africa?" he asked the crowd.


From The Huffington Post.

Obviously, Martin Ssempa feels passionately about the use of gay porn to promote his idea that there is something wrong with homosexuality. You can tell he's passionate because he wants to show this gay porn to many people, so that they will see the same things that he has seen--by virtue of watching lots of gay porn. You know, he had to have watched a lot of gay porn to determine exactly what gay porn should go into his presentation. And I'm sure he doesn't shy away from watching it each and every time he presents it. How else would he stay "on message"?

I think he might even practice his demonstrations about how bad gay sex is by playing the gay porn he has so that he can illustrate it. Again and again. In words. I think he does something like that--you know, just to perfect his message. Not, like, in a weird way.

Just in a totally obsessed with how really, really bad gay sex is way. Which he thinks about. A lot.

Just saying.

No comments:

In Defense of Wonks

  Klippenstein is a good reporter and a generally good egg, but my God, the juxtaposition of housing as a problem (which can be understood i...