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Welcome to Call to Decision

URGENT
NEW PETITION: SELECT HERE TO DEFEND OUR TROOPS AGAINST OPEN
HOMOSEXUAL AGGRESSION, AND WE WILL FAX YOUR PETITION TO ALL 100
SENATORS AND 435 CONGRESSMEN, (saving you hours of labor!)
OBAMA ENDANGERS TROOPS LIVES by REPEALING
"DON'T ASK-DON'T TELL"
President Obama pledged in his State of the Union Address to promote
open homosexual aggression within the ranks of the military,
by directly recruiting Congressmen and Senators in 2010 to overturn
the "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" law that saves
troops lives and already
guarantees equality. Ignoring a letter signed by over
1,150 retired military flag and general officers, who asked
Obama to enforce the 1993 Clinton-era law that currently
prohibits open homosexual aggression in the military, Obama
instead sacrificed military readiness,
unit cohesion, and safety of all American troops, to
prioritize his special relationship with less than 1% of the
American population who claimed to be homosexual in the last
census.
"This year, I will work with Congress and our military to
finally repeal the law that denies gay men and women the right
to serve the country they love," Obama boldly misled,
repeating the vow he made during a speech Oct. 10th before a gay
rights group. (The truth is homosexuals already now have the
right to serve, so long as they keep their sexual aggression to
themselves.) "If you adhere to our common values, you
should be treated no different than anyone else," Obama
said oxymoronically, defining
"equality" and "values" as a sudden
endorsement of illegal acts of sodomy long banned by the
Uniform Code of Military Justice. The Joint Chiefs sat
stone-faced silent, aghast at Obama's plan, but powerless to
publicly oppose their own Commander-In-Chief. We must be their
voice...
SELECT
HERE TO SIGN NEW PETITION DEFENDING OUR TROOPS AGAINST OPEN
HOMOSEXUAL AGGRESSION, AND WE WILL FAX TO ALL 535 CONGRESSMEN.
As a former Navy Chaplain and Air Force Academy graduate, having
served during wartime combat operations, in close quarters with
Sailors onboard a combat cruiser, and having
personally counseled both straight and homosexual service
members, I can personally attest the last thing our
Sailors need is a lack of trust or suspicion toward their fellow
shipmates. Our uniformed service
members very lives depend daily on their ability to trust each
other, without worry about being ogled, made advances
upon, or violated by those with whom they share common sleeping
quarters and showering facilities, 24/7 both on and off duty.
Friends, do you care about protecting our military's trust, unit
cohesion, and saving our troops lives? Take action today...
SELECT
HERE TO SIGN NEW PETITION DEFENDING OUR TROOPS AGAINST OPEN
HOMOSEXUAL AGGRESSION, AND WE WILL FAX TO ALL 535 CONGRESSMEN.
Kevin Nix, spokesman for the pro-homosexual Service members
Legal Defense Network, which is spearheading the "Don't
Ask, Don't Tell" repeal effort, told the Washington Times
the House bill now has 182 co-sponsors,
just short of a majority. "We're just trying to get
to 218 to show that the bill is ready," said Mr. Nix, who
added that senators plan to introduce a bill shortly.
"We expect a bill introduction for the first time in 16
years," he said. "We definitely expect a hearing this
year. There are still things that need to happen, but we are
definitely on the brink of a bill in the Senate. We want repeal
done in 2010. Done, to the president's desk for a
signature." A spokesman for pro-homosexual Congressman
Patrick J. Murphy (D-PA), who is leading the repeal campaign in
the House, said he has commitments from
16 members in addition to the 182 co-sponsors, totaling 198
votes, just short of a majority.
SELECT
HERE TO SIGN NEW PETITION DEFENDING OUR TROOPS AGAINST OPEN
HOMOSEXUAL AGGRESSION, AND WE WILL FAX TO ALL 535 CONGRESSMEN.
In the Pentagon however, Marine Corps Commandant Gen. James T.
Conway has emerged in internal deliberations as the most
outspoken opponent of permitting gay men and women to serve
openly in the U.S. military, according to the Washington Times.
"Most of the senior brass hold
deep reservations about President Obama's pledge to end
the ban on gays in the military, especially in the middle of two
wars that have put extra stress on the military, down to the
platoon level, where soldiers and
Marines would be expected to bond with openly gay colleagues,"
the Times reported.
WHY KEEP OPEN HOMOSEXUALITY
OUT OF THE MILITARY?
Four reasons:
1) Allowing open homosexuality especially hurts unit cohesion
and would cost American lives in war,
damaging the trust shared in close proximity, common
sleeping quarters and showering facilities that are unavoidable
in close combat. 2) Men and women do not share the same showers
for obvious reasons, so why force men
to share showers with openly homosexual men? This fact
alone would hurt recruiting. 3)
The rampant spread of the HIV-AIDS
virus contaminates the blood often shared by necessity on
the battlefield. Soldiers requiring blood-transfusions and
medics would be immediately endangered. 4) "Gay
promotion quotas" would soon be forced upon
presently impartial promotion boards, causing a burdensome rise
in sexually-charged "equal opportunity" complaints
against commanders, especially those
who offend gays by inadvertently speaking of their traditional
Judeo-Christian faith.
SELECT
HERE TO SIGN NEW PETITION DEFENDING OUR TROOPS AGAINST OPEN
HOMOSEXUAL AGGRESSION, AND WE WILL FAX TO ALL 535 CONGRESSMEN.
But Marine Commandant General Conway has gone further than
others in stating his opposition to a change in policy,
according to a former official who was privy to private
conversations on the matter. "He
feels very strongly that [removing the ban] would be disruptive,
and he opposes it," he said. But if Congress changes
the law, the General must implement the law.
Obama campaigned during his election to end "don't ask,
don't tell," the policy signed into law by President
Clinton. The policy ended the practice of asking prospective
recruits about their sexuality, allowing
homosexuals to freely serve, but prohibited openly gay men and
women from talking about their sexual urges while serving.
Repeal would allow them to share
their sexual urges with their fellow soldiers, creating
needless and divisive tension in the ranks.
The House Armed Services Committee will likely hold a hearing on
a repeal bill in the spring, meaning the earliest floor vote
could come before the middle of 2010, as part of the 2011
Defense Armed Services Authorization or Appropriations spending
bill. Democrats on the Senate Armed Services Committee had
planned a hearing in 2009, but none was scheduled. The White
House will likely soon submit a repeal bill to the Hill.
SELECT
HERE TO SIGN NEW PETITION DEFENDING OUR TROOPS AGAINST OPEN
HOMOSEXUAL AGGRESSION, AND WE WILL FAX TO ALL 535 CONGRESSMEN.
The four-star chiefs of the Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force and
Army have said little on the topic in public and have not been
pressed by Congress to provide their professional opinions. All
four declined to answer when asked for their personal opinions
on the ban by The Washington Times, except to say they will
abide by the law. They've been silenced for fear of upsetting
Obama, who would likely force their immediate retirement.
"They are not going to talk until it's time to talk,"
said a senior officer inside the Pentagon, who added the chiefs
will discuss any specific legislative proposal in private with
the chain of command - meaning Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates
and the president.
Adm. Mullen, who as Joint Chiefs chairman is the president's top
military adviser, has expressed concern about carrying out the
president's wish. "I think it's important, as we look to
this change, that it be done in a way that doesn't disrupt the
force at a time where it's under a lot of stress," Adm.
Mullen told the Military Times in May. "And that, to me,
means in a measured, deliberate way, over some time -- to be
determined. And I don't know what that would be." (I know
how and when...never risk our
troops lives.)
SELECT
HERE TO SIGN NEW PETITION DEFENDING OUR TROOPS AGAINST OPEN
HOMOSEXUAL AGGRESSION, AND WE WILL FAX TO ALL 535 CONGRESSMEN.
The Times reports Gay rights groups cite recent polls that show
the public now supports repealing the ban, unlike in 1993, when
polls showed the opposite. That year, Congress stopped Mr.
Clinton's bid to change what was then only a regulation. He
ended up signing the ban into law. The Pentagon discharged 633
men and women under the ban in fiscal year 2008.
Gallup reported to the Washington Times in June that 58 percent
of the conservatives it polled favored allowing openly gay men
and women to serve. Overall, 69 percent of adults support ending
the ban, Gallup said. (That's a good
reason to forward this email widely, to begin educating our
friends on why the current "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" law
must remain.)
Elaine Donnelly, who heads the Center for Military Readiness and
argues in favor of the ban, pointed a reporter toward a recent
article she wrote for the American Thinker.
"Consistently small numbers and percentages of people
discharged due to homosexuality contradict any claim that a
national security emergency justifies repeal of the law,"
she wrote. "And it is not convincing to hold up the small,
dissimilar militaries of foreign nations, none of which have
adopted the extreme agenda being
proposed for our military, as role models for America's
forces. Nor does it help to ignore the stated opinions of more
than 1,150 retired flag and general officers and current
military personnel." Our military
is not a grounds for new and radical social experimentation,
especially ones that endanger lives.
SELECT
HERE TO SIGN NEW PETITION DEFENDING OUR TROOPS AGAINST OPEN
HOMOSEXUAL AGGRESSION, AND WE WILL FAX TO ALL 535 CONGRESSMEN.
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God Bless you, in Jesus' name,

Chaplain Gordon James Klingenschmitt
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P.S. Please don't wait. Our troops lives,
trust, and cohesion depend on our voice. Please take action,
sign our petition today, and we'll automatically deliver your
message now!
SELECT
HERE TO SIGN NEW PETITION DEFENDING OUR TROOPS AGAINST OPEN
HOMOSEXUAL AGGRESSION, AND WE WILL FAX TO ALL 535 CONGRESSMEN.
Disclaimer: The views of Chaplain
Klingenschmitt, who was honorably but involuntarily discharged
from the Navy in 2007 after facing court-martial for praying
"in Jesus name" in uniform, (but was later vindicated
by Congress), are his own personal views, not the views of any
political party, government, or organization.
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