Norma Anderson, a trailblazing former GOP legislator, is among the Colorado voters who have challenged the Republican front-runner’s candidacy in a case that will be heard by the Supreme Court
Norma Anderson, a trailblazing former GOP legislator, is among the Colorado voters who have challenged the Republican front-runner’s candidacy in a case that will be heard by the Supreme Court
Low effort research:
That’s one reason why as co-chair of Conservatives Against Discrimination, I teamed up with Centerline Action to conduct research and mobilize Republican members of Congress last year to support the passage of the RMA. Recent research from Centerline has found that nearly three-fourths (72 percent) of registered voters agree that same-sex marriage should remain legal, with a majority (56 percent) of Republicans saying the same. More than half (55 percent) of self-described Trump Republicans believe the same. Further, two-thirds (66 percent) of voters say the government should be doing more “to combat discrimination against gay and transgender Americans.”
I guess we could look up the vote results from 2022.
Since I asked you to name the Republicans you have voted for who were pro-LGBT+, does this mean you voted for Ileana Ros-Lehtinen at some point between 1989 and 2019 or did you not actually bother reading what I responded to you with again?
Your attitude is poor, or at least your assumption is inaccurate. I understand you want me to admit I haven’t personally voted for a politician based on their stance regarding that issue. Why? If I haven’t personally voted for someone because they supported that topic, then I hate people and am an bigot?
I did read it. The point was that there were a lot more supporters in the party, meaning they don’t all hate a group of people based on bigotry. Some at least try, that’s better than rounding them all up in camps as fascist governments might do to a group they want to exterminate.
I’m limited to the people I’m presented with.
In other words, you can’t name one single Republican you’ve voted for that wasn’t an anti-LGBT+ bigot.
One of my senators supported the marriage act and voted for it, the other didn’t. I don’t know them personally, but at least one was for it.
I’m not sure if he hates an entire group of people or not. I don’t like that they won’t just support it, treat people as the same, and get the whole thing put to bed.
I’d love to support a different senator who had proper values about this specific topic, but didn’t also contrast with other topics.
Why does this matter? Do you think my voting decision affects over generalizing a whole group?
Clearly there is division amount that party where some are not bogits.
Sometimes things aren’t all or nothing.
I have given you three chances to provide me with a single name of any Republican you voted for that was not an anti-LGBT+ bigot.
You haven’t done so.
You are not conversing in good faith and I think it’s obvious why.
Thank you for proving my point.
I think we’re done here.
What about Islamic religion? Are they bigots? There’s a proper way to beat your wife constructively and lovingly.
Are they bigots?
They don’t like community people either. I think they kill them? I watched a video of a group of them cutting the heads off two guys over bigot views.
Would rather have mild Republican bigotry then murder I guess.
I’m curious though if that’s all of them, or some of them? All one political party,.or some?
Even now you won’t give one single name of a non-bigoted Republican you have voted for. And it should be very obvious why that is. And why you vote for them anyway. Which makes you as bad as them.
Thanks for proving my point.
Goodbye.