Russia remains stalwart in its laws that aim to curb the influence of the West’s gay-friendly culture on Russian youth. Meanwhile, last week, in a stunning turn of events, India’s high court reinstituted a nineteenth-century law against sodomy. On cue, the ligbitist kibitzers are going crazy in such homophile haunts as the New Yorker and the Guardian, expressing total outrage that there should exist, anywhere on the globe, nations that do not think it’s normal or appropriate to subsidize and celebrate men sodomizing boys.
I cannot blame Russia, India, or any nation for reacting to what they see in the West with measures that I would ostensibly oppose on principle. Russia’s ban on promoting homosexuality to children does impinge on free speech. India’s ban on sodomy is an intrusion into the sex lives of consenting adults. But we don’t live in an ostensible world.
Walter Jenkins Arrested 1964
Dec. 23, 2013, Dennis Prager said: “Gays should never be harassed. I have always supported that. one of the reasons that I didn’t become a Republican until the Reagan era was what happened. It seared me. When some people in the Goldwater campaign outed a gay advisor to Lyndon Johnson and ruined his life. Some people followed him into a men’s room. I thought that was so despicable that I couldn’t become a Republican, even though I was always anti-left.”
According to Wikipedia:
A month before the 1964 presidential election,
on October 7, 1964, District of Columbia Police arrested Jenkins in a YMCA restroom. He and another man were booked on a disorderly conduct charge.[4] an incident described as “perhaps the most famous tearoom arrest in America.”[5] He paid a $50 fine.[6] Rumors of the incident circulated for several days and Republican Party operatives helped to promote it to the press.[7] Some newspapers, including the Chicago Tribune and the Cincinnati Enquirer, refused to run the story.[8] Journalists quickly learned that Jenkins had been arrested on a similar charge in 1959,[9] which made it much harder to explain away as the result of overwork or, as one journalist wrote, “combat fatigue.”Finally, on October 14, a Washington Star editor called the White House for Jenkins’ comment on a story it was preparing. Jenkins turned to White House lawyers Abe Fortas, the President’s personal lawyer, and Clark Clifford, who unofficially was filling the role of White House Counsel. They immediately lobbied the editors of Washington’s three newspapers not to run the story, which only confirmed its significance.[11][12] and within hours Clifford detailed the evidence to the President and press secretary George Reedy, “openly weeping,”[13] confirmed the story to reporters. Probably forewarned, Johnson told Fortas that Jenkins needed to resign.