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by Douglas Murray
• July 1, 2016 at 5:00 am
- Immediately
after the massacre in Orlando, the gay press was full of articles
that adamantly refused to admit the reality of Islamic homophobia.
- The same
organisations that obsess over which bakeries in the U.S. and Europe
will or will not bake wedding cakes for gay couples, and rightly
have no trouble berating homophobic Christian pastors, seemed wholly
uninterested in the motivations of the Pulse nightclub killer.
Instead, these papers and websites were filled with articles,
petitions and joint letters, enjoining people not to notice
the Islamic element.
- These gay
activists have a vision of the world where only
"patriarchal" white males of Jewish or Christian heritage
can cause the world's problems.
- A small
minority of very vocal "far-left" activists are now using
their LGBT status as a smokescreen not to advance gay rights but to
advance "far-left" politics.

The recent shootings at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando Florida have
already begun to be submerged by the news cycle. Shock at the worst
mass-shooting in American history -- which saw the death of forty-nine
people and the wounding of even more, fifty-three -- has been further
dulled by various distractions in the debate. This time, these have
included a debate on America's gun laws and speculation around the
sexuality of the gunman.
All of these matters have been fought backwards and forwards and
should certainly be components of any argument. But the part of the
debate that has been the most important and -- as usual -- the most
covered over, has been the religious motivation of the gunman. This, and
the response it has entailed, is worth dwelling on: it reveals a
concerted effort not to learn from events.
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