Gay Activists Allied with the Islamic State
Gay Activists Allied with the Islamic State

Fallujah, Iraq, some homosexuals on the top of a building. Blindfolded and unaware, these gays are then thrown from the building by the executioners of the Caliph al Baghdadi. Those who did not die instantly were prey for the crowd that finished them off with stones. 

At the end of July, in Stockholm, the city from where many Islamists have fled to go to fight with the Caliph, holds a special gay pride. Shouldn't this be the right time for the ephebic LGBT activists to condemn the crimes of Islam as they have never done before? It doesn't seem like it.

Instead, they decided to complain against the organizers, the liberal nationalist right. The reason? The presence of people of Islamic faith in the neighborhoods that the march passes through, those pieces of democracy abandoned to "multiculturalism". They are the same militants who are proud to organize gay pride parades in Jerusalem. 

The event's organizer is Jan Sjunnesson, former editor of the conservative daily Samtiden. The event's Facebook page is flooded with insults against "xenophobic" and "Islamophobic" actions, while anti-racists have even decided to organize a counter parade. The RFSL, a gay organization funded by the generous Swedish welfare, also protested the parade.

So, when the rally passes "sensitive" neighborhoods and some Muslims decide to protest and perhaps throw stones and shout curses (as has happened in recent years in Copenhagen, Denmark), they would find themselves allied with the homophilic mainstream.

Sharia and LGBT together.

Gay activists have never said anything about homosexuals under the Palestinian Authority, nor did they protest when Gay Pride in Madrid boycotted the Israelis. Nothing, absolutely nothing, is what the LGBT said in the Nineties when in Algeria the Islamists announced how they settled the gay question: "In the fight against evil we must eliminate homosexuals and depraved women". Almost nothing said against Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the Iranian president who a few years ago, in addition to denying the gas chambers, denied the existence of gays in the Islamic Republic. 

The well known Australian columnist, Andrew Bolt, asked why there were no boats against Islamic State at the Sydney Gay Parade. Not a boat on a hundred and fifty. The British weekly Spectator's Douglas Murray summed up this gay indulgence with a question: "Why does the battle for gay rights stop at the borders of Islam?"

The controversy around the Sweden march shows the flaws in the libertarian platform of our Western audience, because gay culture can not be the Western shield against political Islam. It would be a battle lost from the start.

And what about the homosexuals in the Islamic world? Well, they must prove themselves capable of flying.