CNN, the network that encourages gay activists and promotes the gay
agenda, is now trying to sweep the issue aside – when President Obama is
under fire for his support of gay marriage, that is. On Thursday
morning, CNN's Carol Costello suggested Rev. William Owens, a critic of
Obama's support for same-sex marriage, focus on something else.
"I think nearly every poll out there shows that same-sex marriage is
low on the priority list for most Americans," she told Owens. "High on
the priority list especially among African-American voters is the lack
of jobs. So why not go out and talk about that instead of same-sex
marriage?"
CNN's Kyra Phillips took the opposite stance [1] on same-sex marriage in April, calling it a "very big issue" and hounding Rep. Allen West (R-Fla.) for wanting to talk about jobs and the debt instead.
[Video below. Audio here [2].]
Costello's sidestep was laughable considering she just promoted [3] a 10 year-old gay marriage activist the day before. And CNN believes gay rights is quite an important matter, considering the positive coverage they give to gay rights activists:
Gay activists fighting the Boy Scouts' ban on openly-gay scouts and den leaders received encouragement [4] and downright sappy [5] interviews from CNN.
CNN hailed openly-gay Congressman Barney Frank (D-Mass.) as a gay "pioneer [6]" while badgering social conservative Tony Perkins over why homosexuals "bother [7]" him "so much."
CNN compared nominating a gay activist to a state's judiciary with desegregation [8].
CNN has boosted [9] gay rights activists in their fight to win public favor on "marriage equality."
Anchor Don Lemon compared [10] Mitt Romney defending traditional marriage to former Governor George Wallace pushing for segregation.
Shortly after President Obama announced his support for same-sex
marriage, CNN's guests favoring gay marriage outnumbered those opposed five to one [11]. The network continued [12] its brazenly pro-gay coverage into the evening.
CNN showed complete hypocrisy considering it has spent time and headlines boosting the pro-gay agenda, only to dismiss its importance when President Obama was under fire for supporting it.