Posted on 03/18/2009 7:50:37 PM PDT by BonRad
Gay marriage bill deadlocks in committee House lawmakers will vote next week
By LAUREN R. DORGAN Monitor staff
March 18, 2009
A House panel deadlocked yesterday on whether to support gay marriage, voting 10-10 on a bill that would make New Hampshire the third state to allow same-sex couples to marry. The split vote means that the bill will go to the whole House next week for a debate and vote without any recommendation from the House Judiciary Committee, which vetted the bill. The committee also deadlocked on another hot-button social issue yesterday, voting 10-10 on whether to forbid discrimination against transgender individuals. (See story, B1.) [snip]
[2nd article below]
http://www.concordmonitor.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20090318/NEWS01/903180326
Panel splits on bill for transgender rights Measure moves to House without support
(Excerpt) Read more at concordmonitor.com ...
ping
What same-sex “marriage” has done to Massachusetts
(It’s worse than you think)
http://www.massresistance.org/docs/marriage/effects_of_ssm.html
Well I have a dead horse in this race. My gay brother died of aids, as a consequence of his choice of the homosexual lifestyle. NH government and all governments in the US are just adding to the deaths of Americans with nonsense like this. More BS sponsored by the supporters of Pres Death Obortion.
Can’t imagine what you and FlyingEagle have gone through.
Those who promoted this will face a terrible judgement.
That’s all I can ever easily say.
I saw this post on FR earlier (pinged it) and its of some real hope.
Its almost like (next door) a prophet isn’t heard in his own land.
Hawaii, of all places, appears to have dodged the bullet
thanks in no small part to Massachusetts’ lessons, and yet we can’t seem to be able to read same MA literature in NH.
I was estranged from my gay brother for years and then I just decided it didn’t really matter that he messed up the lifestyle choice, he was still my brother and I loved him very much. I started phoning him in St Louis every single day on my way home from work, and we would just talk about things, for years. Eventually the AIDS blinded him, he could no longer work, he just stayed home listening to TV and so I decided he could just as well listen to me. I came to understand the AIDS disease much more and to have a greater appreciation for the danger it poses to our society as well as the homosexual agenda and how it traps people. I hope you are reconciled to your son as I was to my brother so that you can have the relationship you deserve before the disease takes him. I am a cancer survivor so I know what it is to live with a deadly disease and understand that at the end all we really have is the relationships. I also understand the power of prayer and have experienced miracle healing from stage 3 adenocarcinoma - it is completely gone after surgery and chemo. I also understand now that I can really help others by speaking out against the homosexual lifestyle - if it saves one person from AIDS it is well worth it to be blunt and honest and opposed to gay sex. Politicians are idiots about it, so anxious to be culturally relevant that they are blind to the disease they encourage.
Thanks, actually it was an experience for spiritual growth - I lost a brother but gained much in insight and understanding and faith.
NH no longer believes its motto. The people there would rather die than be free!
Didn’t know if you saw this thread. Hadn’t heard this angle yet.
http://www. undergroundjournal. net/igroops/theunderground/adminpages/Its-1984-In-Massachusett
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