I am pitiful, FRiend. I am full of pity for those, like Milo, who have been abused sexually and are suffering from it for years afterward; and I am full of pity for those who believe self-righteous judgmentalism of the victims of this kind of crime is a bona fide of conservatism or of Christianity, for that matter.
We do know that God does not make mistakes. But we also know that sin entered the world in the Garden, and that society has been coddling sex abusers, making excuses for their crimes against children, enabling them, promoting heathen sexual practices in all the media and in law, and forbidding counselors to help even those children who were raped as infants and toddlers to receive adequate counseling if one of the results of their abuse is that they then believe they are "gay."
This is the reality of our fallen world for the abused; Mr. Yiannopoulos was abused not by just anyone, but by a priest of the Roman church, making it even more difficult to sort out his understanding of God's true love and intentions for him.
Clearly you have not read his words or you would know that he condemns pedophilia and has exposed the lies of the left concerning male-female relations, abortion, and homosexuality. He has publicly admitted he is a sinner. It is those who take pleasure in despising him for whom I am full of pity.
So, Milo is not culpable for his actions because he can blame it all on being abused by a priest when he was 15 . . . and that is why he speaks vulgar language and jokes about sleeping with black men - but we that are Christians are very culpable and deserving of censor because we believe what God has written about those that he condemns? Blaming an individual’s actions on his environment is a liberal charade . . . and one that despises the God of the Bible is certainly no one to condemn another, for they are condemned already.
Your skewed interpretation of the Word of God is indeed pitiful.
Yes, your words are pitiful; and so, by extension - are you.
Excellent post.