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  1. #1
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    Bill O'Reilly: Lesbian Gangs are taking over the US!

    As usual, O'Reilly is nuts, blathering about things that aren't true.

    Here's his rant . . .
    http://youtube.com/watch?v=eOpChXhglGg
    . . . where he alleges violent lesbian gangs, carrying pink pistols, all over the country are raping girls, beating up men, recruiting 10 year olds, and forcing them into the homosexual lifestyle.



    But, as usual, he's full of BS, as evidenced in a story by the New York Times:

    http://www.nytimes.com/cq/2007/07/16/cq_3090.html
    Gay Gun Advocates Draw Bead on O'Reilly

    By CQ Staff, CONGRESSIONAL QUARTERLY
    Published: July 16, 2007

    To put things mildly, Bill O’Reilly is not the apologetic type. The notoriously combative Fox News talk show host won’t back down from provocative arguments or factually disputed features aired on “The O’Reilly Factor.” So it was news, of sorts, when gay and lesbian activists got O’Reilly to at least acknowledge that his fabled “no spin zone” had oversold an alarmist report about “a national underground network” of lesbian gangs raging through the nation’s cities.

    The furor began at the end of last month, when the offending segment aired. O’Reilly introduced the piece by asserting that the gangs were “raping young girls” and “terrorizing people.”

    O’Reilly also interviewed the primary source for the story, Rod Wheeler, a Maryland security consultant and former District of Columbia police officer. Wheeler added a lurid detail to the talk of an epidemic: He told O’Reilly that some gangs called themselves “the pink-pistol-packing group” and assaulted people with pink 9 mm Glock handguns.

    That’s where the sensational report bumped against a real-life interest group. There is, as it happens, a national coalition of some 10,000 gay and lesbian gun owners called “the Pink Pistols.” But far from visiting mayhem on unsuspecting young girls and random passers-by, the group conducts advocacy work on behalf of the traditional conservative cause of defending Second Amendment freedoms.

    As the group’s real profile became known throughout the blogosphere, gay and lesbian activists inundated the O’Reilly Factor with e-mail, phone calls and letters demanding an on-air retraction. GLAAD, the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation, mobilized its own grass-roots campaign against the report, and a civil rights group, The Southern Poverty Law Center, issued a point-by-point rebuttal of the claims in O’Reilly’s segment.

    Wheeler soon responded, replacing his personal Web page with a “clarification and apology” asserting that viewers had misunderstood his comments. He hadn’t meant to implicate the Pink Pistols in violent gang activity, he said, and when he mentioned “over 150 of these gangs” in the Washington metropolitan area, what he actually meant was that there are 150 gangs of all types in the region. He did concede that his reference to a “national epidemic” of lesbian gangs was overstated.

    Wheeler says he’s received nearly 300 e-mails about the report, many of them hostile, and he wants to make clear that he has nothing against lesbians: “They think I was saying lesbians are bad people. I feel awful about it.” On the other hand, he’s standing by his belief that lesbian gangs are using pink pistols in crimes: “This is not something I made up.”

    Pink Pistols spokeswoman Gwen Patton views such contrition with skepticism. “I think there was a great deal of sensationalizing and agenda-driving going on here,” she says. “Perhaps Mr. Wheeler’s own personal feelings regarding the gay and lesbian community entered into it.” Patton also wants the record to show that the group doesn’t dispense literal pink firearms: “It’s pink as in the pink triangle,” she explains.

    After Wheeler issued his apology, O’Reilly agreed to do an on-air interview last week with GLAAD spokesman Rashad Robinson. O’Reilly defended the story while conceding that it could have been overhyped. He cited some reports that groups of lesbians had committed violent acts in New York, Memphis and Philadelphia, making these episodes a trend in his view. “It’s a valid story,” he said. “Is it out of control? No. . . . I’m not in fear of the lesbians beating me up tonight.”

    Robinson says O’Reilly’s “non-apology apology” is a great deal shy of the retraction GLAAD was looking for. “The story is a complete and total fabrication, and he still has failed to offer one shred of evidence as to why it’s legitimate news,” he says. At the same time, however, he says it represents progress of a sort: “It’s important to recognize that O’Reilly rarely admits to exaggerating a story and promising to do better next time.”




    ----------
    Here's Olbermann's take on O'Reilly's rant:
    http://youtube.com/watch?v=YX_nQwDX**k

  2. #2
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    They put a Black man on to try and make the gang report look legit.
    Muscle Asylum Project Athlete

  3. #3
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    Our favorite religious-rightwing organization, Focus On The Family, evidently thought that gay activists were trying to squelch this important information.

    Tsk tsk tsk . . . what is it with these people?



    http://www.citizenlink.org/content/A000005067.cfm

    7-17-2007

    Gay Activists Try to Stop TV Report on Lesbian Gang Attacks
    from staff reports


    High school students are the victims.

    The Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD) has apparently threatened to sue a Tennessee TV station for airing a report on lesbian gangs attacking students.

    Jack Peck, general manager of WPTY in Memphis, said the station agreed to make some rewrites before the story aired in February, but that wasn't enough to satisfy GLAAD.

    The story featured an interview with Shelby County Gang Unit specialist Beverly Cobb, who said girls are being attacked in high school bathrooms and stairwells by members of a gang called GTO or "Gays Taking Over."

    “They are forcing themselves on our young girls in all our schools," Cobb said in the televised report.

    The station gave GLAAD an advance viewing of the story. The group declared it “sensationalistic and homophobic.”

    Peter LaBarbera, with Americans for Truth, said the station manager told him the group definitely did not want the story to air.

    “A senior staffer told him several times, ‘We’re going to take you to court if you air this report,’ ” he said.

    Similar gang activity is reported in New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, Baltimore, and Washington, D.C. Linda Jernigan, a former homosexual, said that’s why GLAAD is making such an issue of the Memphis story.

    “They don’t want this type of information to get out," she told Family News in Focus, "because then they know people’s eyes will be opened, they’ll begin to see this whole situation for what it really is.”

  4. #4
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    fcking manly lesbians scare me

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