Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Maggie Gallagher Continues to Enrich Herself Through Anti-Gay Hate

Personally, one of the most obscene, reprehensible, and morally challenged members of the professional Christian set is Maggie Gallagher. The same Maggie Gallagher who is married to a Hindu who she keeps hidden away more securely than the most closeted self-loathing gay. Not content with raking in the dough through NOM and its hate and bigotry peddling affiliates, now Gallagher is about to latch onto the teet of Ave Maria School of Law, a wingnut Roman Catholic law school in Naples, Florida. The law school which will house a so-called called the Center for Research on Marriage, Religion and Public Policy will be headed up by guess who? Maggie, of course, who will further enrich herself with a salary. Jeremy Hooper at Good As You has the details of the hate mistress' latest anti-gay activities. Here are highlights:
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So yet another gig for Maggie that's wholly about exalting personal faith views on marriage and morality in a way that influences shared public policy. The continued goals are [1] to shape young legal minds in a way that further muddies the waters between civil marriage licensing and its optional (even if oft-utilized) religious ceremony component; [2] to make marriage all about reproduction, even though procreation is also a wholly optional component of marriage (one that many same-sex couples also engage in); and [3] to collect a paycheck while doing all this. Maggie's profitable, personal prayers injected into the realms of civil discrimination and unjust division.
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She sees her religion as superseding civil matters that she finds personally conflicting ("to fight against an unjust civil order"). In short: She thinks she knows better,

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Is the job market only softening for law school grads looking for specific, high-paying jobs at the top law firms, or if it means that the United States has too many lawyers in general? However, a report earlier this year by the National Association of Law Placement indicated that even though the majority of law school graduates can still find jobs, a far higher percentage of those grads are now taking jobs that are temporary.





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