Daily Slave
September 17, 2014
A propaganda piece from the Jew controlled Daily Beast website claims that Kazhakstan nationalists who are pushing for gay DNA tests are crazy people who hate faggots.
I fail to see why this is considered such a crazy idea. Even though I don’t necessarily agree with the approach, it is a far saner idea than such ideas we see promoted in the West.
For example, it is certainly far saner than allowing faggots and transgenders to serve openly in the military. Allowing mentally ill people to serve openly does nothing to strengthen any organization. It only serves to weaken it.
It is also much saner than allowing faggots to “marry,” which is a completely ridiculous concept. Why should two people who are incapable of producing offspring be allowed to marry? It serves no purpose.
Of course, those ideas are considered trendy and hip where as any attempt to maintain traditional values is considered insane.
There’s an old chestnut, attribution unknown, that says “When America coughs, the world gets a cold.” For nationalists who hate gay people, perhaps the parallel should be “When Russia scratches, the world gets scabies.”
Case in point: Far-right nationalists in Kazakhstan this week have proposed not only a more stringent version of Russia’s “Anti-Propaganda Law” but—wait for it—genetic testing to identify gay people.
To be sure, it’s unlikely that this bizarre DNA proposal will ever become law. It was put forth by an ultra-nationalist organization that, like its counterparts in Russia, mingles anti-gay and anti-foreigner positions, often seeing the former as representative of the latter.
As to whether Kazakhstan will pass a Russia-style Anti-Propaganda Law, that is a different matter. Kazakhstan voted for, essentially, a “traditional marriage” amendment at a recent UN Human Rights Council meeting, and legislators from multiple parties have called for a law similar to Russia’s. One deputy from the ruling Nur Otan party said that gays are “criminals against humanity.” Anti-gay amendments to Kazakhstan’s “Code on Marriage and Family” are presently being debated.