Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
July 3, 2015
At first I was like “this guy seems like a pretty cool guy.”
A small hardware store in East Tennessee is making national headlines after posting a “No Gays Allowed” sign in the storefront window following the Supreme Court’s decision allowing same-sex marriage.
Jeff Amyx, a baptist minister who owns Amyx Hardware & Roofing Supplies in Grainger County, said he added the controversial sign in order to stand up for his religious beliefs.
“They gladly stand for what they believe in, why can’t I? They believe their way is right. I believe it’s wrong,” Mr. Amyx told a local NBC affiliate. “But yet I’m going to take more persecution than them because I’m standing for what I believe in.”
“Would you let a child molester come in your home, around your kids? Of course not,” he told a local CBS affiliate. “So why would I let a homosexual hang around me? It’s against my nature, it’s against my way of life, it’s against my religion.”
But then I saw this and was like “this guy is not really very cool.”
WKRN:
On Tuesday, however, media reports say he took down that sign and replaced it with one reading “We reserve the right to refuse service to anyone who would violate our rights of freedom of speech & freedom of religion.”
Amyx, who is Baptist, says he’ll sell to gay people as long as they “behave” and don’t express their opinions in his store.
So you’re okay with them touching your stuff with their butthole AIDS fingers, Amyx?
When he decided to replace the sign he should have put one up reading “I have no balls – please walk all over me, because my principles don’t really mean anything to me and I won’t resist.”
What a coward. If you’re going to make a statement, then bloody make it.
The Jews make statements all the time and never back down from them. The Jew Hedy Weinberg, the executive director at Tennessee’s chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, made this statement in regards to this issue:
Gay and lesbian people are our neighbors, coworkers, family members and friends. When it comes to being able to be served by a business, they should be treated like anyone else. Religion should not be used as an excuse to discriminate against LGBT people. Businesses that are open to the public should be open to everyone on the same terms.
Do you think he is going to go back and qualify that to make it sound less offensive?