Russia Condemns Gay Marriage Ruling, Calls to Ban Pro-Gay Facebook

Daily Stormer
June 29, 2015

The rainbow house is a real thing.
The rainbow house is a real thing.

I’m not sure that people really grasp how phenomenally important it is that Russia refuses to capitulate to the West on the issue of homos.

Moscow Times:

A spokesman for the Russian Orthodox Church has called on all those who idolize the American democratic model to take a hard look at themselves after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled to legalize same-sex marriage, Interfax reported Sunday.

The United States’ highest court ruled Saturday that same-sex marriage should be legalized across the entire country, meaning that the 14 states with bans on gay marriage will no longer be able to enforce them.

But Vsevolod Chaplin, a Russian Orthodox Church spokesman, decried the decision to legalize such a “godless and sinful thing” and warned his compatriots to be wary of the values that the current U.S. leadership is trying to impose on other countries, Interfax reported.

“In reality they want to take away your right to live by faith … to take away the possibility of building the life of your society and your state based on the eternal and unchanging moral laws dictated by God,” the priest was quoted as saying.

Homosexuality is not illegal in Russia, but a law passed in June 2013 bans the promotion of “nontraditional” sexual relations to minors. A survey by independent pollster Levada Center last month found 37 percent of Russians think homosexuality is a disease that needs to be cured.

In light of the Supreme Court’s decision, Facebook created an application that allows users to cover their profile pictures with a transparent filter in the colors of the LGBT rainbow flag. Rishat Shigapov, a Facebook user who heads a digital marketing agency, responded to the rainbow-flag app by creating a separate program allowing users to cover their profile photos with the colors of the Russian flag. Revealing his new tricolor profile photo, Shigapov wrote on his Facebook page: “I’m Russian and I’m proud.”

The Facebook app likewise provoked the wrath of conservative politician Vitaly Milonov, a deputy in St. Petersburg’s legislative assembly.

Milonov, an architect of Russia’s “gay propaganda” law, told the Russian News Service on Saturday that he had asked the country’s media watchdog to block Facebook because the application was in “flagrant violation” of the country’s law given that the social media site has no age limit.

The reaction to the Supreme Court’s decision has not been entirely negative in Russia. Senator Konstantin Dobrynin, deputy head of the Federation Council’s constitutional law committee, used the ruling to urge his country to adopt a more balanced approach in its own dealings with the LGBT community.

Bravo.