US

.- Tim Gill, a billionaire from Colorado
who has funded homosexual activism throughout the United States, spoke at the
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered (LGBT) Delegates Caucus at the
Democratic National Convention on Monday, outlining how he has worked to advance
homosexual causes in U.S. politics. Gill endorsed undermining rising politicians
critical of homosexual advocacy by targeting donations to benefit their
opponents on the state level.
Gill, who was introduced at the caucus as
one of the nation’s largest funders of LGBT “civil rights initiatives,”
reportedly has spent $150 million on LGBT issues. He is the former CEO of the
software publishing company Quark, Inc. and is also the founder of the Gill
Action Fund, a major backer of homosexual political candidates and
causes.
“Every single advance for gay rights has come at the state
level,” Gill said, saying the most important thing the Democratic LGBT delegates
could do is “go back and support those pro-gay state legislators, and eliminate
the anti-gay state legislators.”
He encouraged the delegates to donate
to state candidates out of state, especially in rural areas.
The
billionaire homosexual activist also counseled the audience not to donate to
unwinnable races, but rather to focus their donations where they will most
likely change the outcome of elections.
“Just a little bit of money goes
a long way,” he said.
If all the LGBT delegates donated fifty dollars
to specially targeted races, which he numbered at no more than ten or twenty per
election year, Gill said “we can get rid of them.”
By successfully
changing Republican legislatures to Democratic ones, Gill claimed, “the net
result is always good for gays.”
Though he was a Democrat speaking at
the Democratic National Convention, Gill claimed he and the LGBT delegates were
in a “battle for the soul of the Republican Party,” a party which he claimed was
controlled by “a bunch of bigots.”
“The only way bigots are going to
learn is if we take their power away from them,” he asserted.
He counseled
the delegates to find the next Rick Santorum, the former U.S. Senator from
Pennsylvania, and “end his career.”
Pennsylvania U.S. Senator Rick
Santorum, a Republican, who opposed homosexual causes, lost to the Democratic
Sen. Robert Casey, Jr. in 2006. Gill took credit for helping bring about
Santorum’s loss.
Organizers at the LGBT Caucus claimed as members at least
274 of the more than 4,000 DNC delegates attending the convention.
Orginally published on Catholic News Agency, but link no longer works...