(I doubt they'll object to printing this! ... print it further.)
State Rep. Gerald Allen’s anti-gay bill got an appropriately chilly reception at a hearing in the House Education Committee this week. Though he has rewritten the bill to tone it down, it remains a narrow-minded expression of homophobia.
The Cottondale Republican wants to prohibit schools from spending public funds on books or other materials that recognize or promote homosexuality as an acceptable lifestyle. Allen says the legislation is not about hate but is a response to concerns of citizens about cultural preservation and government spending.
The motivation, however, is quite obvious -- and not just to the gays who complained about it at the committee meeting on Wednesday. It treats homosexuality as a contagious sin, spread by casual contact -- a concept that belongs in the Dark Ages.
Allen has tried to make his legislation more palatable by excluding college libraries, allowing for some of Shakespeare’s plays to be read in K-12 classes and letting college theater groups perform Tennessee Williams’ “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof."
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