Virginia’s Anti-Gay Attorney General Comes out – As a Birther
Written by Jon Ponder Wednesday, 17 March 2010 07:20
In the two months or so since they took office, Virginia’s new Christian extremist governor, Bob McDonnell, and Ken Cuccinelli, the commonwealth’s proudly homophobic attorney general, have made national news by rescinding — then restoring (sort of) — protection from discrimination for gays who work for the state or attend a state-funded college or university.
Aversion to civil rights for gays became issues during both pols’ campaigns last year. First it came to light that when McDonnell was a student at TV preacher Pat Robertson’s Liberty University 20 years ago, he wrote a paper in defense of permanently relegating gays to second-class status, along with, as he put it, “fornicators” and “cohabitators.” (Young McDonnell ignored the fact that, in practice then as now, it is only gays, not sexually prolific straights or unmarried heterosexual couples, whose rights are up for grabs via legislative regulation and voter approval.)
By comparison, however, McDonnell came off as practically enlightened to Ken Cuccinelli, who made news with this:
“My view is that homosexual acts, not homosexuality, but homosexual acts are wrong. They’re intrinsically wrong. And I think in a natural law based country it’s appropriate to have policies that reflect that. … They don’t comport with natural law. I happen to think that it represents (to put it politely; I need my thesaurus to be polite) behavior that is not healthy to an individual and in aggregate is not healthy to society.”
(Yes, we know what you’re thinking. Cuccinelli, the father of seven, doth protest too much. Let’s just mark him as “bi-curious, conflicted.”)
Given all that, it’s hardly surprising that Gov. McDonnell and A.G. Cuccinelli have drawn the media’s attention by fumbling on gay rights. Here’s a recap of sorts from the March 11, 2010, Richmond Times-Dispatch:
Gov. Bob McDonnell is strengthening largely symbolic anti-bias protections for gay state employees, attempting to douse a political firestorm set when his attorney general decreed such safeguards don’t exist.
McDonnell, who previously had resisted legal protections for gay state employees, declared yesterday that as head of the government work force, he will not tolerate bias on the basis of sexual orientation and he threatened to fire offenders.
McDonnell was compelled to action after Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli told tax-supported colleges and universities last week that they have no legal foundation for protecting gay students and employees from discrimination.
Cuccinelli’s position echoed a 2006 opinion by McDonnell that declared unconstitutional part of an anti-bias order by Gov. Timothy M. Kaine.
The controversy — it ignited protests online and on campuses as well as in the General Assembly — threatened to tarnish McDonnell’s fledgling administration; made the state an object of ridicule on “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart”; and could complicate efforts to lure defense giant Northrop Grumman, which has gay-friendly employee policies, to relocate to Fairfax County from Los Angeles.
“It has caused too much fear and too much uncertainty in the business community and the higher-education establishment and among young people in the commonwealth — and I simply won’t stand for that,” McDonnell told reporters.
Over the weekend, however, Cuccinelli shredded his already tattered credibility after being caught on tape speculating about where Pres. Obama was born, which he claims not to be “beyond the realm of possibility.”
Q: What can we do about Obama and the birth certificate thing?
Cuccinelli: It will get tested in my view when someone — when he signs a law, and someone is convicted of violating it and one of their defenses will be it’s not a law because someone qualified to be President didn’t sign it.
Q: Is that something you can do as attorney general? Can you do that or something?
Cuccinelli: Well only if there is a conflict where we’re suing the federal government for a law they’ve passed. So it’s possible.
Q: Because we are talking about the possibility that he was not born in America.
Cuccinelli: Right. But at the same time under Rule 11, Federal Rule 11, we gotta have proof of it.
Q: How can we get proof?
Cuccinelli: Well… that’s a good question. Not one I’ve thought a lot about because it hasn’t been part of my campaign. I mean, someone is going to have to come forward with nailed down testimony that he was born in place B, wherever that is. You know, the speculation is Kenya. And that doesn’t seem beyond the realm of possibility.
Got that? The top law official of the commonwealth of Virginia is a birther — quite possibly becoming the top elected state official in the country to join their ranks. Congratulations, Virginia.
Read the original article in Pensito Review
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