Letter to ABC News
(September 23, 2005)
Where is the story on the House of Representatives
today attaching a Hate Crime's Bill to a Children's Safety Bill
and then passing it?
Also, if you're going to publish it, and
since thirteen-year old Jesse Dirkhising in 1999 was killed by two
gay adult men, would you discuss if it now become a crime to report
that crime? I ask this because during the time of his death, ABC
didn't report the horrific torture and murder of Jesse anyway, suppressing
the story along with NBC, ABC, and virtually all mainstream newspapers,
maybe through the directive of the ASNE?
Only Fox had carried it and had attended
the trial of Jesse's killers, or didn't you know that? I know that
because I took time to call the police where Jesse was murdered,
and ask who covered the story.
Also, if the bill passes the Senate will
it mean if one disagrees with the male gay lifestyle and its spreading
of AIDS and one says that on a Web site, can they then be arrested
and the Web site shut down?
And what about a minister in a church?
Will he have to rip pages out of his NAV or King James Bible?
I guess ABC knows you can be arrested
in Sweden today for insulting a gay, the gay being the one who determines
if he has been insulted, which has caused for the rise of skinhead
violence in that country over the abuse of children by Swedish homosexuals.
I hope your would discuss this in the
news, too. I believe well more than half your audience would want
these questions answered.
If ABC doesn't want to discuss Jesse's
case, then how about the network news discussing the horrific murder
of ten-year old Matthew Curley's, his mother suing NAMBLA in 1999
to take down their Web site. She did it because a member had killed
her son using their downloaded information, the suit continuing
on to this day five years later, the Massachusetts's Courts, the
ACLU, and NAMBLA trying to run the mother out of money, or didn't
you know that? Also has anyone asked Senator Kennedy why he is not
supporting his own constituent?
I had thought the Constitution guaranteed
quick and speedy trials anyway. What happened to the backing up
by the courts of that promise?
ABC must know that NAMBLA is now supported
by the ACLU in Mrs. Curley's lawsuit, saying if NAMBLA wants to
put up information on how a member can avoid the authorities when
raping a child, NAMBLA should be able to because it is a free speech
issue.
I would love to hear ABC Evening News
host discuss this in an intelligent manner under the banner of child
safety, or is this kind of discussion no longer possible in the
politically correct world that now exists in the halls of the skyscrapers
that sit on the soil of New York City, the three networks there
passing this on from sea to shining sea?
This really is an interesting
issue, isn't it, the kind of stuff that could light the fuse for
an eventual civil war.