Yes, he loved his children. No, he did not push the homosexual agenda.
However, the current "purist climate" would have killed Reagan's nomination if the same standards were applied today.
No, he did not push the homosexual agenda.
Look up the Briggs Initiative. I also advise you to read "An American Life" by Ronald Reagan and learn that if we had treated him the way we treat our candidates now that he'd have given up politics early.
One, Proposition 5, would be the nations toughest anti-smoking law. The other, Proposition 6, would provide for firing teachers who advocate homosexuality.
The measures are similar in that they would mean more government (in fact, the author of Prop. 6, State Sen. John Briggs, said in a recent interview government is the whole ball game). The two measures also present enforcement problemsProp. 5 because it would be difficult to enforce except at great cost and Prop. 6 because it could be over-enforced.
Proposition 5 sets out to protect non-smokers from the fumes of those hooked on the weed. It would prohibit smoking in nearly all public places, but the hitch is that it defines private places of employment as public. Shades of newspeak in Orwells 1984. Restaurants would be required to have smoking and non-smoking sections. And, as with offices and factories, the owners would have to foot the cost for the No Smoking signs. Ironically, the measure would permit smoking in public auditoriums when a rock concert, roller derby or professional boxing or wrestling match is the attraction, but not if the fare is an amateur event or a jazz concert.
Short of recruiting an army of smoking police, the measure seems unenforceable. Smoking is already prohibited in many public buildings, but this measure goes well beyond, to restrict both personal liberties and private property rights. That reasonable smokers and non-smokers can use a little common courtesy in working out their differences seems not to have occurred to the proponents of Prop. 5. If it passes, it wont be the first time a false assumption found its way into law and made government grow.
Proposition 6 rests on several assumptions. The two most frequently mentioned are that teachers can influence the sexual orientation of children because they are role models and that homosexual teachers will molest their pupils. Briggs told an interviewer the other [day] that Everybody knows that homosexuals are child molesters. Not all of them, but most of them. I mean, thats why they are in the teaching profession.
Although statistics are not kept nationally, informed observers usually put the percentage of child molesting cases by homosexuals at well under 10 percent. The overwhelming majority of such cases are committed by heterosexual males against young females.
As to the role model argument, a woman writing to the editor a Southern California newspaper said it all: If teachers had such power over children I would have been a nun years ago.
Whatever else it is, homosexuality is not a contagious disease like the measles. Prevailing scientific opinion is that an individuals sexuality is determined at a very early age and that a childs teachers do not really influence this.
Had Proposition 6 been confined to prohibiting the advocacy in the classroom of a homosexual lifestyle (and sex-before-marriage, swinging. and adultery, for that matter) it would no doubt enjoy much wider support than it does. Instead, the measure calls for firing teachers who engage in homosexual activity (something already covered by California law) or homosexual conduct, which it defines as advocating, soliciting, imposing, encouraging or promoting private or public homosexual activity . . . It is that passageand especially the word advocacy that has generated heavy bipartisan opposition to the measure.
Since the measure does not restrict itself to the classroom, every aspect of a teachers personal life could presumably come under suspicion. What constitutes advocacy of homosexuality? Would public opposition to Prop. 6 by a teachershould it passbe considered advocacy?
The measure would require formal school board hearings if a teacher is accused. Under the present law an informal investigation can be conducted to determine the merits of charges against a teacher. Though the formal hearings under Prop. 6 would be private (unless the accused wanted them public), how do you keep such charges private in a small community? And how do you prevent an overwrought child with bad grades from seeking revenge by accusing the teacher of a homosexual advance or advocacy? Under Prop. 6, you dont.
Will California rewrite that old line to read, As California goes, so goes the nation? Here is one heterosexual non-smoker who, where Props. 5 and 6 are concerned, hopes the answer is no. If blue jeans and drive-in churches werent enough to convince you that California sets trends, Proposition 13 should have left no doubt. Californians arent stopping with the tax revolt, however. The Golden States November ballot contains two controversial measures which, pass or fail, have the potential for setting more national trends.