Ryan T. Anderson, the William E. Simon Fellow in Religion and a Free
Society, warned that 'bullies" were poisoning democratic discourse by
attacking anyone who doesn't share their view:
The outrageous treatment of Eich is the result of one private, personal
campaign contribution to support marriage as a male-female union, a view
affirmed at the time by President Barack Obama, then-Sen. Hillary Clinton,
and countless other prominent officials. After all, Prop 8 passed with the
support of 7 million California voters.

So was President Obama a bigot back when he supported marriage as the union
of a man and woman? And is characterizing political disagreement on this
issue--no matter how thoughtfully expressed--as hate speech really the way to
find common ground and peaceful co-existence?
Sure, the employees of Mozilla--which makes Firefox, the popular Internet
browser--have the right to protest a CEO they dislike, for whatever reason.
But are they treating their fellow citizens with whom they disagree
civilly? Must every political disagreement be a capital case regarding the
right to stand in civil society?

When Obama "evolved" on the issue just over a year ago, he insisted that
the debate about marriage was legitimate. He said there are people of
goodwill on both sides.

Hans von Spakovsky, manager of the Election Law Reform Initiative and
senior legal fellow, said the episode was an example of how the disclosure
of political contributions served as a means to intimidate and harass an
individual for his personal views:

Before Eich resigned, he pointed out that he had kept his personal beliefs
out of Mozilla and that they were not relevant to his job as CEO. He was
exactly right, although that did not prevent him from resigning.

In a startling display of irony that was obviously lost on her, Mozilla
Executive Chairwoman Mitchell Baker, who approved of Eich's resignation,
said it was necessary because "preserving Mozilla's integrity was
paramount." She seems not to recognize that forcing a founder of the
company to resign because of his personal beliefs that have nothing to do
with his qualifications as a corporate officer is the exact opposite of
"integrity."

Eich is certainly not alone in his predicament. As the Heritage Foundation
previously pointed out, other supporters of Proposition 8 in California
have been subjected to harassment, intimidation, vandalism, racial
scapegoating, blacklisting, loss of employment, economic hardships, angry
protests, violence, death threats, and anti-religious bigotry. All
committed by individuals claiming they are simply trying to gain
"acceptance" and who complain about the supposed intolerance of society
over their lifestyle.

http://blog.heritage.org/2014/04/04/ceo-made-political-donation-lost-job-liberals-didnt-like

.



On Fri, Apr 4, 2014 at 8:26 AM, Sam <[email protected]> wrote:

> You sound proud.
>
> .
>
>
>
> On Fri, Apr 4, 2014 at 1:28 AM, Eric Roberts <
> [email protected]> wrote:
>
>>
>> He was forced to do so by his employees, who were disgusted by his actions
>> and demanded that he step down.
>>
>>


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