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________________________________
 From: itemabu2 <[email protected]>
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Thursday, June 27, 2013 5:03 PM
Subject: Re: [proletar] CNN: After Supreme Court ruling, Obama presses the 
world on gay rights
 


  
Obama itu penjilat pantat islam sama spt David Cameron.

On 6/27/13, Bukan Pedanda <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
> Homoseksual itu telah dibuktikan ilmuwan alamiah belaka.
> Di dar al Islam homoseksual di persekusi..
> Sementara itu berbagai gereja Nasrani dilanda goncangan diskusi, tapi mereka
> biasanya tidak mempersekusi homoseksual
>
> --
>
> After Supreme Court ruling, Obama presses the world on gay rights
> By Josh Levs andJessica Yellin, CNN
> June 27, 2013 -- Updated 1729 GMT (0129 HKT)
> Scenes of joy after Supreme Court ruling
> STORY HIGHLIGHTS
>       * NEW: He calls former slave trade post a powerful reminder to keep 
> focus
> on human rights
>       * Obama calls for decriminalizing homosexuality; Senegalese President 
> Sall
> says no
>       * He's pushing U.S. investment, addressing development issues, promoting
> democracy in Africa
>       * Nelson Mandela's legacy will linger "throughout the ages," Obama says
> Dakar, Senegal (CNN) -- U.S. President Barack Obama
> on Thursday called on countries throughout the world to decriminalize
> homosexuality, a day after the U.S. Supreme Court handed a major victory to
> proponents of same-sex marriage.
> Every group of people has a right to its own views, Obama said, and that
> diversity should be
> respected, "but when it comes to how the state treats people -- how the
> law treats people -- I believe that everybody has to be treated equal."
> He spoke at a news conference with President Macky Sall of Senegal, a
> country in which homosexuality is illegal.
> "Regardless of race,
> regardless of religion, regardless of gender, regardless of sexual
> orientation ... people should be treated equally, and that's a principle
> that I think applies universally," Obama said.
> The remarks came in response to a question from CNN as to whether he was
> pressing Sall on the issue.
> President Obama in Africa
> Obama: Mandela is a hero for the world
> Obama to tour Senegal 'House of Slaves'
> What Obama hopes to achieve in Africa
> Obama said that the issue did not come up in their talks, but that the
> question of how gays and
> lesbians are treated has been coming up in Africa in general.
> Sall responded that his country has no plans to decriminalize
> homosexuality.
> "Senegal is a very
> tolerant country which does not discriminate in terms of inalienable
> rights of human beings," he said, according to an official translation.
> People are not refused jobs for being gay, he said. "But we are still
> not ready to decriminalize homosexuality."
> "But of course this does not mean that we are all homophobic," Sall
> insisted.
> Sall then turned to another issue on which the two nations differ: capital
> punishment.
> "In our country, we have abolished it for many years," he said, adding, "We
> do respect the choice of each country."
> Obama's Africa visit
> Obama left the United
> States on Wednesday for a trip to Senegal, South Africa and Tanzania --
> his second visit to sub-Saharan Africa since taking office.
> The trip aims to bolster investment opportunities for U.S. businesses,
> address development
> issues such as food security and health, and promote democracy. It comes as
> China aggressively engages the continent. The Asian nation is
> pouring billions of dollars into Africa, running oil and mining firms,
> and in 2009 replaced the United States as the largest trading partner.
> At Thursday's news
> conference, Obama was asked to assess the big news at home: the Supreme
> Court ruling Wednesday striking down a key part of the Defense of
> Marriage Act.
> The decision was "not
> simply a victory for the LGBT community," he said, referring to lesbian,
> gay, bisexual and transgender people. "I think it was a victory for
> American democracy."
> READ: Same-sex marriage rulings hailed as historic victory
> "I believe at the root
> of who we are as a people, as Americans, is the basic precept that we
> are all equal under the law. We believe in basic fairness. And what I
> think yesterday's ruling signifies is one more step towards ensuring
> that those basic principles apply to everybody," Obama said in response
> to a question from CNN's Jessica Yellin.
> His administration will
> now have to comb through every federal statute, he said, to ensure that
> federal benefits "apply to all married couples."
> There are complexities,
> he noted. Since some states recognize same-sex marriages and others
> don't, the government will need to determine whether a same-sex couple
> remains married under federal law after moving to a state that does not
> recognize the marriage.
> Mandela's influence
> Obama also spoke of ailing former South African President Nelson Mandela,
> who is in critical condition in a Pretoria hospital.
> "My first act of
> political activism was when I was at Occidental College as a 19-year-old --
> I got involved in the anti-apartheid movement," Obama said.
> He said he was inspired
> by what was taking place at the time in South Africa. He had read
> Mandela's writings and speeches, and understood "that this was somebody
> who believed in that basic principle I just talked about -- treating
> people equally -- and was willing to sacrifice his life for that
> belief."
> Mandela "is a personal
> hero" and "a hero for the world," Obama said. "And if and when he passes
> from this place, one thing I think we'll all know is that his legacy is one
> that will linger on throughout the ages."
> Obama's visit to South
> Africa on Saturday will include a stop at Robben Island, where Mandela
> spent a majority of his 27 years in prison. The White House schedule
> does not include a visit with the anti-apartheid icon.
> After making his remarks Thursday, Obama visited Goree Island, which once
> served as a strategic post in the transatlantic slave trade.
> He called the trip a
> "powerful" reminder that "we have to remain vigilant when it comes to
> the defense of human rights. ...This is a testament to when we're not
> vigilant in defense of human rights, what can happen."
> "Obviously, for an
> African-American, an African-American president, to be able to visit
> this site, I think, gives me even greater motivation in terms of human
> rights around the world," Obama said.
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>

 

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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