Teen says he hates jews blacks and gays

No longer are they dominated by teens engaging in thrill-seeking with predatory gangs of their peers. He said *fake* Jews are being attacked by African Americans.” The reality is that words have consequences, and attitudes of hatred will lead to acts of hatred.

Even when the Jews assimilated and did their best to shed their Jewish identity - you guessed it - they were still hated. Five states now allow same-sex marriage, and another three recognize such unions from other states. Since then, the record has been mixed.

Responding to the wave of teen suicides — including, most dramatically, that of year-old Tyler Clementi, a Rutgers University student who leaped off the George Washington Bridge in New York City in September — anti-gay leaders instead blamed those who sought to protect students from bullying.

In Covington, Ky. In Vonore, Tenn. Four teenagers commit suicide in a three-week span after being bullied, taunted or outed as homosexuals. A Changing Landscape Remarkably, most Americans today seem to have a sense of the violence that the LGBT community is regularly subjected to, or in any event are increasingly rejecting extreme religious-right narratives about the alleged evils of homosexuality.

Inthe legalization of same-sex marriage in most of Canada, plus the U. Byfueled by the anti-gay rhetoric and political organizing of religious-right groups, at least 40 states and the federal government had adopted constitutional bans or laws against same-sex marriages.

But its hardest core angrily presses on. By this August, according to a Roper poll, a majority of Americans supported same-sex marriage for the first time. The reality is that homosexuals or perceived homosexuals are by far the group most targeted in America for violent hate crimes, according to an Intelligence Report analysis of 14 years of federal hate crime data.

A leading criminologist and sociologist of hate crimes, Jack Levin of Northeastern University, sees evidence of the growing radicalization of the fringe in other ways. Although the rash of student suicides drew major media attention for a few daysthe reality, gay rights advocates say, is that the LGBT world has been plagued by hate violence for years.

The year-old charged with murder as a hate crime in the fatal stabbing of O’Shae Sibley, a Black gay man, is alleged to have taunted Sibley and yelled homophobic slurs before the attack. An earlier Gallup poll, released in Mayhad similar results.

This was not always so. Antisemitism is growing in America, especially among young people. All of this is only a sampling of the anti-gay attacks occurring around the nation, most of it drawn from just the last few months. The religious anti-gay right has been knocked back on its heels by gay rights advances.

He says perpetrators of anti-gay hate crimes appear to be getting older. Seven students — at least four of whom had endured anti-gay bullying — kill themselves over the course of a year in a single Minnesota school district. But the question still remains: Why?

Why the Jews?. That is a deeply distressing trend, writes Jonathan A. Greenblatt. The bottom line: Gay people are more than twice as likely to be attacked in a violent hate crime as Jews or blacks; more than four times as likely as Muslims; and 14 times as likely as Latinos.

In New York, 10 suspects are arrested for torturing three gay victims. California allowed them for some months inbut the Proposition 8 referendum ended that — until a federal judge this fall overturned the proposition, saying it discriminated unconstitutionally against homosexuals.

A rash of attacks hits Washington, D. And in Michigan, a prosecutor harasses a local gay rights student leader for months.

The Real Reason Why

In fact, the chief target of these anti-gay ideologues — the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network GLSEN — has been working to get protection from school bullying for a wide range of racial, religious and sexual minorities, not only LGBT students.

The Jews of 19th century Germany renounced their status as a “chosen people,” but they were still hated. A federal bill that would have prohibited states from recognizing same-sex marriage failed.