Showing posts with label gay propaganda in comics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gay propaganda in comics. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Wonder Woman (Comic Book) Strongly Promotes Same Sex Marriage, Time To Boycott Time Warner!

DC Comics is owned by Time Warner (Remember that before using their products)


The world's most iconic female superhero isn't just a supporter of same-sex "marriages" -- she officiates them, too.
That's right, Wonder Woman presides over the wedding of two brides in Sensation Comics Featuring Wonder Woman, Chapter 48.  The new installment of the anthology series, due out Aug. 20, was written and illustrated by Jason Badower. 

The "wedding" issue also marks Badower's DC Comics debut. The artist told The Huffington Post in an interview that Wonder Woman (she already promotes Avodah Zarah) is "the most logical candidate in the DC Universe," to officiate same-sex "marriages" because her creator, William Moulton Marston who was in a 3 way relationship with 2 women (that means they were together also), specified that she originally hailed from an island inhabited only by women. Hence, he said, it's likely that Wonder Woman's mother would have officiated and authorized similar ceremonies.  In the book (1954Seduction of the Innocent psychiatrist Fredric Wertham claimed that Wonder Woman was supposed to promote lesbianism, Dc Comics vehemently deigned these charges.  That book led to the comic book code that forced standards on the comic book industry that worked until the 70's.
Badower said he also really wanted to reference current affairs -- specifically, the U.S. Supreme Court's June 26 ruling that legalized same-sex "marriage" nationwide -- in the story. 
"I saw this Wonder Woman story as an incredible opportunity to have one of the most recognizable, iconic characters in the world to be among the first to step forward and officially endorse this new law," he said. "But I thought, let's not just have Wonder Woman embrace this new law, let's have her celebrate it."  and thus convince kids this is great.
As to whether or not Wonder Woman might one day find herself in a same-sex relationship, Badower pointed to her longtime, heterosexual love interest Steve Trevor. With Wonder Woman often rescuing Trevor in a gender-reversed take on the "damsel-in-distress" motif, he said, "The pressures she must have felt from that unconventional relationship would, unfortunately, be familiar to many people today."
He then said, "Her courage in the face of that is an incredible attribute we can all learn from." 
DC Comics hasn't shied away from lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) issues in recent years. In 2013, the DC Universe introduced the first openly transgender character in a "Batgirl" comic. Meanwhile, Selina Kyle, the character formally known as Catwoman, was confirmed to be bisexual.
Meanwhile, Midnighter, a character who first appeared in the DC Comics franchise in 1998, will reportedly explore his sexuality and even join the gay social networking app Grindr in a forthcoming comic book.
For the past 20 years DC Comics has actively been promoting homosexuality from remaking established characters as homosexuals (Most noticeably Green Lantern a character that goes back to the early 40's) to black listing Orson Scott Card (who opposes same sex "marriage") from working on Superman breaking their deal with him. 
Don't think this story doesn't effect you, Many Orthodox Jewish children heard of Wonder Woman, Furthermore things less then this, have already brainwashed a generations of youth leading to our current predicament.

Even if you don't read DC Comics you can make your view known by not using other Time Warner products.
(huffington post) highlighted portion our additional comments


Saturday, January 3, 2015

Liberal Newspaper Shows How Hollywood Changed America's Values On Homosexuality

Pop culture helps change minds on gay rights

Today, gays and lesbians are the folks next door, brought to the nation’s living rooms through the force of popular culture. Whether fictional characters or the performers themselves, they’re on TV, in movies, in music, even in comic books.

McClatchy Washington Bureau (TNS)
WASHINGTON —

When she learned a relative was gay, Amy Mesirow embraced the idea, used it as a "teaching" moment for her children and explained how it also would be OK if one of them were gay.

Then her son, who was 15 at the time, came out of course it had "no" relation to her clearly liberal child rearing techniques. “I felt like he was entering a whole new world, where I couldn’t follow him,” Mesirow recalled of her struggle to adapt.

Eventually, she found reinforcement in an unexpected place: television. “A year later, ‘Modern Family’ premiered,” she said of the hit show featuring a gay couple, “and changed my vision.”

Today, gays and lesbians are the folks next door, brought to the nation’s living rooms through the force of popular culture. Whether fictional characters or the performers themselves, they’re on TV, in movies, in music, even in comic books. Many play roles that are not the often derisive stereotypes of a just a generation ago.

Popular culture is a key to the broad and rapid shift in the nation’s politics as the country has turned rapidly from long opposition to gay "rights" toward support for gays, including same-sex marriage, acceptance of a gay child and willingness to vote for a gay politician.

Millions watch Cam and Mitch, a "married" male couple raising a "daughter" on “Modern Family,” ABC’s five-time Emmy award-winning sitcom. “Same Love,” a "marriage"-dequality anthem by Macklemore and Ryan Lewis, jumped to the Top 5 on Billboard’s rap-music chart last year.

In comic books, Archie, the red-haired freckle-faced perennial teenager, was killed last year while protecting a gay friend. DC Comics introduced a gay Green Lantern two years ago reinventing a character that was first published in 1940 into a gay character undoing his entire previous history that included grand children. Marvel Comics presided over comicdom’s first same-sex superhero "wedding" when Northstar "married" his male partner in “Astonishing X-Men.”

There are 33 recurring lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender characters on prime-time shows and 64 on scripted prime-time cable-television programs in the 2014-15 season, up from 42 in 2013-14, according to GLAAD, a gay-terrorists "rights" group.

It’s a long way from 1999, when the Rev. Jerry Falwell derided the children’s TV show “Teletubbies” because “Tinky Winky,” a purple character who carried a red handbag and had a triangular-shape antennae on his head, appeared to be gay.

“We’re far from a happy world ... but we’ve made dramatic "progress",” said actor George Takei, who played Hikaru Sulu in the “Star Trek” television series and movies. He came out in 2005 and "married" longtime partner Brad Altman in 2008.

The portrayals of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people in popular culture and the portrayals of people who "love" them, Takei said in an interview, have “contributed to changing American society.”

TV plays big role

While attitudes may be changing rapidly, acceptance is far from universal. “They are using their influence in socially irresponsible ways,” Bryan Fischer of the American Family Association said of the entertainment industry.

The group’s One Million Moms boycotted J.C. Penney in 2012 for hiring as its spokeswoman Ellen DeGeneres, who came out on her comedy show in the 1990s. Fischer said the group continues to target advertisers of shows it opposes. “Our concern is they are normalizing and sanitizing what is an unnatural and risky lifestyle,” he said.

Sanitized or not, the cultural impact on public opinion is undeniable, and that in turn is changing politics. Vice President Joe Biden, who endorsed same-sex "marriage" before the 2012 presidential election, cited the power of popular culture in helping facilitate the change.

“When things really began to change is when the social culture changes. I think ‘Will & Grace’ a gay TV Show probably did more to "educate" the American public than almost anything anybody’s ever done so far,” Biden said on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” referring to the NBC sitcom that centered on the friendship between roommates Will Truman, a gay lawyer, and Grace Adler, a straight interior designer.

While it seems sudden, the changes have been a long time in coming, a legacy of the civil-rights movement.

“We’re just now seeing the acceleration of a process that has been going on for more than 40 years,” said Nadine Hubbs, a professor of women’s studies, music and American culture at the University of Michigan.

The middle class has been gradually embracing homosexuality, Hubbs said, and “when celebrity artists come out, it contributes to the softening of the boundaries and eventually it can turn into a critical mass.”

Surveys suggest that the depictions carry influence: which is why GLAAD pressures anyone who doesn't cow-tow to them
• Twenty-seven percent of respondents said shows with LGBT characters such as “Modern Family” and Fox’s musical show “Glee” helped influence them to support same-sex "marriage", according to a 2012 poll by The Hollywood Reporter.
• Thirty-four percent of respondents said seeing gays and lesbians on television and 29 percent said seeing them in movies helped change their views, according to a 2008 poll conducted for GLAAD by Harris Interactive.
For some Americans, viewing LGBT characters through popular culture and media provides a no-pressure, no-judgment insight into communities they might not otherwise see or fully understand. “Seeing it in the comfort of your own home, where you can work it through without anybody judging or watching you, is really useful,” said Mesirow, of Marstons Mills, Mass.

When Mesirow’s son Ben, now 22, came out, she quickly learned it’s one thing to intellectually accept homosexuality and another to come to grips with it emotionally when it involves a member of your immediate family. “You have visions for your child’s future, living a similar life to your own with a wife and biological children and the whole picket-fence scenario,” Mesirow said. “We felt he wasn’t going to be able to live a mainstream life and be accepted by people around him and be able to raise a family.”  Their not just reaching the leftists, but also the masses who are brainwashed by this including Jews who consider themselves Orthodox

Tuning into shows such as “Modern Family,” along with “The Fosters” on ABC Family and the Amazon-streamed show “Transparent,” helped ease her concerns.

“Here’s this gay couple with this big extended family that, for the most part, is very supportive; with co-workers and jobs with no issues to speak of,” Mesirow said of “Modern Family”

“Their lives are like "any" other couple’s ... Just seeing it on the TV and feeling I got to know this couple and this "family" ... just gave me a sense of relief and a vision that Ben could have this type of life.” Her search for understanding led her to join the support group PFLAG, Parents, Family and Friends of Lesbians and Gays.

Assimilation challenges

Activists knew that increased positive visibility in popular culture would help change attitudes. “The best way to change hearts and minds is through media,” said Sarah Kate Ellis, president and chief executive of GLAAD. “For many, many years, networks were reluctant to depict LGBT people the same way they depict heterosexual characters. Ultimately, we want network TV to depict LGBT characters the same way they would straight characters: in a multidimensional way.”

ABC’s musical drama “Nashville” highlights country music’s resistance to gays with a storyline involving a closeted country singer who marries a woman to keep his secret. The actor who plays Will Lexington told Out magazine last year that he doesn’t believe country-music executives would give Lexington “the time of day.”

While the number of LGBT characters and plots are increasing on television, LGBT actors say they still experience discrimination behind the camera. Fifty-three percent of LGBT respondents to a 2013 survey by the Screen Actors Guild and the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists said they believe that directors and producers were biased against hiring LGBT performers. in short they won't be happy till everyone is gay

A GLAAD report last summer found that "only" 17 of 102 movies from major movie studios in 2013 featured LGBT characters, and that most of those portrayals were "negative" their definition of negative mean that they are not perfect propaganda tools. Some writers for DC Comics’ “Batwoman” quit in 2013 after the company reportedly rejected a storyline that had the superhero "marrying" her girlfriend. even though DC Comics has been using their comicbooks for gay propaganda for more than the past decade, turning numerous characters of theirs into homosexuals years after they were first invented  

Some LGBT-rights activists also complain that the change in popular culture has homogenized portrayals of gays and lesbians for the benefit of heterosexual audiences and paints an incomplete picture of their lives.

Suzanna Danuta Walters, director of women’s, gender and sexuality studies at Northeastern University, said “Modern Family’s” gay characters “offer a narrow slice of gay life: two wealthy white men, who never touch each other.” the reason for that is that is the best way to propagandize

“There are people on the gay left who deeply regret the trend toward assimilation and desexualization,” said Paul Robinson, an emeritus Stanford University history professor and author of “Queer Wars: The New Gay "Rights" and its Critics.”

“There’s an argument within the gay community between those who support "assimilation" — getting "married" and joining the military — and those who think gays should be part of an alliance with women, poor people, people of color. The people who want to get "married", have children, have won the argument.”   in actuality gays on both sides of the "argument" are pretty much all a bunch of leftists on every single social issue, and in more than 80% of times leftists on every single issue. The fight is over whether or not they should use their strong political clout primarily for LGBT issues, or push both sides equally.  Unfortunately their is a much higher percentage of "Orthodox" Jews who voted for Coumo YMS in this last election, then there are gays who will vote for a pro life candidate no matter how evil they are on LGBT issues

(seattle times) highlight our additions

Monday, April 29, 2013

DC Comics Makes A Gay Transgendered Character In Order To Brainwash Children

Dc Comics Transgender Batgirl
DC Comics Using Comics to promote Homosexuality


DC Comics has introduced a new lesbian, gay, transgender and bisexual (LGBT) friendly character: Alysia Yeoh, the transgender roommate of Batgirl.

Comic fans were introduced to Alysia in "Batgirl" #19, which hit shelves on Wednesday, according to Wired. She is the first transgender character in mainstream comics, and she reveals that she is trans during a conversation with Barbara Gordon (Batgirl) in the pages of the new issue. The character is also bisexual.

Writer Gail Simone told Wired she was inspired by the fans to develop a character like Alysia. "Why was this so impossible?" she asked herself at the time. "Why in the world can we not do a better job of representation of not just humanity, but also our own loyal audience?”

Simone explained to Wired that breaking down barriers in the comic book world is a process. "[A]lmost all the tentpoles we build our industry upon were created over a half century ago… at a time where the characters were almost without exception white, cis-gendered, straight, on and on," she said. "It’s fine — it’s great that people love those characters. But if we only build around them, then we look like an episode of 'The Andy Griffith Show' for all eternity.”

After the big reveal, some questioned if Alysia is in fact the first openly transgender character in comics.
Comic blog Bleeding Cool notes that there have been multiple transgender characters in the past -- like Masquerade from 1993's "Blood Syndicate" or Marisa Rahm from "Death Wish" -- but many of these were either not outwardly identified as transgender or the issues themselves were labeled mature content/alternative, as opposed to mainstream.

DC's inclusion of LGBT characters has been moving ahead at full steam recently.  In February, Batwoman proposed to her girlfriend, Captain Maggie Sawyer, in the first-ever lesbian "marriage" proposal in comic history. 

All of this comes on the heels of controversy surrounding DC tapping anti-gay writer Orson Scott Card to co-author the "Adventures of Superman" #1 digital short. A petition to get Card booted from the project has since gathered over 17,000 signatures. However, DC stood by the Ender's Game author, and the issue is set to be released on May 29.

(Huffington Post)

Monday, February 25, 2013

Superman comic's anti-gay writer faces backlash from major media


The controversy over anti gay-marriage campaigner Orson Scott Card's deal to write the next Superman chapter has spilled over to major media companies who are due to work with the sci-fi author in 2013.
Orson Scott Card's very public personal beliefs came under renewed firewhen DC Comics announced on 6 February that he was signed on to write a story in the digital-first Adventures of Superman anthology. That ire is now threatening promotions of the filmed adaptation of Card's sci-fi novel Ender's Game, which hits theaters in November.
One studio executive told the Hollywood Reporter that the film's production company Summit should "keep him out of the limelight as much as possible."
"I don't think you take him to any fanboy event," said another. "This will definitely take away from their creative and their property."
Card's collection of anti-gay sentiments include saying that legalizing gay marriage: "Is about giving the left the power to force anti-religious values on our children," and that being gay is a "a reproductive dysfunction".
And as public opinion on gay marriage has shifted favorably, Card's opinions have increasingly alienated his audience.
An online petition requesting that DC Comics drop Card is less than 500 signatures short of its 15,000 signature goal. Comic-book store owners have said they won't sell his Superman comicFreelance writer Glen Weldon wrote on NPR that the Card-penned comic would be the first bit of Superman pop culture he would avoid after 45 years of fandom.
Weldon said there are plenty of writers whose opinions he disagrees with, but Card is different because he is in activist who serves on the National Organization for Marriage, a group dedicated to preventing the legalization of same-sex marriage. 
"DC Comics has handed the keys to the 'champion of the oppressed' to a guy who has dedicated himself to oppress me, and my partner, and millions of people like us," Weldon said. "It represents a fundamental misread of who the character is, and what he means."
DC's inclusion of Card seems to backpedal on the increasingappearance of gay characters and marriage into mainstream books. Archie Comics and Marvel Comics featured gay weddings in their comics last year and DC reintroduced the Green Lantern as gay shortly after.
Archie Comics said in October that they received thousands of new subscribers and lost only seven after introducing gay character Kevin Keller. Marvel Comics writer Daniel Ketchum, who is gay, said he was prepared for a backlash before announcing that superhero Northstar would be marrying his partner, but was instead flooded with comments supporting the marriage.
DC Comics co-publisher Dan Didio told the Guardian in October that fan reception of gay characters was "extraordinarily positive."
This week, DC Comics released its newest issue of Batwoman, where the superhero proposes to her girlfriend, a plotline unlikely to curry favor with Card.
The company told the Advocate in early February: "As content creators we steadfastly support freedom of expression, however the personal views of individuals associated with DC Comics are just that – personal views – and not those of the company itself."