US US Secretary of State says he promotes LGBT agenda ‘in every conversation’ with Saudis - No wonder everyone loves America

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US Secretary of State says he promotes LGBT agenda ‘in every conversation’ with Saudis​

Jack Bingham
Fri Jun 17, 2022 - 6:43 pm EDT

WASHINGTON, D.C. (LifeSiteNews) — U.S. Secretary of State Anthony Blinken told the press on Thursday that he pushes LGBT “rights” with his Saudi Arabian counterpart “invariably, in every conversation.”

According to Politico, the statement came during the State Department’s first-ever “briefing for LGBTQI reporters,” with Blinken explaining that he has had “real engagement” with Saudi Foreign Minister Faisal bin Farhan Al-Saud when talking about protections for the LGBT community in the Middle Eastern nation.

Despite ardently pro-LGBT U.S. President Joe Biden saying he was going to treat Saudi Arabia like “the pariah they are,” Blinken said the administration is seeking to “recalibrate the relationship,” part of which is advancing the homosexual agenda.

Blinken went on to herald the proliferation of the LGBT agenda across the world, mentioning the “remarkable” turnout of people at pride events in Lithuania, and the successful push by the United States to have homosexual acts decriminalized in Botswana.

According to the State Department, the U.S. government has funded approximately 10,000 LGBT “human rights defenders” through its Global Equality Fund, whose partners include the Royal Bank of Canada, Deloitte, Hilton, and Bloomberg L.P.

It remains unclear why the Biden administration sees it to be in the interest of the American taxpayer to fund the advancement of anti-Christian morality across the entire globe when the United States is facing decades-high inflation, skyrocketing crime in major cities, and shortages of essential goods, including baby formula.

Nonetheless, in 2021, Biden appointed Jessica Stern as the “U.S. special envoy to advance the human rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer and intersex persons.”

According to Blinken, Stern is able to “walk into my office and walk into any office 24/7” to “give us that intense focus that we need.”



politico.com / archive

Blinken: I press Saudis on LGBTQI issues ‘in every conversation’​

The secretary of State warns that attacks on LGBTQI communities are the “canary in the coal mine” for broader anti-freedom efforts.

By RYAN HEATH
06/16/2022 06:10 PM EDT

Secretary of State Antony Blinken says he brings up LGBTQI rights with his Saudi counterpart “invariably, in every conversation,” but defends President Joe Biden’s planned July visit to the kingdom — where homosexual acts carry the death penalty.

“There are a lot of different things” that constitute America’s interests in the country, Blinken said.

Speaking at the State Department’s first-ever briefing for LGBTQI reporters, Blinken told POLITICO that “we have real engagement” with Foreign Minister Faisal bin Farhan Al-Saud when he raises his LGBTQI-themed complaints. But he said human rights are only one part of America’s foreign policy and “everything has to be reflected in what we do.”

It’s hardly the concerted effort to treat the Saudis “like the pariah they are” that Biden promised as a candidate, but Blinken insists that was never the administration’s plan. “We were determined from day one to recalibrate the relationship: not rupture, recalibrate,” he said.

It’s a delicate juggling act for a pro-LGBTQI administration.

The State Department says it has provided financial assistance to around 10,000 LGBTQI human rights defenders via its Global Equality Fund. But in pursuing what Blinken called a “first do no harm” approach to attacks on LGBTQI communities globally, the administration is also vulnerable to criticism that it acts too slowly or quietly in defending those under siege.

That group includes Brittney Griner, the out American basketball player whose imprisonment in Russia on drug smuggling charges has been extended until July 2.

Blinken has now classified Griner as “wrongfully detained” — after a two-month legal process. Her case is part of a broader trend of American citizens being used as political pawns by autocratic regimes.

Asked if foreign leaders point out that LGBTQI rights are under attack in states across America, Blinken admitted, “I, not infrequently, get that response.”

The Saudi death penalty example illustrates that for other LGBTQI communities globally, the stakes are often higher than for those defending, for example, marriage equality in the United States.
Blinken painted a picture of a world polarizing on LGBTQI rights.

There is occasional real progress: “Pride in Lithuania: 17,000 people, that’s remarkable!” he noted, speaking of the recent Baltic Pride parade in Vilnius, and highlighting a successful years-long push to decriminalize homosexuality in Botswana that was supported by the United States.

All that exists against a grim backdrop: one in three countries globally still criminalize homosexuality.
Blinken describes the current backlash against LGBTQI communities as “a deadly serious time,” and frames these attacks as a “canary in the coal mine” for broader human rights and democratic freedoms.

While leaders such as Russia’s Vladimir Putin provide extreme examples of the use of anti-gay ideology, the administration is worried about many other countries. And yet, the State Department remains reluctant to name and shame.

Privately, U.S. diplomats point to Hungary, Poland, Guatemala and Indonesia as examples.

“The last thing we want to do is actually make things worse,” Blinken told POLITICO, arguing that “we have to do it on a case-by-case basis, because every country has a different situation.”

The decision on whether to go public with criticism often depends on feedback from local activists, Blinken said, adding that he insists on American diplomats abroad providing “as much early warning as possible” about new attacks on rights.

In a common Biden administration refrain, Blinken emphasized the importance of coordination with allies: “Coming together can make a big difference: the country in question will take it more seriously.”

That work would be easier if Jessica Stern, the U.S. special envoy to advance the human rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer and intersex persons, had more than three counterparts around the world — in London, Rome and Buenos Aires.

Stern warned that autocratic governments are copying anti-LGBTQI legislation from each other and anti-gender movements are gaining strength — often funded by American private donations.

The Global Philanthropy Project estimates that since 2008, “eleven United States organizations associated with the anti-gender movement funneled at least $1 billion into countries across the globe” — vastly outspending LGBTQI advocacy.

“The anti-gender movement is growing in strength. It’s well networked, and it’s well resourced,” Stern told POLITICO. “Bad ideas are copied. And we’re seeing copycat legislation and a new crop of criminalizing laws that target LGBTQI activists around the world.”

“When you say a law criminalizes me for who I am, it violates my rights. But if you argue for equal protection under the law, you’re attacked as an activist. There’s never a way forward,” she lamented.
Promising to “make sure that [the State Department] actually reflects the full country that we represent,” Blinken described Stern’s role as being able to “walk into my office and walk into any office 24/7,” and “give us that intense focus that we need.”

Blinken remains worried but upbeat — believing that the backlash experienced by some LGBTQI communities is because of the broad success they have had in speaking out and securing both legal rights and cultural affirmation. “The planet as a whole” he said, “has never been more tolerant by lots of measures.”

“In every corner of darkness, we also find some places of light,” he said.
 
I understand World Politics is a different horse in a way; but this is the kind of shit that gets people to stop talking to you. This is literally online SJW bullshit where everything is racist, everything is sexist, everything is homophobic and you have to point it all out. I'd also like to think Blinken tried something like "We need more petroleum products to manufacture KY for our faggots." So the Saudi's wrote that down and decided we need even less.
 
My first thought reading the title:

"Yes please it'll be funny when they snap".

My second thought:

"Please do this under your own authority and not on behalf of the whole country".

If there's any thought put into it, I'd say it's a 2 pronged strategy. It panders to wokes here, and if they can trigger a hate crime over there they use that as an excuse to start / continue another forever war.
And for what it is worth, the Saudis know it is all bullshit anyway.
 
@snailslime stop giving everyone in the thread negative ratings @Null why is this allowed you should remove stickers from this section reeee
Think about it.

If all snailslime does is hand out negative ratings, does it mean anything?

...well, it doesn't, but that's mainly because this is snailslime we're talking about.
 
Think about it.

If all snailslime does is hand out negative ratings, does it mean anything?

...well, it doesn't, but that's mainly because this is snailslime we're talking about.
I think I noticed one of my posts wasn't negrated once and I figured I wasn't being edgey enough.

Then I realized my goal was not to be edgey so it oddly means something, but the meaning means nothing.
 
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