Thursday, November 15, 2012

Freaks for Eternity


Larry Auster, at the View From the Right (VFR), has the above photo from 2009 of the San Fransisco police force out to commemorate the 1966 Compton's Cafeteria Riot. The photo is captioned:
Freaks in charge: Heather Fong (left), Theresa Sparks, and Sgt. Stephan Thorne commemorate the start of the transgender rights movement.
The freaks are:
- Theresa Sparks is the president of the San Francisco Police Commission and the CEO of a multimillion-dollar sex toy company. “She” started out life as a male but had the operation. Sparks was a Grand Marshall in the 2008 San Francisco Pride Parade.

- Stephan Thorne took a different route to police work, starting out life as a female and, through surgery, becoming a simalcrum of a man. Thorne enjoys the distinction of being the San Fransisco Police Department’s first transgender officer.

- Heather Fong is the first female and the first lesbian chief of the San Fransisco Police Department.
LA writes:
That photo is one of the freakiest things I’ve ever seen...Not only are they freakish, and not only are their physical appearances and expressions freakish, but the atmosphere and lighting and the people behind them are also freakish. It’s like something out of hell. Yet it’s a picture of public officials and police in an American city.
Homosexuals (and this includes lesbians) thrive under freakish environments. It is as though they're accelerating the hell in which they will be living for eternity.

I used to think that homosexuals where hyper-tuned to beauty (at least, that is what sex writer Camille Paglia writes and I think still believes). But, I think what they finally get is freakishness, or hyper-distortion of life. This brings them closer to hell than to heaven.


Here are the happy trio of sinners, Fong from 2008, the year she retires, Sparks from 2007 as incoming Police Commission President, and Thorne from 2008 promoted to lieutenant. They have enough to be happy about. As Larry Auster says at the beginning of his post:
I’m laughing out loud. It doesn’t bother me any more. It’s their country now.
And he elaborates at an earlier post:
Which doesn’t mean that we shouldn’t try to get at the truth. We should never give up trying to get at the truth. But to think that finding the truth will lead to the administration being held accountable, by law or by public opinion, for any wrongdoing it has committed, is delusory. It’s their country now.