Monday 13 August 2012

FOREIGN LESBIANS AND 22 RESERVED SEATS

The people of Papua New Guinea do not know how close they went to making an irreversible change to the political scene.

A successful vote for the 22 reserved seats in parliament would have changed every thing for the worse. Please click:

Affirmative action for our women MPs – I say stuff it!

In the recent election, there were three women voted into parliament by their electorate of men and women.

They were grass roots women of status who were focused on families, marriage and faith.

They came out of the village culture.

But there is another group of women being supported by the foreign lesbians who come out of village culture but have no intention to return..

They want changes that have little to do with family women.

They want lesbian rights, same sex marriage and adoption of children by gays and lesbians.

They have no hope of being elected by an equal vote against men. They want an easy path to be elected by reserved seats.

Then they are not accountable to village women.

They prevailed on Dame Carol Kidu to clear the path through de-criminalization of gay and lesbian sex and 22 reserved seats.

They failed. We feel sorry for Dorothy Tekwie whose Greens party was compromised by an Australian gay political leader.

But environment did not scratch women where they itched.

Senator Bob Brown came to PNG on the pretext of environment but really to attend a debate at Divine Word University on decriminalization of gay and lesbian sex.

If the 22 seats were passed, there would be infiltration of lesbians into the women's movement.

Hordes of young women would take out membership of the women's groups in a process called stacking.

When the annual general meeting was held, the executive would be in the hands of young lesbians being tutored by the UN to take control of nominations for the 22 seats.

The people of PNG got the better deal. This time there will be a basic mind-set change. Just wait.

The report above quotes the Prime Minister saying there should be more women in parliament. That is just what we would expect a good man to say.

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