Cal Poly Students' 'Gay Makeout Session' Silences Campus Preacher (VIDEO)
Campus preachers: when they're not explaining that women were made for men or arguing with professors, they're holding up signs that say, "You Deserve Rape."
One such extremist preacher was doing her thing at the California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo, Calif., recently, warning students that they must repent or go to hell, when two students apparently decided they'd had enough.
A video of the incident posted to YouTube and picked up by Gawker shows two men walking up next to the preacher and starting to wildly make out. The preacher goes quiet as onlookers begin cheering and clapping for the kissing students.
The YouTube user who posted the video, Nadira320, said the preacher "was just beginning a rant on traditional marriage and why gay people are evil when this happened. Highlight of my week."
Students have actually pulled this move before. In 2011, two students at the University of Texas kissed in front of anti-gay preacher Jed Smock. And both same-sex and heterosexual couples kissed in protest of a similar preacher at Yale University in 2010.
John Aravosis, editor of AMERICAblog, has a fairly comprehensive collection of LGBT couples (on TV shows and in real life) using a kiss as a "political weapon." He wrote in response to backlash over a pair of April Time magazine covers showing gay couples kissing: "It shouldn’t be a 'thing,' but it is a thing."
One such extremist preacher was doing her thing at the California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo, Calif., recently, warning students that they must repent or go to hell, when two students apparently decided they'd had enough.
A video of the incident posted to YouTube and picked up by Gawker shows two men walking up next to the preacher and starting to wildly make out. The preacher goes quiet as onlookers begin cheering and clapping for the kissing students.
The YouTube user who posted the video, Nadira320, said the preacher "was just beginning a rant on traditional marriage and why gay people are evil when this happened. Highlight of my week."
Students have actually pulled this move before. In 2011, two students at the University of Texas kissed in front of anti-gay preacher Jed Smock. And both same-sex and heterosexual couples kissed in protest of a similar preacher at Yale University in 2010.
John Aravosis, editor of AMERICAblog, has a fairly comprehensive collection of LGBT couples (on TV shows and in real life) using a kiss as a "political weapon." He wrote in response to backlash over a pair of April Time magazine covers showing gay couples kissing: "It shouldn’t be a 'thing,' but it is a thing."
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