Only “Congruent” Free Speech Allowed in Atlanta
In what is becoming a more frequent and more confrontational occurrence, the right to Free Speech is being curtailed by those not “congruent” with the radical homosexual agenda. In our modern era of injustice, those whose views are congruent to the radical left seem to have more rights than those who are not.
In this article at WorldNetDaily, you can watch the video where people who do not subscribe to sodomite pride are forced to leave public property. From the article:
Atlanta officials declare Constitution-free zone
‘Your message is not congruent,’ so leave public property or be arrested
Posted: June 23, 2007
1:00 a.m. EasternBy Jennifer Carden
© 2007 WorldNetDaily.comAtlanta ‘gay’ pride poster
The city of Atlanta has created a Constitution-free zone on public property for this weekend’s 2007 Atlanta Pride festival, according to pastors and lawyers who have been trying to secure an assurance that Christians’ free-speech rights will be protected.
“The Constitution does not apply in Piedmont Park this weekend,” attorney Joel Thornton, of the International Human Rights Group told WND.
“The city of Atlanta, whose attorneys I have been negotiating with for the past six months, has just sent me a letter saying that they ‘will not be able to offer you or your client[s] any assistance in this matter,’” he said.
The theme of the Piedmont Park event for Atlanta’s “gay” community may be: “Our Rights, Your Rights, Human Rights,” but the pastors have no doubts their Christian message will be silenced by the authority of the city’s police force.
An estimated 300,000 people from all areas of the country attend the festival, which is the culmination of Atlanta’s “Gay” Pride month, an event welcoming “diversity,” “tolerance” and “rights.”
But, said Thornton, “when officers of the Atlanta Police Department threaten to arrest Christians for sharing their faith at the event there will be nothing stopping them from keeping the Gospel message from being heard in this community.”
Thornton’s conclusion is supported by the experiences of a number of pastors who at the 2006 event were restricted for delivering “incongruent” messages at the homosexual event. That scene was captured on videotape:
Dick Christensen said he and his small group of urban missionaries hadn’t even unfurled their banners on the grassy knoll outside the festival gate a year ago before they were threatened with arrest.
Atlanta Pride Committee Executive Director Donna Narducci approached Christensen with a personal security guard and an Atlanta police officer, asking him to move from his place outside of the public park.
“It’s not like we had banners and bullhorns,” Christensen told WND. “I was just wearing an ordinary shirt, no buttons, and I’m confronted before I even begin to exercise my First Amendment right to free speech.”
“She was carrying a permit, and she said that I had to leave the public sidewalk surrounding the park,” he recalled, “because, and I quote her, I was not ‘carrying a message that is congruent with Atlanta Pride.’ That is the reason I had to leave the public sidewalk or face arrest.”

