Trump rallies with pastor who claims gay people molest children

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Donald Trump has continued his defiant association with an extreme pastor who claims gay people are likely to sexually abuse children.

Trump has repeatedly come under scrutiny over his ties to Pastor Robert Jeffress, of Dallas First Baptist Church.

The influential pastor has been shunned by moderate Republicans due to his hateful public comments about gay people, but Trump has maintained close ties to him while in the White House.

Back in January, Jeffress led a private prayer ceremony for Trumpā€™s inauguration, while in May the pair were pictured posing together in the Oval Office.
Robert Jeffress and Trump
Despite clear warnings about Jeffress, the President solidified the relationship over the weekend, attending a rally hosted by Jeffress at the Kennedy Center.

A choir serenaded Trump with a hymn titled ā€˜Make America Great Againā€™, while in a speech Trump hit out at the ā€œfake mediaā€.

Jeffress had directly equated gay people to paedophiles in the past.

Speaking on his radio show, he claimed: ā€œSome gay activists donā€™t even try to hide the link between homosexuality and paedophilia. There are some who are right now are actively involved in trying to legalize sex between adults and children by lowering the age of consent or removing it altogether.

ā€œIt would be wrong to even suggest that a majority of homosexuals are pedophiles, but the truth nevertheless is there. There are a disproportionate amount of assaults against children by homosexuals than by heterosexuals, you canā€™t deny that, and the reason is very clear: homosexuality is perverse, it represents a degradation of a personā€™s mind and if a person will sink that low and there are no restraints from Godā€™s law, then there is no telling to whatever sins he will commit as well.ā€

It is far from his only extreme comment, many of which were recorded for his radio show and are a matter of public record.

A simple Google search of Jeffress unearths most of the comments.


He has also compared homosexuals to people who rape animals, claiming: ā€œGodā€™s plan for sexuality is one man with one woman in a lifetime commitment called marriage. Any deviation from that is sin.

ā€œOf course, Iā€™m always, the retort to that is ā€˜oh! Are you pulling a Rick Santorum and saying that homosexuality is like bestiality, uh, incest, or pedophiliaā€™? And I say ā€˜Yes.ā€™. It is just as immoral as those practices.ā€

On another occasion on his radio show, he claimed that homosexuality is ā€œthe most detestableā€ act in the world.

The pastor claimed: ā€œWhy is there such a high incidence of disease among homosexuals? They are engaged in the most detestable, unclean, abominable acts you can imagine.

ā€œBecause what they are doing is unnatural, it goes against nature, because of that filthy practice; there is a natural result to it. There is natural, physical consequences to homosexual behavior. Thatā€™s why God says donā€™t engage in it, you are going to harm your bodies in doing so.ā€

Speaking on a further occasion the preacher cited the 2003 Supreme Court ruling that struck down sodomy laws banning gay sex as one of three laws that have destroyed America.

He fumed: ā€œThe third explosion that has weakened the social and spiritual infrastructure of our nation, making our collapse I believe inevitable, is the Supreme Court decision Lawrence v. Texas in 2003.

ā€œSometimes God destroys a society immediately. But other times, as in our case, there is a series of seemingly unrelated explosive choices, followed by a delay, and then followed by the sudden and dramatic collapse, just as in an implosion.

ā€œLadies and gentlemen, I am convinced that we are living in that in between time right now. We are living in that in between time between these explosive, wrong choices our country has made and the inevitable implosion of our country.ā€

The pastor also previously suggested gay sex is like plugging an electrical cord into the wrong outlet.

He said: ā€œYou know, in the instruction manual, it said, now plug this into a 120 [volt] outlet. Suppose I said, ā€˜Oh, Iā€™m not going to follow those instructions, those are antiquated instructions. Iā€™m going to plug it into a 220 [volt] outlet. Itā€™s my TV and I can do whatever I want to with it.ā€

Jeffress added: ā€œWell, it is my TV to do what I want to with it, but Iā€™m going to blow that TV to smithereens if I put it in a 220 outlet.ā€