[float=right][IMG=145x175]http://i865.photobucket.com/albums/ab217/dianaroo/... Lively, the founder of Abiding Truth Ministries, goes on trial Monday at 11AM for 'crimes against humanity' in Massachusetts Federal Court.
The lawsuit alleges that beginning in 2002, Mr. Lively conspired with religious and political leaders in Uganda to whip up anti-gay hysteria with warnings that homosexuals would sodomize African children and corrupt their culture. The Ugandan legislature considered a bill in 2009, proposed by one of Mr. Lively’s Ugandan contacts, that would have imposed the death sentence for homosexual behavior. That bill was at first withdrawn after an outcry from the United States and European nations that are among major aid donors to Uganda, but a revised bill was reintroduced last month.
Mr. Lively is being sued by the organization Sexual Minorities Uganda under the alien tort statute, which allows foreigners to sue in American courts in situations alleging the violation of international law. The suit claims that Mr. Lively’s actions resulted in the persecution, arrest, torture and murder of homosexuals in Uganda.
Lively sparked international outrage when he worked with anti-gay forces in Uganda to foster legislation that would impose the death penalty for homosexual activity. While the future of that bill is still up in the air, a Ugandan LGBT group is suing Lively for crimes against humanity in Massachusetts federal court.
Scheduled to begin Monday at 11am, the case is believed to be the first use of the Alien Tort Statute—which gives American courts the right to hear human-rights cases brought by foreign citizens for conduct committed outside the US—involving sexual orientation.
Lively, who is being defended by the anti-gay legal Liberty Counsel. has distanced himself from the bill’s original death-penalty clause but endorsed an allegedly revised version that imposed life imprisonment.
He’s made a real habit of stirring up virulent homophobia overseas: Lively co-authored The Pink Swastika, which posits that “homosexuals [were] the true inventors of Nazism and the guiding force behind many Nazi atrocities,†and formed the anti-gay Watchmen on the Walls in Riga, Latvia. According to Southern Poverty Law Center, the Watchmen “are known for presiding over anti-gay rallies where gays and lesbians are pelted with bags of excrement.â€
Here are two related videos:
Lively delivers an hate-filled address (VIDEO) at a 2009 conference in Uganda.
The Rachel Maddow Show covered American involvement in the Ugandan "Kill The Gays" bill (VIDEO) on her show on MSNBC on December 11, 2009.
...and finally, here's an article, Massachusetts Tea Party Patriots: 'We will not be silenced by faggots.' about a rally on the Boston Common at which Scott Lively delivered a speech.
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Comments
you are clearly not a lawyer,
By anon
Sun, 01/06/2013 - 12:09pm
you are clearly not a lawyer, nor familiar with what "international law" is. As a clue, the laws of Thailand and Saudi Arabia are not "international law".
"opinions" = violence
By Lavandar Mist
Sun, 01/06/2013 - 3:46pm
Sir, Mr. Lively's "opinions" have manifested into something more than just opinions. He has deliberately lied about the gays in Uganda to bring forth hostile legislation against them. Those are not opinions that you're defending. They are violent words that have been converted into real, tangible action. This lawsuit seeks to hold him accountable for his words.
Have fun sympathizing with your precious zealot.
opinions vs. actions
By anon
Sun, 01/06/2013 - 10:17pm
You might want to pay some attention to the whole story. Lively has been actively seeking to have legislation enacting a death penalty against gays, fomenting lies about gay people in order to get that legislation passed and physically attacking gay people himself and encouraging others to do so as well. That's not legal. Opinions are one thing, seeking to murder people for being gay and scaring people into approving legal action involving a death penalty against anyone by making up lies about them is not simply opinion. It's defamation for starters and libel. Neither of these is legal unless we're talking about somewhere in your mind.
No
By anon
Mon, 01/07/2013 - 2:52pm
Inciting mass murder is a crime against humanity. Hope this helps clear up your confusion.
What on Earth was this prick's incentive?
By Will LaTulippe
Sun, 01/06/2013 - 12:06am
Was he to receive a bounty for every gay Ugandan that got arrested or something? What the (expletive) was his endgame?
It's probable that each gay
By Lanny Budd
Sun, 01/06/2013 - 9:21am
It's probable that each gay who suffers on this earth lessens Mr. Lively's guilt over his own suppressed homosexual urges.
They are losing the fight in the US
By JP Gal
Mon, 01/07/2013 - 10:13am
and so exporting their hate is the only way to keep their organizations growing and their coffers full. It's like the tobacco companies, which are aggressively marketing cirgarettes in other countries as smoking declines here.
Abuse of a Right?
By Daan
Sun, 01/06/2013 - 6:34am
Who is funding Lively? He travels to Uganda but also to Eastern Europe charging with his campaign of historical falsity and his crusade to rid the world of Gay people.
One of the things that I questioned about the anti-Gay campaign in Uganda is whether it represents a campaign of demagoguery and witch hunts. Anti-Gay campaigns are often fronts for campaigns to accumulate power and/or to create enemies out of thin air. It uses an already existing bias as a means to create an enemy or scapegoat whom a politician can then use to prove that he is a crusader for what is good and right. Joe McCarthy used anti-Gay and anti-Communist witch hunts as a means for portraying himself as a hero and crusader for God and patriotism. But Lively is only the tip of the iceberg. Conservative Christians in this country, including power elites such as mega churches or The Family (conservative religious Senators) in D.C. are involved in the Ugandan campaign of sexual purification as well. The idea of purity - and the uses of crusades against impure elements - is alive and well in Uganda and this nation.
To me this also opens the question of where is the line between a right and an abuse? Free speech is not an absolute right. So is Lively's promoting legislative murder in another nation protected by the 1st Amendment or does it fall outside that protection? The Ugandan bill includes execution for "aggravated homosexuality." This would make Uganda the equal of Iran where Gays are hanged from building construction machinery. If Lively is found to have advocated death for Gays in Uganda then he guilty of advocating murder. I don't think that is Constitutionally protected.
I bet it takes a lot of
By anon
Sun, 01/06/2013 - 10:57pm
I bet it takes a lot of persuasion to make Ugandans homophobic.
I....I...hate him and....
By Brian Riccio
Sun, 01/06/2013 - 5:18pm
I hate his ass face!!
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