Homophobia Fallacy

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Homophobia fallacy is the false reasoning and flawed logic behind most allegations of "homophobia" i.e. anti-homosexual prejudice or bias.

It is demonstrated by this example.

In 2016, a UK man named Stephen Port was sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder of four young homosexual men. Port, a 41-year-old chef, found his victims on dating websites and plied them with drinks spiked with fatal amounts of the drug GHB to rape them while they were unconscious. He dumped their bodies in or near a graveyard within 500 metres of his flat in Barking, east London, and embarked on an elaborate cover-up. He disposed of their mobile phones, repeatedly lied to police and planted a fake suicide note in the hand of one of his victims, taking the blame for the death of another.

The judge told Port that he had carried out the murders to “satisfy his lust” for sex with young men who were rendered unconscious. He highlighted Port’s attempt to cover up two of his murders with fake suicide notes as “wicked and monstrous”.

The court heard Port had an insatiable desire for boyish-looking men he referred to as Twinks. [Standard LGBT slang]

He trawled the internet for pornography involving inert young men being raped by older men. [Provided for the LGBT community or it would not be there].

So the killer was homosexual and motivated by homosexual lust. The victims met him willingly by using a mobile phone "app" for homosexual men seeking promiscuous encounters with strangers. Yet the families and the media immediately started looking for a way to blame heterosexuals.

They claimed that the deaths of Jack Taylor, Anthony Walgate, Gabriel Kovari and Daniel Whitworth over 15 months bore striking similarities but police failed to make the link until relatives of his final victim demanded answers. A police investigation was launched, searching for a "homophobic" culprit. A total of 17 officers are being investigated over their handling of the case, seven of whom could face the sack if found to be guilty of gross misconduct. [1]

All the homosexuals were exonerated from blame, as was the LGBT community, and blame was instead attached to a heterosexual. That is the Homophobia Fallacy in a nutshell.

Because of the prevalence of this fallacy, and the false logic of those who seek out and report cases of so-called "homophobia", plus the known tendency of LGBTs to fabricate apparent "hate-crimes", no reliance can be placed on their reportage, their statements or on versions of events based on the evidence provided by their activists.

See also Fake Hate-Crimes


References