Did Barney Franks Gay Agenda Open the Turnstiles of Terrorism?
Aggressively homosexual Massachusetts Rep. Barney Frank’s successful 10-year campaign to change immigration law so that it wouldn’t be so “unduly restrictive on political grounds” — a godsend to terrorists — turns out to have been motivated by his gay agenda. Prior to 1990’s Frank Amendment, aliens could be denied entrance to the USA for a variety of commonsense reasons related to ideology. In their place, Frank left us with a rule that foreigners could not be excluded or deported “because of any past, current, or expected beliefs, statements, or associations which, if engaged in by a United States citizen in the United States, would be protected under the Constitution of the United States.” In the words of James R. Edwards, Jr., author of “The Congressional Politics of Immigration Reform,” the Frank Amendment “sought to extend the First Amendment to the world — despite foreigners’ lack of corresponding duties that U.S. citizens bear or the status of being subject to the U.S. governmen