Tennessee State Sen. Mark Green – Photo: Facebook.
Tennessee State Sen. Mark Green, President Trump’s pick to be the next Secretary of the Army, is lashing back at the “liberal left” by accusing them of “blatantly falsifying” comments he made about transgender people.
Green accused liberals of cutting and splicing his words about terrorism and ISIS after he allegedly claimed that it was his job as someone in public office to “crush evil.” In a radio interview with Blog Talk Radio’s The Hotwash with CJ and Alexlast summer, Green was expressing his opposition to allowing transgender people to use bathrooms that match their gender identity.
Green compared the federal government’s intrusion into state affairs, via guidance to local school districts on transgender bathroom policies, to its insistence that states sponsor Syrian refugees. He then proceeded to wax philosophical, implying there was a religious basis for what he saw as his responsibilities as a state senator, including “protecting women in bathrooms.”
“As far as the religious argument goes…Romans 13 is pretty doggone clear: this is a passage where it tells people to submit to the authorities over them. … But what it goes on to say is the government exists for two purposes: the government exists to honor those people who live honorably, who do good things, to reward people who behave well, and to crush evil,” Green said. “And so that means, as a state senator, my responsibility…is to create an environment where people who do right are rewarded, and people who do wrong are crushed, evil is crushed.”
But Green pushed back against the interpretation, as reported in the press, that he had ever implied transgender people were evil. In a Facebook post, he linked to an article claiming that “homosexual groups” are attacking him because of his Christian faith, and saying “it will not stand.”
“Let me be very clear,” Green wrote in the post. “1) The only people I have ever called evil are murderous terrorists trying to kill Americans. 2) The only people I have ever suggested be crushed are the terrorist enemies of our nation. 3) I have never and will never force my religion on anyone. If God gives Mankind a choice, which I believe, who am I to force my faith on anyone?
“4) I believe that every American has a right to defend their country regardless of race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, and religion. It’s the radical left that won’t allow the latter. 5) I have never considered myself a judge of anyone, but I have been a protector of everyone in this nation.”
Green has previously indicated that he believes being transgender is a “disease” in response to a question about his thoughts on transgender military members being able to serve openly. He has sponsored a religious exemption bill that would allow companies to discriminate against LGBTQ people, a “bathroom bill” restricting what facilities transgender people can access, and a bill allowing teachers to shun content that conflicts with their religious beliefs, including with respect to the inclusion of LGBTQ-related content. He also voted for a Tennessee’s counselor exemption bill, which allows therapists to refuse to treat LGBTQ people if they have strongly-held personal objections to homosexuality.
GLAAD has previously called senators to reject Green’s nomination when it comes before them in the upcoming days and weeks, citing his comments from his interview on The Hotwash. GLAAD responded to Green’s allegations that he had been misquoted by tweeting: “All we did was quote him.”
As Army Secretary, Green would be tasked with overseeing a force that’s fully integrated, part of which means ensuring that all military members are treated equally and are able to access the same benefits. Some have expressed concern that his personal beliefs on homosexuality and transgenderism may influence how he treats LGBTQ service members.
“The Trump Administration must have been desperate to fill this post because Mark Green’s anti-LGBTQ remarks should disqualify anyone seeking to be in charge of the United States Army, which includes many out and proud soldiers,” Sarah Kate Ellis, the president and CEO of GLAAD, said shortly after Green’s past remarks on transgender rights came to light. “Our nation is strongest when we are together — and calling transgender people ‘evil’ does just the opposite.”
U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace once cast herself as an LGBTQ-friendly Republican. She has since become one of Congress’s loudest opponents of transgender rights -- and is now echoing a familiar refrain used by opponents of same-sex marriage on social media.
"Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve," wrote Mace on X, repeating a long-used slogan that mocks same-sex relationships as “abnormal” and frames homosexuality as contrary to the Bible. The South Carolina congresswoman is currently running for governor.
A community note soon appeared under Mace’s post, pointing out that she voted twice for the Respect for Marriage Act -- once during its initial passage, and again when the House approved the Senate’s version. The 2022 law requires both federal and state governments to recognize same-sex marriages performed in states where they’re legal.
A Florida man has been arrested and charged with the murder of Girlalala, a 21-year-old transgender TikTok influencer, after allegedly shooting her during what appears to have been a dispute between the couple.
Broward County Sheriff's Office deputies say 25-year-old Shanoyd Whyte Jr. shot Girlalala shortly before 7 p.m. on Friday, November 14, while the two were sitting in a car on the side of the road in Lauderdale Lakes, Florida.
According to Miami-based WPLG, video from a nearby Tesla shows a man believed to be Whyte getting out of the driver's side of a sedan as Girlalala tries to exit the passenger side. He appears to grab her by the hair and force her back inside before pacing outside the car with a cellphone in hand.
A D.C. jury has acquitted a gay man accused of assault after he threw a Subway footlong at a federal agent during President Trump's short-lived federal enforcement "takeover" of Washington last summer.
As part of the "takeover," Trump deployed agents from multiple federal law enforcement agencies, along with National Guard troops, to patrol D.C. streets, ostensibly to deter crime. Among them were Customs and Border Protection agents, who carried out traffic stops aimed at rounding up undocumented migrants.
Sean Dunn, a 37-year-old Air Force veteran who served in Afghanistan from 2010 to 2011, was captured on video yelling at a Customs and Border Protection agent near a traffic stop on 14th Street NW. The footage shows him jumping up and down, throwing the sandwich, and then trying to flee on foot. The August 10 confrontation quickly went viral on social media.
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Tennessee State Sen. Mark Green, President Trump’s pick to be the next Secretary of the Army, is lashing back at the “liberal left” by accusing them of “blatantly falsifying” comments he made about transgender people.
Green accused liberals of cutting and splicing his words about terrorism and ISIS after he allegedly claimed that it was his job as someone in public office to “crush evil.” In a radio interview with Blog Talk Radio’s The Hotwash with CJ and Alex last summer, Green was expressing his opposition to allowing transgender people to use bathrooms that match their gender identity.
Green compared the federal government’s intrusion into state affairs, via guidance to local school districts on transgender bathroom policies, to its insistence that states sponsor Syrian refugees. He then proceeded to wax philosophical, implying there was a religious basis for what he saw as his responsibilities as a state senator, including “protecting women in bathrooms.”
“As far as the religious argument goes…Romans 13 is pretty doggone clear: this is a passage where it tells people to submit to the authorities over them. … But what it goes on to say is the government exists for two purposes: the government exists to honor those people who live honorably, who do good things, to reward people who behave well, and to crush evil,” Green said. “And so that means, as a state senator, my responsibility…is to create an environment where people who do right are rewarded, and people who do wrong are crushed, evil is crushed.”
But Green pushed back against the interpretation, as reported in the press, that he had ever implied transgender people were evil. In a Facebook post, he linked to an article claiming that “homosexual groups” are attacking him because of his Christian faith, and saying “it will not stand.”
As Army Secretary, Green would be tasked with overseeing a force that’s fully integrated, part of which means ensuring that all military members are treated equally and are able to access the same benefits. Some have expressed concern that his personal beliefs on homosexuality and transgenderism may influence how he treats LGBTQ service members.
“The Trump Administration must have been desperate to fill this post because Mark Green’s anti-LGBTQ remarks should disqualify anyone seeking to be in charge of the United States Army, which includes many out and proud soldiers,” Sarah Kate Ellis, the president and CEO of GLAAD, said shortly after Green’s past remarks on transgender rights came to light. “Our nation is strongest when we are together — and calling transgender people ‘evil’ does just the opposite.”
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