NATO diverts attention from losses in Ukraine, declares military alliance exists to support LGBTQ+ ideology
By bellecarter // 2024-05-27
 
Amid the ongoing and escalating conflict in Ukraine, where Russia seemed to be making major gains, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) has a more important announcement: its all-out support for the LGBTQ+ ideology proliferation. On May 17, in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said that the intergovernmental military alliance exists to spread LGBTQ+ values. "#NATO exists to defend 32 nations, and our peoples' right to live freely and in peace. On the International Day against Homophobia, Biphobia and Transphobia and every day: all love is equal. LGBTQ+ people deserve respect and dignity and I am proud to call myself your ally," he said and ended the social media post with the hashtag #IDAHOBIT. Critics believe that the NATO leader is just diverting the public's attention away from Ukraine and its Western allies' failure to sustain the war they have waged against the Eurasian nation. Kyiv has recently admitted its military workforce is in critical shortage. It is even requesting for "trainers" from the West to be deployed in the beleaguered nation so that they can train recruits faster and send them in the frontlines in no time. (Related: NATO to overstep Russia's red line as it mulls sending troops to train Ukrainian armed forces.) Since the beginning of Russia's special military operation in Ukraine on Feb. 24, 2022, Stoltenberg has been particularly vocal about NATO's values and why it's an institution that has to be trusted despite its long track record of causing instability abroad from Serbia to Libya. NATO, founded in 1949, was established to counter the Soviet Union’s influence on the European continent. "In fact, the alliance's creation was part of a broader effort to serve three purposes: Deterring Soviet expansionism, forbidding the revival of nationalist militarism in Europe through a strong North American presence on the continent and encouraging European political integration," its website indicated. But ever since the Soviet Union collapsed, "NATO has worked to remake the world in America’s increasingly dysfunctional image," Big League Politics' Jose Nino said in an article. "Moreover, it teams up with a consortium of non-profit organizations to promote values such as sexual deviancy through soft power means. More importantly, it is an entangling military alliance with a crusading ideology that is a threat to world peace." Analysts believe nations in their proper state of mind, especially the U.S., would be wise to exit this alliance altogether and chart their own paths on the world stage. Meanwhile, IDAHOBIT is celebrated annually, marking the World Health Organization's decision in 1990 to declassify homosexuality as a disease. During last year's "celebration," Stoltenberg said "NATO's strength is our diversity,” stressing that "it is important that we reflect and celebrate the extraordinary diversity of our populations." He added that every member of the LGBTQ+ community "deserves dignity and respect."

Former NATO head wants West to accelerate help to Ukraine

For former NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen, it is time for the West to "wake up," when it comes to Russia's war in Ukraine. "The damage done by our hesitancy can be counted in Ukrainian lives," he said on Tuesday at an Atlantic Council event hosted by the Eurasia Center. Rasmussen called for Western allies to accelerate military support to Ukraine during the said event, where American, European and Ukrainian officials and experts in mapping out their recommendations for what the alliance should achieve for Ukraine at July's NATO Summit in Washington, are present. Over the past two years, "our soldiers had to buy time for the Western decision-makers far too often," Head of the Ukrainian President's Office Andriy Yermak said. Ahead of the summit, Rasmussen and Yermak led a working group to consolidate recommendations from former leaders across the Alliance. Rasmussen also recommended that Kyiv should be invited to the said summit and also set a target date for Ukraine's NATO membership no later than July 2028. Former British Prime Minister Liz Truss also spoke virtually at the event, agreeing that she wants Ukraine to become a NATO member "as soon as possible" so that the alliance is "able to collectively defend… against future threats from authoritarian regimes." Yermak argued that an invitation to NATO for Ukraine would not only be cost-effective in bolstering the Alliance's defenses, but it would also be "an acknowledgment of Ukrainian bravery and their struggle for freedom." He added that "if Ukraine stands, Europe stands. If Ukraine falls, the Kremlin will choose its next victim." Meanwhile, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), who urged Washington to "move at the speed of relevance, not the speed of bureaucracy" to support Ukraine reiterated Rasmussen's appeal. Visit CultureWars.news to read more stories on governments pushing for woke and gay ideologies. Watch the video below where the Hungarian foreign minister slams Western allies for their failed Ukraine strategy. This video is from the Vampire Slayer channel on Brighteon.com.

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Sources include:

BigLeaguePolitics.com NATO.int 1 NATO.int 2 AtlanticCouncil.org Brighteon.com