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Methodist Denomination Labels Terms ‘Husband’ and ‘Wife’ Offensive

The Methodist Church of Great Britain (UK) continues to function as a vehicle for particularly crazed demons to live vicariously through, recently updating their “Inclusive Language Guide” to recommend members no longer use offensive terms like “husband” and “wife,” but rather inoffensive terms like “parent” “partner” and “carer.”

We covered this irredeemably noxious denomination before, after Cliff College, a school overseen by The Methodist Council of the United Kingdom, sacked Dr Aaron Edwards, a professor of theology, for expressing that “Homosexuality is invading the church.

While conservative Methodists in the United States enjoy freedom of speech to oppose sexual immorality in the church, this is not true for their UK counterpart. Here, the Methodist Council has openly attacked the remaining remnant of conservatives within the denomination, actively using hate speech laws of the UK and pro-LGBT+ cultural momentum as a club to remove dissenters.

According to the inclusive language guide, the denomination crafted the documents so its members may “recognize that we sometimes exclude people” and will better be able to “listen with humility, to repent of any hurtful language, and to take care with how we listen and what we say or write” when dealing with groups which have been “marginalized and/or demonized by common culture.”

Other idiotic recommendations include:

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UK Police Release Chilling Pro-LGBT Billboard. ‘Being Offensive is an Offence,

(The PostMillennial) Police in Merseyside, a town in northwestern England, were forced to apologize after putting up a billboard claiming that “being offensive is an offence.”

An image circulated on Twitter showing Merseyside Police outside a market with a large advertising truck that read “Being offensive is an offence.”

The police say the billboard was meant to encourage residents to report hate crimes, but afterwards, they had to make amends, according to the BBC.

Merseyside police “[apologizes] for any confusion this may have caused” while noting that “hate crime is an offence and will not be tolerated.”

“Hate crime can come in various guises that can include assault, criminal damage, verbal and written online abuse,” the police spokesman said.

The billboard sparked widespread criticism, with people..

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Editor’s Note. This article was written by Noah David Alter and posted at The Post Millennial. Title changed by Protestia.