Retard fraud lawsuit: ‘Gay’ man sues Bible publishers



bradleyfowler.jpg

$70 million for emotional distress because homosexuality cast as sin

Oh really, sue the bible because Christians folks find the gay fudge packing lifestyle repulsive and equate that with devil stuff.
He dude if you are seeking $60 fucken million then I should get twice that because as a child I saw a bunch of naked nasty ass hairy dudes with clown hats parading down a
San Francisco street ruined my fucken day. I’d call that emotional distress jackass.

‘Astounding research’

Fowler’s blog on Sen. Barack Obama’s campaign website features a post titled “Unleashing America from Injustice,” in which he says he “was completely distraught after discovering the term-homosexual-was added to the bible, in 1976, and then removed, in 2001 and 2006, without any consideration to the many victims who committed suicide or were murdered because of their sexual preference of homosexuality.”

Here is dudes website

A homosexual man who has a blog on Sen. Barack Obama’s campaign website is suing two major Christian publishers for violating his constitutional rights and causing emotional pain, because the Bible versions they publish refer to homosexuality as a sin.

Bradley LaShawn Fowler, 39, of Canton, Mich., is seeking $60 million from Zondervan and another $10 million from Thomas Nelson Publishing in lawsuits filed in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan, the Grand Rapids Press reported.

Fowler filed his claim against Grand Rapids-based Zondervan Monday, alleging its Bibles’ references to homosexuality as a sin have made him an outcast from his family and contributed to physical discomfort and periods of “demoralization, chaos and bewilderment,” the paper said.

He filed suit against Tennessee publisher Thomas Nelson in June.

Zondervan says that even if Fowler’s claim is credible, he’s suing the wrong party. A company spokesman told WOOD-TV in Grand Rapids that Zondervan doesn’t translate the Bible or own the copyright for any of the translations but relies, instead, on the “scholarly judgment of credible translation committees.”

READ MORE IF YOU CARE

Sphere: Related Content

Leave a Reply