Gay activists seek to ban new movie ‘Pink’ depicting kids suffering from gay adoption

Mar 12, 2016 by

by Matthew Cullinan Hoffman, LifeSite:

A new motion picture now showing in Mexican theaters is exposing the public for the first time to a relentlessly realistic depiction of the dangers and harm suffered by children adopted by homosexual couples.

Pink: It’s not what they say it is, which debuted on two hundred screens this weekend in the Cinemex chain of theaters, is the story of a homosexual couple who adopt a boy, inevitably exposing him to the chaos and confusion generated by their promiscuous lifestyle.

The movie’s uncompromising portrayal of the gay subculture has provoked protests from homosexual activists in Mexico, who have asked government officials to prohibit the showing of the film in the nation’s theaters.

The federal government’s National Council for the Prevention of Discrimination initially refused to act but has now asked the secretary of governance to increase the movie’s rating to a more restrictive one (it is currently accessible to those aged 15 and up). It also called on the movie industry to eliminate “stereotypes, prejudices, and stigmas” associated with homosexual “families.”

Homosexual “marriage” and adoption have been legal in the nation’s capital, Mexico City, for several years, and the country’s Supreme Court is gradually seeking to impose the redefinition of marriage on the entire country, despite mass protests and resistance from state legislators. A strong majority of Mexicans continue to oppose adoption by homosexuals.

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