
BOYCOTT! The Home Depot promotes the homosexual agenda
For several years, The Home Depot has given its financial and corporate support to open displays of homosexual activism on main streets in America's towns.
Rather than remain neutral in the culture war, The Home Depot has chosen to sponsor and participate in numerous gay pride parades and festivals. Most grievous is The Home Depot's deliberately exposing small children to lascivious displays of sexual conduct by homosexuals and cross-dressers, which are a common occurrence at these events.
Judge for yourself by reviewing the photos below, taken during recent homosexual events sponsored by The Home Depot. Should The Home Depot be helping advance the homosexual agenda? And more importantly, will you choose to boycott The Home Depot?
The goal of every homosexual organization supported by The Home Depot is to get homosexual marriage legalized. The information below provides just a glimpse of how broad The Home Depot's support for the homosexual movement is.
The Home Depot's track record of support for the homosexual agenda, including homosexual marriage and exposing young children to gay celebrations in public.
- In June 2010, The Home Depot set up a "Kids Workshop" as a vendor at the Southern Maine Pride Festival and parade. Read more.
- In 2009, The Home Depot gave over $5,000 to be a major sponsor of the Nashville Gay Pride Festival. It also sponsored parades in Atlanta, Kansas City, Portland and San Diego. Read more.
- The Home Depot offers insurance benefits that cover sex-changes operations for employees. That insurance also extends to same-sex partners of homosexual employees, proving The Home Depot considers gay couples as "married." Source: Human Rights Campaign Corporate Equality Index
- In 2008, The Home Depot sponsored the Durham Pride Weekend with a kid's workshop and parade march. The events include "massages for couples" and "Drag Shows."
- As early as 2005, The Home Depot placed a full-page ad in the Out & Equal homosexual workplace conference program guide.
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The Home Depot proudly displays its support for homosexuality in this parade float. The company has placed corporate-approved floats in multiple gay pride parades over the past few years.
The Home Depot says it will continue to allow employees to participate in future pride parades and festivals "in any way" they choose.
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The flags in these Home Depot cups promote a gay website which proclaims itself as "the men's social group for men who have sex with men."
The cups were given to children by The Home Depot gay parade marchers, while homosexual activists followed up by introducing them to gay sex websites.
The Home Depot has no problem aligning itself with gay activist groups who target children with a pro-homosexual message.
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This Home Depot employee's apron sticker shows support for the nation's largest gay advocacy organization, The Human Rights Campaign.
In addition, employees decorate their company aprons with other pro-homosexual messages.
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Take Action!
- Sign the Boycott Pledge (above).
- Call your local store manager. Let the manager know that you will not be shopping at The Home Depot until the company stops supporting the homosexual agenda. You can find his number here (Click "Store Finder").
- Print the paper petition and distribute it at Sunday School and church.
Extremely important! Regularly post this to your Facebook page (link below) and encourage others to join the boycott!
The Home Depot's responses when asked to stop supporting the homosexual agenda:
"This is an inclusion issue with Home Depot" - June 22, 2010 "At the end of the day here, we're not going to send anything out that forbids our associates to be involved in these pride festivals in any way." - July 15, 2010
"The bottom line is, it just runs counter to our inclusive culture and that's the word I'm getting back and that’s where we stand." - July 15, 2010
It's official! Children exposed to nudity at event supported by The Home Depot.
Posted on the Maine Pride Facebook page following the 2010 parade and festival:
"...the only disappointing thing was the group of women who decided to take their shirts off right by my kids, all under age 10 (and then didn't seem to care when i said something to them about it)..."
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