Imagine a world so detached from reality that basic truths—truths that have held steady since the dawn of humanity… truths that a three-year-old can comprehend—are trampled, mocked, and discarded as relics of a bygone era. Now stop imagining. You’re living in it.
The “gay marriage” ruling, Obergefell v. Hodges, didn’t just open a Pandora’s box—it obliterated it, leaving us swimming in the fallout: surrogacy farms, children as commodities, and a nation stumbling over itself to appease the angry leftist mob.
But while most of America is on its knees, one Oklahoma politician, Dusty Deevers, just stood up. Deevers, a Southern Baptist ordained pastor and Oklahoma Senator just led the Oklahoma Senate Republicans to sponsor a resolution calling the Supreme Court to make history of this nightmare.
Senate Resolution 8 (SCR8) is essentially a manifesto of resistance, a line drawn in the cultural sand. It’s Oklahoma’s way of saying, “Enough.”
Oklahoma just did what most states—and most “conservative” politicians, pastors, and church leaders—are too terrified to even consider. They openly declared that marriage is, always has been, and always will be a covenant between one man and one woman.
And not only that, but they also called for the Supreme Court to right the catastrophic wrong of Obergefell v. Hodges. In other words, Oklahoma just committed the ultimate cultural sin: telling the truth.
The nonsense of Obergefell, to be blunt, is that it was never about equality. It was a slick marketing campaign, a calculated cultural coup dressed up as a human rights victory. The Supreme Court’s ruling didn’t just redefine marriage, it weaponized it, using it as a cudgel to bash traditional morality into submission.
By concocting a so-called “right” to same-sex marriage out of thin air, they eradicated centuries of tradition, law, and common sense, not to mention God’s created order, in one judicial stroke. At least they attempted to.
But what did this groundbreaking ruling give us? A free pass to commodify children, to turn women into rented wombs, to butcher the biological truth that children need both a mother and a father. Obergefell didn’t dignify love—it cheapened it, slapped a price tag on it, and sold it to the highest bidder.