Paul Cameron Warns That ‘A Gay’ May Be Coming For Your Son

Today’s “Pray In Jesus Name” program featured the first segment in a multi-part, in-person interview that host Gordon Klingenschmitt conducted with notorious anti-gay “researcher” Paul Cameron of the Family Research Institute and it turned out to be every bit as crazy as one would expect an interview between an anti-gay exorcist and an advocate for executing gays to be.

Klingenschmitt, who is currently the Republican nominee for a seat in the Colorado state legislature, asked Cameron if gay people “use molestation as a recruiting tool,” and Cameron assured him that they most certainly do.

“Homosexuals, from the get-go, as long as we have recorded history, have used the molestation of boys as a way to recruit to homosexuality,” Cameron declared, claiming that his “studies” have found that sixty percent of boys who reported that their first sexual experience was a same-sex experience grow up to be gay.

“So this is a tremendous recruitment tool,” he said. “If a gay can get to your son first, the chances are about 50-50, as near as we can tell, that your son is going to be a practicing homosexual to some degree.”

“It’s very important to keep your sons from having a homosexual experience,” he emphasized:

Klingenschmitt and Cameron then discussed Cameron’s work making it illegal for gays to donate blood, which Cameron said is a prohibition that must remain in place today because gays travel the world where they have reckless sex and pick up all sorts of exotic diseases that endanger the rest of society.

“What gays do is so dangerous, I mean, rectal sex. I mean, think of all of the stuff that they do,” Cameron said. “You don’t know what else is out there. We still don’t know all the components in human blood. They’ve got other stuff, if there’s something over in another country in the world, given that gays travel more, given that gays have sex wherever they travel, uh oh, they bring back whatever is out there and there’s always something new out there.”

“So there still needs to be a ban,” concluded Kingenschmitt: