Rod's comments:
"When you put all of that together, guess what it makes: It
forms a complete image of God," White said.
"When you put all of this message together, guess what it makes?:
A lying, racist, homophobic bigot of the big JuJu," Swift said.
:)
Packers' White discusses 'sin' homosexuality in speech
CBS SportsLine wire reports
MADISON, Wis. -- Most people invited to speak to the Wisconsin
Legislature give five minutes of pleasantries, get a few moments
of applause and go home.
Lawmakers weren't expecting the earful Reggie White had in store
for them Wednesday.
They thought the Green Bay Packers star and ordained minister
came to talk about his community work and a recent trip to Israel.
White did, but his nearly hour-long speech also included remarks
on homosexuality, race and slavery that turned the Assembly's
applause to stunned silence.
White said the United States has gotten away from God, in part by
allowing homosexuality to "run rampant."
HOMOSEXUALITY IS a sin, and the plight of gays and lesbians should
not be compared to that of blacks, White told lawmakers.
"Homosexuality is a decision, it's not a race," White said.
"People from all different ethnic backgrounds live in this
lifestyle. But people from all different ethnic backgrounds
also are liars and cheaters and malicious and back-stabbing."
White said he has thought about why God created different races.
Each race has certain gifts, he said.
Blacks are gifted at worship and celebration, White said.
"If you go to a black church, you see people jumping up and down
because they really get into it," he said.
Whites are good at organization, White said.
"You guys do a good job of building businesses and things of that
nature, and you know how to tap into money," he said.
"Hispanics were gifted in family structure, and you can see a
Hispanic person, and they can put 20, 30 people in one home."
THE JAPANESE AND other Asians are inventive, and "can turn a
television into a watch," White said. Indians are gifted in
spirituality, he said.
"When you put all of that together, guess what it makes: It
forms a complete image of God," White said.
White said later that his comments were about coming together
as a society and were not meant to stereotype the races.
"This is the first time I've been at a loss for words,"
Assembly Minority Leader Walter Kunicki, D-Milwaukee, said
after White's speech. "You can still tell from the tension
in the room that much of this was offensive."
White was invited to speak by Assembly Speaker Scott Jensen,
R-Waukesha.
Jensen called White's comments about homosexuality
"disappointing." Homosexuality is a genetic predisposition,
not a decision, Jensen said.
Rep. Tammy Baldwin, a Madison Democrat and the Legislature's
only openly gay member, said she disagreed with White's remarks,
but as a lawmaker believed in putting aside personal feelings
to promote a "healthy debate."
CBS SPORTS spokeswoman Leslie Ann Wade declined to comment on
White's speech or whether his remarks would affect his chances
for a studio analyst's job. White has auditioned for a
commentating job at the network.
CBS fired football analyst Jimmy "The Greek" Snyder in 1988
for saying that blacks had been "bred from slavery" to make
better athletes.
"CBS doesn't accept bias from any of its announcers of any
kind," Wade said.
White declined to comment on whether he will leave the Packers
before the 1998 season.
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March 25, 1998
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