But as best we can tell, no other flag - or its colors - has graced the White House via lights at any time in the history of ever. Maybe we just haven't looked hard enough. Voters who've now been told that their vote is meaningless.īut perhaps more importantly, consider this. It's quite another thing to plaster the 'gay flag' all over the people's house - a slap in the face to many religious groups, millions of Americans who strongly believe marriage is between a man and a woman, and the voters who'd previously opposed this measure in their respective states.
He's flip-flopped on rear-admirals getting married. It's one thing for the President to call the case's victors after the ruling and give a speech hailing the Court's decision. Let us repeat, shall we? This is not the Obama's house. Fresh off the President's heckler lecture about how it's "my house" (when actually it's WE THE PEOPLE'S house), we have this: In 1978, though, a gay artist and civil rights activist Gilbert Baker, alongside the Grove Street gay community in San Francisco, made the first rainbow pride flag as a response to an anti-gay. The family currently occupying our White House know no shame. In celebrating the 2015 Supreme Court's ruling to legalize same-sex marriage, the White House lit-up with the iconic color scheme of Baker's flag. Watch the video above to see a time lapse of the White House lighting up as the sun went down. Could he maybe evolve on ISIS next?Īnd maybe Michelle's proud of her country a second time now? Anybody have a sound bite on that? Wait for it. The light display capped a day of jubilation over the decision at the executive mansion. You know, that same Barack Obama who previously declared, "Marriage is between a man and a woman."