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How’s this for some good news?

For the first time since Obergefell, the support for gay “marriage” (or gay mirage) has started to level off and even decline as, it turns out, some on the right are awakening to the slippery slope.

According to a new Gallup survey, Republican support for gay mirage has plummeted in just the last two years.

Apparently, the doubling down on “bake the cake, bigot” and the open grooming of children in public school and at pride events has created a little bit of backlash.

According to the poll, conducted last month, 46 percent of Republicans support same-sex marriage — statistically similar to the 49 percent who supported same-sex marriage in 2023. The latest results, however, mark a continued decline in support among Republicans from the record 55 reported in 2021 and in 2022.

In two years, there’s been nearly a ten-point swing AGAINST gay marriage.

In 2021 and 2022, many on the right saw Obergefell as the law of the land and that gay “marriage” as a fact of life. But in the last two years, as “decency” has returned to the White House, 9% have changed their mind on something as simple as the redefining of marriage.

Are Republicans regrowing their spines??

There’s an even BIGGER drop in the number of Republicans who think homosexuality and the whole LGBTQ+ thing is morally acceptable.

Republicans have also seen a decline in those who say ‘gay or lesbian relations’ are “morally acceptable” — at 40 percent today, down slightly from 41 percent in 2023. The percentage of Republicans who share this view is markedly lower than the record 56 percent in 2022.

MOST Republicans now think gay and lesbian relationships are not morally acceptable. Or, at least, a majority wouldn’t agree.

We’ve been blackpilling and dooming for so long that we couldn’t see the Overton Window swing back right in front of our eyes!

Even independent voters’ approval of gay relationships has dropped 5 points, although it is still the strong majority.

Since 2016, the year after the Supreme Court legalized same-sex marriage in Obergefell v. Hodges, support for same-sex marriage has remained above 61 percent. Support has grown steadily in the last two decades. According to Gallup, the slowing of the upward trend in support is indicative of the leveling off of Democratic and Independent support and the slight dip in Republican support.

The good news? We seem to have plateaued. The bad news? It’s hard to see societal trends dipping further into disapproval of homosexuality when so many young people are identifying as a “sexual minority.”

But it’s encouraging to see many people wake up and come to their senses nonetheless.


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