09-17-2021, 03:27 AM
One loudmouth Boomer SOB who died of practicing what he preached about COVID-19
Robert Enyart (January 1959 – September 13, 2021) was an American conservative talk radio host and pastor of Denver Bible Church in Denver, Colorado. He was an outspoken anti-abortion advocate, theologian, and political commentator. Enyart was an opponent of COVID-19 vaccinations and mask mandates. He died of COVID-19.
Enyart, who grew up in New Jersey, served as a spokesman for the anti-abortion group American Right to Life.[1][2]
In 2000, Enyart took up the position of pastor at Denver Bible Church, a Protestant Christian church in Wheat Ridge, Colorado, close to Denver.[3]
Real Science Radio was a creationism radio show and podcast created by Enyart. It was originally titled Real Science Friday and was renamed in 2013 after an intellectual property lawsuit was brought by NPR for the similarity to their show Science Friday.[4]
Enyart picketed the homes of doctors who performed abortions, causing one Colorado town to ban such protests in residential neighborhoods.[5] He criticized presidential candidates who did not share his view on abortion.[6]
Enyart angered families of AIDS victims when he read a man's obituary on his television show, Bob Enyart Live, calling the deceased a sodomite.[7] A regular feature of the show involved reading obituaries of AIDS sufferers while playing "Another One Bites the Dust" by Queen, whose lead singer, Freddie Mercury, died in 1991 from complications from AIDS.[8]
Enyart was a proponent of corporal punishment of children.[9] He served a 60-day jail sentence after being convicted of child abuse for hitting a 7-year-old boy with a belt so violently that he raised welts and broke the skin of the child.[10][11]
He agreed to stop making late-night telephone calls to Kenosha, Wisconsin, residents who were upset with the content of his program on a Kenosha television station after Senator Russ Feingold (D-Wis.) called for a Federal Communications Commission investigation to see if the talk show host had broken laws.[12]
In June 2009, Enyart was sentenced to 11 days in jail after he refused to pay a fine upon his conviction of criminal trespassing at the Focus on the Family headquarters.[13]
In 1999, Enyart bought about $16,000 worth of O. J. Simpson memorabilia which he burned on the steps of the Los Angeles courthouse where Simpson was acquitted in protest of the verdict in the O. J. Simpson murder case.[14][15]
In October 2020, a U.S. District Court judge ruled that the state of Colorado could not impose mask-wearing mandates or limits on the size of gatherings at Denver Bible Church following a lawsuit brought by Enyart.[16]
Enyart and his wife were unvaccinated against COVID-19 after supporting the theory that vaccinations had been tested on aborted fetuses.[1][17] [18] Enyart died from complications of COVID-19.[1]
An August 2021 update to his website announced that Enyart and his wife had developed COVID-19.[19] Enyart died of COVID-19 on September 13, 2021.[2][20]
Robert Enyart (January 1959 – September 13, 2021) was an American conservative talk radio host and pastor of Denver Bible Church in Denver, Colorado. He was an outspoken anti-abortion advocate, theologian, and political commentator. Enyart was an opponent of COVID-19 vaccinations and mask mandates. He died of COVID-19.
Enyart, who grew up in New Jersey, served as a spokesman for the anti-abortion group American Right to Life.[1][2]
In 2000, Enyart took up the position of pastor at Denver Bible Church, a Protestant Christian church in Wheat Ridge, Colorado, close to Denver.[3]
Real Science Radio was a creationism radio show and podcast created by Enyart. It was originally titled Real Science Friday and was renamed in 2013 after an intellectual property lawsuit was brought by NPR for the similarity to their show Science Friday.[4]
Enyart picketed the homes of doctors who performed abortions, causing one Colorado town to ban such protests in residential neighborhoods.[5] He criticized presidential candidates who did not share his view on abortion.[6]
Enyart angered families of AIDS victims when he read a man's obituary on his television show, Bob Enyart Live, calling the deceased a sodomite.[7] A regular feature of the show involved reading obituaries of AIDS sufferers while playing "Another One Bites the Dust" by Queen, whose lead singer, Freddie Mercury, died in 1991 from complications from AIDS.[8]
Enyart was a proponent of corporal punishment of children.[9] He served a 60-day jail sentence after being convicted of child abuse for hitting a 7-year-old boy with a belt so violently that he raised welts and broke the skin of the child.[10][11]
He agreed to stop making late-night telephone calls to Kenosha, Wisconsin, residents who were upset with the content of his program on a Kenosha television station after Senator Russ Feingold (D-Wis.) called for a Federal Communications Commission investigation to see if the talk show host had broken laws.[12]
In June 2009, Enyart was sentenced to 11 days in jail after he refused to pay a fine upon his conviction of criminal trespassing at the Focus on the Family headquarters.[13]
In 1999, Enyart bought about $16,000 worth of O. J. Simpson memorabilia which he burned on the steps of the Los Angeles courthouse where Simpson was acquitted in protest of the verdict in the O. J. Simpson murder case.[14][15]
In October 2020, a U.S. District Court judge ruled that the state of Colorado could not impose mask-wearing mandates or limits on the size of gatherings at Denver Bible Church following a lawsuit brought by Enyart.[16]
Enyart and his wife were unvaccinated against COVID-19 after supporting the theory that vaccinations had been tested on aborted fetuses.[1][17] [18] Enyart died from complications of COVID-19.[1]
An August 2021 update to his website announced that Enyart and his wife had developed COVID-19.[19] Enyart died of COVID-19 on September 13, 2021.[2][20]
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.