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This conservative coming-out video is dead serious

Just wait for the big reveal.

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Ramon Ramirez

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It’s a black-and-white clip, littered with testimonials from a multiracial syndicate of pained, passionate people. One by one, they begin a teary confession.

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“I am a little bit nervous about people, um, kind of hearing that I am this way and then thinking, well, ‘she’s not welcome here,’” says a maternal, warm-looking woman.

“I would say I am different. We’re all different,” says a confused youth.

There are tinkling pianos and strings. And then the big reveal, one by one: “I believe marriage is between a man and a woman.”

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The video—uploaded to the Catholic Vote YouTube channel on June 25—is not a meta-parody, but it does swiftly borrow from the post-YouTube culture of coming-out videos. It’s self-aware and employs tropes stolen from the first-person stories of isolated teenagers revealing who they are. It ends with “you’re not alone” repeated three times.

The video made the blog circuit this week (it already has a parody) and is an apparent reaction to last week’s U.S. Supreme Court‘s same-sex marriage ruling. A Facebook comment under the clip aims to contextualize the CatholicVote.org participants:

This reminds me of the discussions I’d overhear at the student union building at the private Baptist university I went to. There is this weird “we are being oppressed” mentality and that the whole world is out to get them and should be more tolerant and accommodating of them… 

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CatholicVote.org is a 501(c)4 grassroots lobbying group tethered to the CatholicVote.org Political Action Committee. The Chicago-based nonprofit advocates for traditionally Catholic principles, and it likewise blogs about the dangers of Caitlyn Jenner. It raised $476,000 during the 2012 campaign, according to PublicIntegrity.orgm, and $293,000 of that money was spent on either pro-Mitt Romney or anti-Barack Obama advertising. 

Above all, the organization is a big fan of Glenn Beck.

Screengrab via Catholic Vote/YouTube

 
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