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Christian B&B Owners Suffer Hate in Name of Tolerance, Says Writer

Hazelmary and Peter Bull
Hazelmary and Peter Bull have been hit by crushing equality laws and a court case over their 'married couples only' policy for double rooms. (CBN )

The Christian owners of a Cornish bed-and-breakfast have suffered a “campaign of hatred, vilification and intimidation” under the guise of tolerance, a national newspaper columnist has said.

Peter and Hazelmary Bull have been hit by crushing equality laws and a court case over their "married couples only" policy for double rooms.

Following the legal case, the couple has received death threats and vandalism and has now decided to sell the business—which is also their home.

Writing in the Daily Mail, Richard Littlejohn says some who preach tolerance are actually the “most vile, intolerant bigots imaginable.”

He added that the idea of “‘celebrating diversity’ never extends to those with devout Christian beliefs.”

And while the columnist says he doesn't agree with the Bulls’ policy, Littlejohn strongly criticizes the ordeal they have been subjected to.

He writes that when the case first hit the headlines, he said the couple are “in the wrong line of work.”

“But,” he adds, “that doesn’t excuse the campaign of hatred, vilification and intimidation to which they have been subjected over the past five years.

“They’ve suffered death threats and vandalism, and their website was corrupted with porn.

“Not for the first time it’s obvious that those ‘liberals’ who preach ‘tolerance’ are themselves the most vile, intolerant bigots imaginable.

“Funny how ‘celebrating diversity’ never extends to those with devout Christian beliefs.

“Now a misguided, but sincere, couple of middle-aged hoteliers have had their livelihood stripped from them in the name of ‘tolerance.’”

The Bulls will only allow married couples to share a double bed at their guesthouse because of their Christian beliefs.

Their policy, which applies to heterosexuals and homosexuals alike, has been in place since the business opened and is well advertised.

But as soon as new gay rights laws were introduced in 2007, the government’s tourism board for England struck the Bulls’ B&B off its approved list.

In 2011, the Bulls were successfully sued by gay couple Martyn Hall and Steven Preddy, who won £3,600 (nearly $5,775) in damages.

The U.K. Supreme Court will hear the Bulls’ appeal next month in a case backed by the Christian Institute.


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