“They took a couple little quotes out of that whole 40 minutes and it obviously was to fit their narrative, just to be honest.” “I actually talked with them for about 35-40 minutes, shared the whole story,” Rhyan, a pastor, told Faithwire during a phone interview Thursday afternoon. Rhyan even spoke with the reporter from the Post. “I believe for me, as a Christian, we’re the people being shunned, people being silenced, and a lot of the liberal side of things are becoming the bigots to Christianity and faith,” he said. It was all part of a public discourse, Glezman believes that frequently writes off principled Christians as bigots. He hasn’t seen his brother and Pete for a year.
“Chasten had everything, from cellphones paid for, car insurance paid for.”
“The story makes it look as if he came from nothing, a poor family,” he said. It was little more than an example of playing the “victim card” for political gain. Glezman was particularly angered, he added, by accounts suggesting the family was poor and that Chasten went without as he was growing up.