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#1222 | |
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"Brian"
Jul 2007
The Netherlands
7·467 Posts |
Quote:
![]() I can say "bisexual" though. Also "sexual nebulosity". Neither necessarily to be applied to your ex though: you know much better about that, and she probably even better still. Here's another interview. This time with someone, Julie Bindel, whose views on the subject I thoroughly disagree with. She thinks homosexuality is a choice (a related topic to gay "curing" in that it is also seized upon by people who don't let LGBT people be the people who they are). In short: Bindel feels she chose to be a lesbian back in the 1970s (I don't have a problem with that) and that *therefore* everyone can choose to be gay or straight (here I break camp with her pretty emphatically). http://www.independent.co.uk/life-st...e-9582897.html |
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#1223 | |
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"Brian"
Jul 2007
The Netherlands
7·467 Posts |
Randy Thomas, who was formerly an "ex-gay" activist according to pinknews.co.uk, has written an interesting blog post welcoming the recent spate of judgments in the USA striking down same sex marriage bans and apologising for his former role in trying to promote those bans, for example California's Proposition 8.
http://randy.today/gay-marriage/ Quote:
The speedy change in attitudes in the USA and elsewhere on the issue discussed in this long-running, epic thread has astounded me in recent years. Living as I do in the country which was the first (in 2001) to break the restriction of marriage to opposite sex couples, I was helped in my own change in attitude on the issue by my location. I probably first started to believe that marriage between two people of the same sex was not a ludicrous concept in around 1995. If I had lived elsewhere, I believe my personal change in attitude would have occurred later. And now I'm interested to hear if anyone here has changed their opinion during recent years too. If so, what has caused this change of opinion for you personally? |
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#1224 |
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"Jeff"
Feb 2012
St. Louis, Missouri, USA
13×89 Posts |
http://www.thenewcivilrightsmovement...t_pat_s_parade
Okay, what is this world coming to when a man can't get pissed and then drop trou and jerk off on St. Pats? I should point out that I live in the Irish neighborhood in St. Louis and we take our drunken celebrations seriously round here. |
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#1225 | |
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"Brian"
Jul 2007
The Netherlands
7·467 Posts |
Quote:
I'm quite glad to hear he intends to keep his pants on. Anyway, these days I personally take lectures about sexual morality from senior Catholic figures with some contempt. |
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#1226 |
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"Jeff"
Feb 2012
St. Louis, Missouri, USA
13×89 Posts |
To be fair he has exactly no standing in the Catholic church hierarchy. He's just a dude who says bigoted things that speak to a percentage of mostly older and very conservative Catholics (and other like minded people).
It gives the church plausible deniability. Honestly though, there's a lot of tension between this twit and the actual church leaders (outside of New York City)--though my dealings with the laity show that they often don't realize that. |
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#1227 | |
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"Brian"
Jul 2007
The Netherlands
326910 Posts |
Quote:
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#1228 |
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"Jeff"
Feb 2012
St. Louis, Missouri, USA
13×89 Posts |
http://www.slate.com/blogs/outward/2...brilliant.html
still working my way through all the extra material packed into this one article, but even so it's a worthwhile read/listen. |
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#1229 | |
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"Kieren"
Jul 2011
In My Own Galaxy!
2×3×1,693 Posts |
Quote:
http://www.slate.com/blogs/outward/2..._marriage.html |
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#1230 |
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"Brian"
Jul 2007
The Netherlands
7×467 Posts |
Here's a report of a very special wedding. We have a female couple, aged 91 and 90, who have been together for 72 years and have just now married because they finally can.
Can anyone find it in themselves to object to this wedding? http://qctimes.com/news/local/weddin...092f7ec3f.html |
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#1231 |
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"Gang aft agley"
Sep 2002
2×1,877 Posts |
Last Wednesday I had a meal with my brother and another man who is estranged from his gay son. The topic came around to gay marriage. I said that in business, people can shop around for the best partnerships possible without restriction and asked why domestic contracts are different.
Of course then they both brought up the frequently touted goals of marriage: family, procreation, nurturing, etc. So, some people are going always going to find a deficiency in some aspect or other, and then object. The fact that they don't object to the same deficiencies in some traditional marriages is hypocritical IMO. I then suggested that society could offer incentives rather than restrictions to achieve general goals but my brother feels that there is no distinction between incentives and restrictions. In any case I don't like separate treatment. I like the commitment of marriage, and like when two people who care for each other can get married. The fact that these two can now do so is nice. Some people will always object though. Interracial marriage, for example, might have been illegal for much longer if the law was only informed by popular majority. |
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#1232 |
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"Brian"
Jul 2007
The Netherlands
7·467 Posts |
I wish I'd been present to hear you argue with the two of them, Ross.
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