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Grex > Glb > #37: gay bashers in the news again (long -- 163 lines) |  |
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| 25 new of 404 responses total. |
senna
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response 250 of 404:
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Nov 6 05:42 UTC 1998 |
There are wavelengths to all personal associations, and I'd imagine (having
no factual basis for this) that a homosexual person would act differently
around people they felt weren't as accepting. It's just how things work.
Some people that I know tend to be a bit raunchier, and I'm cool with that.
Some are fairly uptight, and I adapt. Granted, with me my standard reaction
to all social situations is to shut up and sit in the corner, but there are
variations of that I use :)
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anderyn
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response 251 of 404:
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Nov 7 01:20 UTC 1998 |
I was very disappointed this week because some one I respect decided to
break off our friendship because (we're in the same writing group) I had
decided that my bi polyamourous character would not commit to one person,
but would like to have at least two partners. (Which -- as I kept saying
-- was for cuddling and the like, rather than for sex, per se.) Apparently,
even in fiction, and fiction with a decidedly fantastic flavour, this
person can't deal with that particular worldview. She said it wasn't logical
for a bi person to want one person of each gender in a poly relationship,
and that I was weird for even thinking about such things. (Since I happen
to be a straight het vanilla monogamous person, I find that a little
strange...) And yet she writes a very het and macho character who, although
married and supposedly very much in love with the wife, still bonks
anything in skirts. Including other married folks. Which is something
which I find immoral since I have always figured that onece you've made
a promise, then you have to keep it, and if you're married traditionally,
then you don't fool around. Sigh. I'm just really bummed about this,
since I had gotten really excited about exploring those areas with my
co-writers, and was looking forward in particular to writing that kind
of relationship in a positive light.
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e4808mc
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response 252 of 404:
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Nov 7 01:42 UTC 1998 |
So why can't you still write about it? Did she force you out of the group?
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kenton
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response 253 of 404:
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Nov 7 02:15 UTC 1998 |
Re 240 Glad I was sitting down, wish the chair had been stronger. When I
read your comments, it collapsed under me.:)
But I'll just add those heterosexuals to the list of perverts. Even so, homo
sexuals have less options than do a heterosexual pair. Therefore they must
improvise. BTW, people who "sleep around" (regardless of sexual preference)
are by far worse than a pair of perverts who stick with each other.
Re 243 I challenge you to find anywhere that I said any sex act should be
outlawed. I do, however, feel that many if not all perverted acts are the
result of poor mental health. Can I prove it? Maybe.
Re 248 Your comments speak worlds to me. And should to anyone else who
understands what they read. Oh! Don't fool around with the depression, there
are plenty of good ways to deal with that problem.
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anderyn
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response 254 of 404:
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Nov 7 02:54 UTC 1998 |
re 252 -- yeah, I can and my other cowriter and I are planning it, but
it's just not the same when you had plans involving other characters and
now you have to come up with something totally different. It's scary.
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rcurl
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response 255 of 404:
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Nov 7 07:57 UTC 1998 |
kenton has a strange fascination with the words "pervert" and "perverted".
I presume they mean to him anything with which he does not agree, or like.
People that are so intolerant and quick to judge others seem to me to be
the real perverts - they have little or no experience themselves about
that which they propose to judge, but are yet willing to act as though
they know something upon which to base their judgements.
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cyklone
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response 256 of 404:
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Nov 7 15:42 UTC 1998 |
I am anxious to read Kenton's discourse on the connection between
"perverted sex" and "poor mental health." But please, O Learned One, first
define "perverted" for us . . . .
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rcurl
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response 257 of 404:
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Nov 7 15:47 UTC 1998 |
"perverse" means "varying from the correct or normal". It then attains
negative connotations of "unreasonable", "refractory", "disposed to vex",.
etc, but solely because someone that varies from the normal is often subject
to criticism or prejudice. From most of the discussion here, since kenton
appears to be in the minority on the issue, he is the pervert. This, of
course, just shows the ridiculousness of trying to demeen others by calling
them perverts - its depends on who's on top (if you will excuse the metaphor).
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cyklone
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response 258 of 404:
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Nov 7 19:46 UTC 1998 |
BTW Rane, the phrase "O Learned One" did not, in this case, refer to you. But
I understand how you may have been confused ;)
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void
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response 259 of 404:
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Nov 8 01:49 UTC 1998 |
wow. there's a lot to respond to here, but since i've addressed my
last few remarks to kenton, i'll continue in that vein.
i've always been a lesbian. growing up, i never encountered any
couple in homosexual relationships...no, i take that back. there was
one couple, but since they were closeted everyone assumed that they were
simply friends who lived together (for 48 years?). however, because our
society is so hetero-oriented, it took me a while to figure out that
there really was a reason i was not terribly interested in boys. it
took a while longer for me to figure out that i really could come out of
the closet, and found people who could accept me for who i am. the fact
remains that being a lesbian is not something i consciously chose, nor
is it something i wish i could stop. is my lesbianism the result of
something in my environment? perhaps, but if it is, there's nothing i
can point to and say, "there! that's it! that's what made me a
lesbian!"
if, by "perversion," kenton, you mean something other than 100%
vanilla missionary-position heterosexual sex, then i guess i'm a pervert
in your book. however, i tend to think that things like rape and child
sexual abuse fall under the heading of perversion, rather than
consensual acts performed in private between consenting adults.
kenton, you probably have met dozens of "open, practicing
homosexuals" and you simply don't know it. i rarely walk up to anyone
i've never met, stick out my hand, and say, "hi, i'm dru, and i'm a
lesbian." (the exception to that is national coming out day, which i
celebrate by coming out to a complete stranger.) someone else brought
this up, and it has made me curious: do you really think that you'd be
able to tell who's gay and who isn't simply by looking at them?
i have a few more questions for you, kenton: why are you so
interested in the goings-on in bedrooms to which you have not been
invited? how do those goings-on directly harm you or your family or any
aspect of your life?
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kenton
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response 260 of 404:
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Nov 9 04:03 UTC 1998 |
Websters- pervert--4.to debase--one practicing sexual perversion.
Perversion-3. Any sexual act or practice considered abnormal.
Sorry guys but there is more that be with me than be with thee.
At the University that my daughter attends there was "a gay pride day" on
which students were to were blue jeans to show support for gays. I was
informed by my daughter that even though a normal day was infested with blue
jean wearers, on that day there were few blue jeans seen on campus. Kids went
out of their way to show a lack of support for this day and this people.
My son in law from Croatia said that the guy out West got what he deserved.
Further he said that any fags in Croatia got the hell beat out of them. Such
practices were not permitted there by the average citizen. <<y response was
that as long as no one was harmed, a person has the right to do what they
want. <i don't agree with my son-in-law and <i don't agree with many of the
writers here.
The most harm done to any individual through homosexual practices is done to
those who practice these perverted actions. Loss of pride in self and self
esteem probably lead the list.
At the present time, I am looking for a design draftsman, experienced in land
development. If a homosexual man or woman met the qualifications, I wouldn't
care what they did on their own time as long as they didn't try to rub my nose
in it.
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rcurl
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response 261 of 404:
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Nov 9 06:45 UTC 1998 |
Other people's pride in self and self esteem is totally the business of
those other people. You really are acting in an overbearing manner to
think that you have an iota of judgement to make about that. If you would
keep out of it, there would be less intended damage to the pride of
others. People with your (and that Croatians') attitude are the cause of
other people's misery - and solely for the sake of pleasing their personal
ego.
Yes, perversion is by defintion "abnormal", but who is to say what is
normal? At one time *democracy* was a perversion. Thinking of giving women
the right to vote was a perversion. Calling things a perversion primarily
reflects poorly upon the caller, not upon the victim. Claiming
perversions is just another way of subduing minorities. In Afghanistan,
women not wearing the chadur or wishing to have an education education are
offical perversions punishable by cruelty if not death. Your decrees are
just as nonsensical and dangerous.
The incident at your daughter's school might show the prevalence of
intolerance at that school - or it could show that most students are
actually tolerant, but don't want to take "sides". Gays would not need
"pride" days if everyone else just treated them with the respect due
individuals.
No one should rub anyone else's noses in their own private preferences.
However, how do you recommend that gays obtain full and total acceptance,
if not to at least raise the issue of the existence of intolerance (which
you seem to interpret as rubbing people's noses in it). I do rub peoples
noses into the expression of their own intolerance (consider your nose
rubbed).
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brighn
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response 262 of 404:
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Nov 9 06:51 UTC 1998 |
In the paragraph beginning: My son in law... you refer to an individual who
was beaten to death, in part because of his sexual orientation.
In the next paragraph, you say: "The most harm done to any individual through
homosexual practices is done to those who practice these perverted actions."
I don't see a large number of gays beating each other to death. Apparently,
loss of self-esteem, which you claim to be a result of practicing
homosexuality, is more harmful than death. Hm.
Wow.
At any rate, you're quite right, "pervert" is someone who practices *abnormal*
sexuality. So you're determining what is considered normal and abnormal. We
could do that. The APA removed homosexuality from its Diagnostics Manual (I
believe DSM-III was the first that didn't list it, some 10 years or so ago).
In so doing, the American Psychiatric Association deemed homosexuality to be
within the realm of "normal" human behaviors.
Hence, according to the predominance of the experts on human behavior in this
country, homosexuality is normal, and hence, it isn't perverted.
In contrast, Masochism is, I believe, in the DSM-IV(R) as a personality
disorder, so us BDSM folks are, in fact, perverts.
Ain't life grand?
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lumen
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response 263 of 404:
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Nov 9 08:03 UTC 1998 |
re #253: :P I already deal with my manic-depression in a good way by seeing
a psychiatrist, so fuck off-- you're starting to annoy me.
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maeve
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response 264 of 404:
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Nov 9 16:43 UTC 1998 |
so much to object to, so little time..
kenton, what is your goal when interacting with people? Do you want to
be able to understand them, or are you more interested in being able to
feel superior to them and their ways of life?
at any rate, I can think of far worse habits than homosexuality, among
them such diverse behaviors as: -drinking strawberry soda -wearing
clothing circa the 70s -using the words 'perverted' 'pervert' 'fag'
more than once in any post and the list goes on..
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brown
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response 265 of 404:
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Nov 9 18:18 UTC 1998 |
I'll just agree with Katy's first line and quit there.
not too sure this is worth it
<bob ponders>.
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brighn
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response 266 of 404:
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Nov 9 22:14 UTC 1998 |
of course it's pointless, bob, but tricksters don't care about points, we care
about how much fun we're having, and hooooooodoggy, this is entertainin'. =}
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mdw
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response 267 of 404:
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Nov 10 00:16 UTC 1998 |
Kenton would have been considered a sexual pervert by the average
ancient greek.
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lumen
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response 268 of 404:
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Nov 10 01:20 UTC 1998 |
re #264: Well, not all clothes in the 70's were so over the top. I like
paisely somewhat, and my dad had some real boss clothes when I was a tot.
Leather armbands are cool-- so are big black leather belts. My good colors
were popular then-- brown, black, sandstone, ecru, etc.
It's disco and the Brady Bunch that really ruined fashion, and even then, the
movie re-make characters wore clothing even more exaggerated than the cast
in the TV series.
You don't like strawberry pop? :(
re #267: Marcus, what's your reference source? I'm curious. My understanding
was that it was acceptable but not necessarily the norm. Your statement is
echoed a number of places here, and I had never read about it.
(Book, author, and year will suffice :) )
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brown
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response 269 of 404:
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Nov 10 03:22 UTC 1998 |
I can't give a reference offhand Jon .. but the greeks were
'perverted' enough to the point that the GOVT made it manditory to
marry and procreate.... they were not getting enough soldiers on
account of the guys hooking up.
they were kept together pretty much since birth to be trained as
soldiers etc, and lived together a good hunk of their adult life.
many only married and had kids out of duty
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joe
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response 270 of 404:
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Nov 10 03:43 UTC 1998 |
You know, I orginally began writing this with the intention of establishing
a counterargument to the idea that gays and lesbians are perverts, but then
I thought to myself, "I don't really give a rat's ass what kenton or mother
superior thinks", and said the hell with it.
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mdw
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response 271 of 404:
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Nov 10 04:32 UTC 1998 |
I'm afraid my office library doesn't contain much on the ancient greeks.
I'll try to find something when I go home.
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senna
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response 272 of 404:
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Nov 10 05:18 UTC 1998 |
Hmm. Katy's first line works for me too. Kenton, your arguments are silly
and nonsensical, your "data" is anecdotal and not even gathered as a primary
source, and your outlook is not the standard by which all people appear.
See, you're not the only person who takes his or her view of the world and
applies it to everybody. On this system or otherwise. But you're by far the
most blatant and the least sensible about it. Your opinions are just that...
your own. Whether or not they are correct, your method of presentation leaves
a great deal to be desired. I most likely agree with some of your beliefs
(ones you haven't been talking about) more than the average grexer, but I
cannot identify with where you stand. Your persistence at ignoring sensible
reason simply does not convince or even justify yourself to anyone.
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janc
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response 273 of 404:
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Nov 10 05:26 UTC 1998 |
I find that I learn a lot from attempting to explain things that I
consider obvious. I've been participating in on-line discussions like
this on all sorts of topics for about 15 years now. I may not have
changed the minds of the people I talked to all that much, but I've
changed *my* mind on almost everything just from the exercise of
attempting to construct solid arguments to support what I thought I
believed.
So on the use of the word "prevert" to describe gays:
All that dictionary definition says is "perverted" means "abnormal" in a
negative sense (debased, degraded). That's certainly what it means.
You seemed to think that clinched the argument, though obviously lots of
people don't think homosexuality is any more abnormal or debased than
other sexual practices. But it isn't the logical weakness of the
argument that offends people. You have lots of choices for which words
to use. You could say any of the following:
homosexuality is perverted
homosexuality is odd
homosexuality is different
homosexuality is unfamiliar
homosexuality is exotic
All these words convey that the practice is not one that fits
comfortably with your personal ideas and experiences. And you could find
a dictionary definition to support the use of any one of them. But they
differ in the value judgements they carry. They also differ in the
degree to which they reflect personal viewpoints as opposed to absolute
judgements (that is, "unfamiliar" has a implicit "to me" after it, while
"perverted" does not). There are a hundred other words you could pick
that would fit the facts as well as "perverted" does (which isn't
necessarily very well). But "perverted" is the most absolute, and the
most negative. When people object to your use of the that word, they
are rejecting the condemnation it carries. You need more than a
dictionary to support such a broad and strong condemnation of a very
large set of people.
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maeve
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response 274 of 404:
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Nov 10 11:54 UTC 1998 |
(no, sorry, not strawberry soda for me, but I see no reason why you
shouldn't drink it, as long as you do it in your own home, with a
consenting glass, and in the dark with the curtains drawn) ;)
look how easy that was
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