Grex Glb Conference

Item 37: gay bashers in the news again (long -- 163 lines)

Entered by void on Mon Oct 12 22:55:26 1998:

298 new of 404 responses total.


#107 of 404 by brighn on Wed Oct 21 14:03:01 1998:

#105> If you'd asked me seveal years ago, Scott, I'd've probably doubted that
any fringe Christian group would picket funerals of gay people, too. There's
always one whacko out there somewhere, which is what you allow for in your
parenthetical.

#104> As abhorrent as I would find such abortions personally, I would rather
that a mother abort a fetus she knows she won't be able to unconditionally
love, than to give birth to it, if that's her choice.


#108 of 404 by rcurl on Wed Oct 21 14:59:31 1998:

I also think that abortions prior to some time limit for action should
be legal regardless of the motive. 


#109 of 404 by drew on Wed Oct 21 19:16:49 1998:

Re #104, 106, 107, and 108:
    That makes five of us.


#110 of 404 by mta on Wed Oct 21 19:41:34 1998:

I think one of your examples comes pretty close to being a no-brainer,
Michael.

How would a racist woman come to be carrying a black child?  It seems unlikely
that she had any choice in the matter -- so we're talking rape here.  Even
many people who favor very strong limits on abortion would agree that a
pregnancy resulting from rape falls outside the "abortion as birth control"
parameters.

Then again, although I would think them incredibly sad, I would support
keeping the abortions in your example legal for the sames reasons others have
stated.


#111 of 404 by senna on Wed Oct 21 20:02:08 1998:

Yeah, #100, I hear they also revel in famine and starvation and homelessness
and racism and genocide.


#112 of 404 by faile on Wed Oct 21 22:39:17 1998:

I don't think I could ever have an abortion.  I don't know... I've never been
pregnant, let alone pregnant in a situation where that's the last thing I
want.  But if I got pregnant at this point in my life, I'd be hard pressed
to keep the baby.  But my personal issues aren't the point.  I don't think
the governement has the right to legislate morality.  
        Of course, there are 2 counter-arguments to that: #1 is what about teh
rights of the unborn child?  #2 What I call the fall back religious-right
argument: We're right and everyone else is wrong, and we know what's best for
them.  
        So I guess that I'm the next person to stand up and say that I supose
I support abrotions being legal, even in the case we've been discussing. 

As for the Shepherd case, I'm of the mind that you don't strip someone naked
and tie him to something because you want to steal his money.  You do it
because you want to make a point.  You do it because you are sick and twisted.
(Sorry, that's the kind of thing that goes on my list of things "normal,
healthy people just don't do.")  Picketting his funeral, if done in a
non-violent manner, is unfortunately, legal, just tasteless and crude.  

The only real use that "hate crime" legislation would have would be stiffer
sentences for those acts which are already illegal if hate can be proved as
a motive.  

A cartoon appeared in the student newspaper here at Vanderbilt that summed
up a view on this pretty well.  Two anti-gay picketters are stading there,
with signs and such, and a voice comes out of the sky and it (supposed to be
god) says, "Well, actually, I don't really like hateful, close-minded,
ignorant murders."


#113 of 404 by lumen on Wed Oct 21 22:54:39 1998:

Yess!!  Can a have a copy of that political cartoon?


#114 of 404 by void on Wed Oct 21 23:00:02 1998:

   going wayyyy back there to the issue of hate crimes legislation...the 
way i understand it is that a federal hate crime law could or would help 
to stiffen the penalties for such crimes and make sure that they are 
properly prosecuted.  for instance, there was the recent case in texas 
where a gay man was killed for being gay, and the judge gave the 
culprits a light sentence because "any normal man would want to kill 
fags."  with a federal hate crimes law, such cases would be taken out of 
the small-town jusridictions where the locals would pretty much refuse 
to convict one of their own for killing what they consider the subhuman 
freaks in their midst.


#115 of 404 by brighn on Thu Oct 22 00:16:27 1998:

#110: Maybe it was consentual sex, but she met him in the dark and they never
turned on the lights? =}

#114: the recurrent problems is, everyone is considered a subhuman freak by
someone. it gets preposterous after a while. (yes, yes, the infernal "slippery
slope" argument.) If a judge really said that, the decision should have been
thrown out, the judge reprimanded, and the trial moved. Obvioulsy the
prosecuter wasn't doing his job. So we should change legislation because
people aren't doing their jobs right?


#116 of 404 by other on Thu Oct 22 00:41:02 1998:

i believe abortion should be legal up through 1 year after birth.
i don't expect to see it happen, and i don't want to try to make it happen,
but that's beside the point.


#117 of 404 by rcurl on Thu Oct 22 04:12:34 1998:

People (especially public officials) not doing their jobs correctly
is often the source of new or amended legislation. 


#118 of 404 by mcnally on Thu Oct 22 04:44:14 1998:

 re #112:  "as for the Shepard case, I'm of the mind that you don't strip
 someone naked and tie him to something because you want to steal his money.."

 You never know..  You're probably right but some strange things do happen
 during robberies.  Five years ago I was robbed by three men who told me
 they were going to kill me, hit me on the head with the butt of their gun,
 and locked me in the trunk of my own car while they joy-rode around Ann
 Arbor for more than 3 hours.  I was white and they were black (as far as
 I know, we all still are :-) 

 Was I the victim of a racist hate-crime or just a trio of more-than-usually-
 depraved criminals?


#119 of 404 by rcurl on Thu Oct 22 04:59:40 1998:

Yes??? What happened then? (I doubt they singled you out to rob specifically
because of race but because your race usually has more money - so I would
guess the latter.)


#120 of 404 by md on Thu Oct 22 11:52:36 1998:

*Oh* what a stereotype!  White guys have more money.  Hmph.

Re #116: You should become an anarchist, they have great answers
for everything.  For example, when an anti-abortion extremist says
"Abortion is murder," you get to answer: "So?"


#121 of 404 by rcurl on Thu Oct 22 14:33:44 1998:

Do you question the likelihood that white persons in the USA taken at
random will have more money on their person than a black person taken
at random? There is a wide disparity in average individual income, by race.
I don't think this likelihood is a stereotype but rather a plausible
deduction from economic statistics. Nevertheless, I have no objection
to your proving me wrong.


#122 of 404 by dino1 on Thu Oct 22 14:37:24 1998:

Sounds like something I would say.


#123 of 404 by nsiddall on Thu Oct 22 15:59:04 1998:

Lots of people seem to have arrived at this idea that because
generalizations are sometimes harmful to individuals--as in the case of
racial stereotypes--they should be eliminated.  Of course you can't
eliminate them--our human powers of observation and categorization are far
too good.  But you can pretend to eliminate them, which is a large part of
"political correctness".  And people really believe their pretenses, and
get angry if you don't play along.  Dinesh D'Souza wrote a book saying,
wait a minute, some of these generalizations are actually true.  I don't
know how good a book that was, but he received huge acclaim and stirred up
huge controversy, for stating something painfully obvious. 



#124 of 404 by brighn on Thu Oct 22 16:37:32 1998:

#120 et al.> If you go to godhatesfags.com, you will learn that gays have
significantly more moeny than straights... hence, the choice of a gay man for
robbery isn't based on hatred, it's based on the same common sense that
McNally was the victim of, right? =}

Rane> Whether that's a motivation for other legislation or not, that doesn't
make it a good or appropriate motivation.


#125 of 404 by mary on Thu Oct 22 17:49:21 1998:

Re: Rane's #121

I don't know how you'd go about proving or disproving it, and I have no
desire to scout out an answer.  But I certainly wouldn't assume the
comment "...the likelihood that white persons in the USA taken at
random will have more money on their person than a black person taken
at random" is true.

Actually, me gut feeling is this would not be true. 



#126 of 404 by rcurl on Thu Oct 22 18:49:09 1998:

Good question for the next census....  :)


#127 of 404 by md on Thu Oct 22 20:50:09 1998:

My "stereotype" remark in #120 was a joke.  You might look that
word up in the dictionary if it's unfamiliar to you.  

On the other hand, Mary makes an interesting point.  If by "money"
you mean "cash," as I assume you do, then it may be true that white 
folk don't carry much of that stuff on their persons anymore.  The
contents of my pockets would be horribly disappointing to a robber.


#128 of 404 by faile on Thu Oct 22 21:04:29 1998:

(Jon... if I can find a copy of the paper from that day sure... just let me
know how to get it to you... just e-mail me.  That goes for anyone else who
would be interested in a copy of that cartoon... the art isn't great, but I
like the statement.)


#129 of 404 by brighn on Thu Oct 22 22:40:12 1998:

Last I checked, I had $42 cash or so in my pocket. A nice enough haul for a
mugging, I suppose.


#130 of 404 by kenton on Fri Oct 23 01:56:39 1998:

Although I don't know what my church stance is on abortion or homosexuality,
I feel both are wrong.

I never thought about abortions, till my wife came home from the doctor and
sobbingly told me the doctor wanted to abort my daughter (due to high blood
pressure problems).  My wife's life was in danger by keeping the baby.  Yet
she did, and the choice was all her's.  That started me thinking about
abortion and the right or wrong of it.

If you manually split a human egg after it reaches 2 cells, you get twins, or
if the size reaches 4 cells, and they are separated, you get quadruplets. 
After the cells reach eight in number, any split causes death to all cells. 
God places a soul after the original egg has multiplied to 8 cells (in my
opinion).  But what about frozen eggs and fetuses.  Would God place a soul in a
state of limbo?

My children were both born by c-section.  By the logic that they are citizens
when born, a fetus would also be a citizen when forcefully extracted from it's
mother.  Where is the ACLU then.  Why are not such fetuses given medical care
to save their lives.  Although many fetuses are torn to shreds inside and so
are born dead (so to speak), many are also removed alive and very much
recognizable as humans.  Doctors don't always get the date of conception
right.  

Want to split some hairs?  Then kill them before you pull them out. That way
they wouldn't be citizens.

If it is OK to kill unborn children for any or all reasons,  then it is OK
to kill you for the same.  Hitler thought so.



#131 of 404 by katie on Fri Oct 23 02:52:47 1998:

I`m interested to know why you believe God "places a soul when the egg 
reaches 8 cells".


#132 of 404 by rcurl on Fri Oct 23 03:23:00 1998:

Re #127: I like to take joking responses semi-seriously to read the
funny responses I get. 

Re #130: you do make difficulties where there is no need for them. The
fundamental question is the control of a woman over her body and its
contents. It has been decided that a woman has the right to terminate
the life of a fetus younger than a certain age - period. All the quibbling
over death before or after extraction, immaterial issues like the mystical
"soul", and so forth, are totally irrelevant. 


#133 of 404 by mcnally on Fri Oct 23 05:37:42 1998:

 re #132:  Is there anything else that many of the rest of us care deeply
 about but which is not important to you that you would like to unilaterally
 declare "irrelevant" while you're at it?  I mean why stop there?  Isn't
 *everything* Rane Curl doesn't consider important irrelevant?

 I hardly agree with #130 but #132 strikes me as just as boneheaded and
 dogmatic.  It is no more than argument by assertion.  Before Roe vs. Wade,
 when abortions were illegal or severely restricted in many jurisdictions,
 would you have argued just as strongly that the question of abortion had
 been settled -- period? 

 In our democracy no issue can be considered permanently settled when
 such a strong division exists between two large opposing camps.  And no
 matter how much hand-waving you do, the fact that a very great number
 of people are very deeply concerned with this particular issue makes
 it pretty hard to justify your claim that it's "irrelevant."


#134 of 404 by brighn on Fri Oct 23 06:51:22 1998:

#133> I don't believe that the Supreme Court had made a decision on abortion
prior to Roe v Wade. Perhaps I'm wrong. While I agree that decisions are never
and should never be set entirely in stone, the Supreme Court has been rather
supportive of the *general* legalization of abortion, while being supportive
of certain restrictions.

At any rate, I was of the opinion that Rane was saying that the nature and
presence of the soul was irrelevant to the legal issue of abortion. I agree.
The soul is a religious and spiritual construct, and is generally irrelevant
to legal issues.

It is legal to remove somebody from life support, if the family deems it
appropriate (particualrly the custodial parents). In almost all cases of
abortion (if not *all* cases of legal abortion), the fetus would die without
the life support of the womb. The custodial parent (i.e., the mother who's
carrying it) should have the legal right to remove that life support.

There. A legal justification of abortion that doesn't rely on "citizenship"
or even on "the rights of the mother vs. the rights of the unborn." Remove
the fetus from the womb; if it can live on its own, without life support, it's
welcome to continue to live.

This line of reasoning is generally called the "viability" argument, and is
used to defend first and early second trimester abortions, while supporting
a ban on late second (the extreme point at which fetuses are viable in
incubators) and third trimester abortions.


#135 of 404 by senna on Fri Oct 23 09:44:12 1998:

Rane, that's partially correct.  The fundamental question for pro-choicers
is whether or not a woman should have control over her body and its contents.
It's quite an understandable viewpoint.  Most people wouldn't want something
growing in them that they're simply told they can do nothing about.  The
fundamental question for Pro-lifers, however, is whether or not a human life
should be preserved.  

Unfortunately, neither side is willing to admit the other side has any valid
arguments, so they continue to bicker like small children :)


#136 of 404 by md on Fri Oct 23 10:38:49 1998:

What makes me uncomfortable is that there's no absolute point
along the continuum of fetal growth where the fetus becomes 
"human."  No one advocates infanticide.  No one (that I know of)
advocates the right to abortion at eight months, because in
most cases that would indeed amount to infanticide.  So we 
slide the cutoff back along the continuum until the law finally
says, "Okay, before *this* point it's okay to abort."  Why?
Because the Supreme Court says so?  Because all us "reasonable"
people think it sounds, oh, about right?  Not very convincing,
with all respect to "reasonable" people (most of whom believed,
until about 20 years ago, that homosexuality was a form of mental 
illness).  

There, I've admitted that the other side has a valid argument.


#137 of 404 by cmcgee on Fri Oct 23 14:32:41 1998:

I'm delighted kenton's wife decided not to have an abortion.  I'm even more
delighted that his wife involved him in the decision.  And I'm glad the two
of them were able to weigh the pertinant medical and personal information and
come to a conclusion that was different from what the doctor recommended. 

I'm also glad that if I were in that situation I'd be able to come to a
conclusion based on my personal medical and family situation.  That's what
choice is about.

Most right-to-life legislation has said that neither she nor I would have any
decision to make.  The legislature would have made it for us.  

I would not like the legislature to say "in this instance, given the best
medical information, you _must_ have an abortion".  Nor would I want
legislation saying "in this instance, given the best medical information, you
_must_not_ have an abortion".  Medical decisions should be left to the
individual, in consultation with whomever they choose.  




#138 of 404 by brighn on Fri Oct 23 15:43:57 1998:

senna, there's a difference between saying, "You have reasoned and valid
points, some of which I even agree with" and "You're right."

I have seen and read proponents, even on the extremes of either side, admit
that the other side was reasoned and valid points. On the pro-choice side,
most advocates admit that the general idea of abortion is distasteful or at
least unfortunate. Their feeling is that the alternative -- prohibiting
abortions -- is more distasteful and unfortuante. Likewise, on the pro-life
side, advocates admit that it's unfortuante that a woman should bring to term
an unwanted child; their feeling is that the option -- abortion -- is more
unfortunate.

In short, nowhere do I hear (for any of MD's beloved "reasonable" people)
anyway saying, "Killing fetuses is great fun!" or "Giving birth to unwanted
children is the ideal to which we should all strive!"

So please get off the Superiority "I'm Not TAking a Side so I can Freely
Insult Those Who have" Fence. I've been up there myself, from time to time.
It doesn't get me anywhere, and it just annoys everyone else.


#139 of 404 by scg on Fri Oct 23 17:22:35 1998:

While brighn in response 134 is trying to make a point I agree with, I don't
think the logic there works.  In situations where it's considered ok to remove
life support, generally it's because the person is considered to have no
chance for a meaningful recovery.  On the other hand, in the case of healthy
foetuses, being in the womb and depending on the mother for life support is
part of the normal life cycle, which allowed to continue will often result
in a healthy baby being born, who can then grow into a healthy adult.  The
abortion question is really about balancing the rights of the potential mother
to make decisions about whether to have a kid, versus the right of this part
of her body that will eventually become a baby to be born.

Clearly, having a heartbeat, or having eight individual cells, or whatever,
isn't sufficient to define human life.  In that case, we would also have to
ban mousetraps and the like, since mice also fit that criteria, and are
considerably more independant than a human foetus, or even a human baby, is.
The law then has to decide at what point the foetus deserves protection as
a human, and while the end of the first trimester is fairly arbitrary, it's
probably about as good as anything else.


#140 of 404 by cyklone on Fri Oct 23 18:14:36 1998:

Re #136: Actually, one scientist has proposed "brain life" as the
"absolute point" to which you refer. 

With regard to the general "message" that pro-lifers are trying to send, I
was interested to read that in the latest budget battle in Congress,
"pro-lifers" (the term used in the paper) were instrumental in removing
contraceptive coverage from medical insurance for federal employees. This
tells me that there may be another hidden agenda for at least some
pro-lifers.  Either they are anti-sex, or they want to eliminate any human
control over the consequences of sexual activity, or they want to bring as
many babies into the world as possible, regardless of whether or not they
are wanted. 



#141 of 404 by rcurl on Fri Oct 23 19:07:14 1998:

Re #133: mcnally certainly enjoys the privilege of making all the boneheaded
and dogmatic assertions that he presents to us. He should allow equal freedom
for others to do the same without getting into a snit about it.

Re #136: one might say, "that's life". Almost all decisions are chosen
out of continua. Given that humans have been confronted with this since
they evolved one would think there would be more comfort dealing with
it. One considers as many of the issues involved as one can, and then one
makes a *decision*. When that decision creates a rule or law, it is then
subject to revision or reversal. Applied to abortion, a "great compromise"
was created by Roe vs Wade. I don't support infanticide, but I see nothing
wrong at all with terminating a newly fertilized ovum. In fact, the
overwhelming female human conscensus is that *they* have that right. We
will always have to live with a compromise (we all know how well the
earlier 'total illegality' of abortion was - abortion was about as common
as it is now, but with much worse consequences for human health.)  


#142 of 404 by faile on Fri Oct 23 22:39:32 1998:

Re 140:  The catholic chruch's argument is that every male sperm represents
a potental human life... and none should be wasted for any other silliness.
(Okay, I'm tired, my languge has gotten a little silly... please don't think
I'm trivializing the issue.... I'm just a tad loopy at teh moment.)  Kind of
like the Monty Python song "Every Sperm is Sacred."  But the point being is
that according to this dogma, humans aren't meant to have sex for teh
enjoyment of it, we're supposed to do it to procreate.  The fact that it's
kind of fun is simply temptation to do it more often.  So any form of birth
control is out of the question.  

Keep in mind that I say that it is the chruch's belief-- if you asked the Pope
"how does the chruch feel about birth control?"  that's kind of how he'd
respond.  Actual catholics run the spectrum.  I have a very conservitave pair
of friends who are trying the rhythm thing (they just got married), and the
rest of us have bets as to when in  the next year she'll be pregnant.  I have
another very devout friend who is getting married in the spring and plans on
using birth control until she's at least 30.  *shrug*  

but I babble.


#143 of 404 by senna on Fri Oct 23 22:42:00 1998:

Brighn, what fence are you referring to?  My neutrality in this argument
involves the fact that I simply do not list my opinion on the issue.  When
do I insult the sides?  I dont' recall doing so.  I insult both sides in equal
amounts on occasion, such as when I observe that both are extremely stupid.
This isn't hard to do.  Both sides *are* extremely stupid.  Which is why I
don't say anything about my opinion. If I'm pro-choice, then a fair number
of pro-lifers will automatically think of me as a brutal holocaustic murderer.
If I'm pro-life, some people will consider me to be a sexist oppressive pig.
I have large numbers of friends on both sides of the issue, and I refuse to
get involved in the nitty-gritty of the argument.  I mean, if you vigorously
insult my person now, imagine how much I'd get insulted (forget issue
disagreement) if I actually took a side.  


#144 of 404 by senna on Fri Oct 23 22:44:55 1998:

142 slipped in... my friend, who is catholic, gave a rundown of the catholic's
viewpoint on it...  I think the official catholic viewpoint is that sex should
be for love, pleasure, and procreation.  They don't have any illusions about
it not being something pleasurable.  Protestant doctrines are much loser.

But, they do have that "potential human life thing."  I've always thought that
was just bizarre.  Thanks to cloning, regular cells are potential human life
too.


#145 of 404 by suzie on Sat Oct 24 00:09:16 1998:

Potential human life?  Wow, does that mean that I'm some kind of evil
sinner murder every month when I don't have unprotected sex when I'm
fertile and kill the potential human baby that God wanted me to have
and like gee no wondr I think the pope is a stupid bonehead jerk.


#146 of 404 by scg on Sat Oct 24 01:06:14 1998:

Yeah, and if you think that's bad, sperm have a lifespan of only a few days,
if I remember correctly.


#147 of 404 by kenton on Sat Oct 24 01:31:13 1998:

I'm not the pope, and I hesitate to call anyone a sinner, but I would be very
cautious about aborting any age fetus.

While I agree that a woman has the right to do as she wishes with her body,
it should be remembered that what she does may effect others.  If a woman
wants no children,she should get sterilized and use birth controls or
abstinence. If she becomes pregnant, then she has two bodies to think about. 
The idea that at some point in time a fetus suddenly becomes human life is
ridiculous.  It is human life as soon as the first cell starts to split (if not
sooner).

I think that cloning has a long, long, long ways to go before they can take
a skin cell and make a complete human from it.

To answer a question aways back....I said a soul after 8 cells, because if
God supplied a soul after the initial egg was fertilized, then identical twins
would be forced to share it.   Please understand that this is my thought and
I have no Biblical or other basis for it.  

Take an adult from their house, in winter, for a long period of time and you
have removed them from their life support.  Especially if you allow them no
clothes. They will die as surely as a  premature baby removed from it's life
support.

Show a small child a pregnant lady, and ask the child what is in her belly and
the answer will be, "A baby".  How can children think so straight, while adults
delude themselves?  Use logic not rationalization.


#148 of 404 by kenton on Sat Oct 24 01:38:55 1998:

This statement was made a ways back "(we all know how well the
 earlier 'total illegality' of abortion was - abortion was about as common
 as it is now, but with much worse consequences for human health.) "
I would like to see this substantiated.  I think the present rate far exceeds
prior rates.


#149 of 404 by johnnie on Sat Oct 24 02:24:51 1998:

Uh, just to clarify the Catholic Church's position (no pun intended) on 
sex and birth control:  The Church sez that every sexual act should be 
*open* to the possibility of pregnancy.  That is, sexual activity which 
by it's nature precludes pregnancy and/or is done solely for the purpose 
of pleasure (masturbation, oral encounters, homosexual activities, sex 
using artificial birth control, etc.) is discouraged.  In addition, 
certain methods of artificial birth control (the pill, IUDs) can cause a 
fertilized egg to be expelled, which is a no-no as the Church believes 
that life begins at the moment of conception.   


#150 of 404 by scg on Sat Oct 24 03:13:20 1998:

re 147:
        You're right that the notion that a fetus suddenly becomes a human life
at some exact point is rediculous.  It certainly is.  The sperm and egg
individually woudln't be considered a viable human.  Once they've combined
they're far more likely to become a human than before, but there's still a
very high chance that the fetus will die before the woman even knows she's
pregnant, and even discounting that, at that point we've got a one celled
organism lacking just about all the traits that we would normally use to
consider somebody to be human.  On the other hand, a fetus a few days before
birth isn't very different from a newborn baby.  In between, there's a nine
month long process of going from one state to the other, and there is no one
instant when we can suddenly decide that that fetus is human now, but wasn't
a few seconds before.  Unfortunately, there's no good legal mechanism for
dealing with gradual changes like that, so the law has to pick a time and draw
the line there.  The end of the first trimester is quite arbitrary, but so
would any other time that line could possibly be drawn.


#151 of 404 by senna on Sat Oct 24 03:14:16 1998:

No, 145, you dont' seem to be harboring any extra bitterness/hatred at all.


#152 of 404 by janc on Sat Oct 24 03:44:39 1998:

I think Kenton needs to read cmcgee's resp:137 carefully.

Your wife was given a choice - to protect her life, or to protect her
baby's life.  She made a courageous choice.  Suppose instead the doctor
had said "Your pregnancy is endangering your life, but it's against the
law to abort it."  She would have been spared the opportunity to make a
courageous choice, because the government would already have decided to
courageously risk her life for the baby's.  I believe it was right for
your wife to make the choice she did, and I applaud and respect her for
it.  But that does NOT mean that I think it would have been good for the
government to make the choice for her.

It's true that most pro-life people would allow abortion in cases where
the life of the mother is endangered, so even under those laws your wife
would not have been robbed of her choice.  However, medical problems
aren't the only kinds of problems which might make giving birth to a
child an extraordinary act of courage.  Bringing a child into this world
is a huge responsiblity, and for many people find it unimaginable that
they can stretch far enough to do that.  To go ahead requires courage
from them, just as it did for your wife.  I believe they too should be
allowed a choice in the matter.

Like Rane, I find your arguements about when the soul enters the baby
irrelevant.  But they aren't irrelevant because I don't believe in
souls.  They are irrelevant because even if I agreed with everything you
said (and I do agree with much of it), it wouldn't change my mind about
abortion.  The reason I believe in abortion being a choice is not
because I think babies don't turn human for three months.  You can harp
on that point forever and it will never change my mind about anything.

My reasoning works like this:

 - First, it is important to understand that the viewpoint of the law
   is not the viewpoint of a person.  The law must be impartial.  Good
   people are partial to their friends and family.  The law must serve
   the good of society as a whole.  Individuals serve other individuals.
   The law must protect the freedom of individuals to seek fulfillment.
   Where the interests of individuals conflict, the law must favor those
   whose actions strengthen society instead of those who weaken it.
   (That is why it's good for the law to strongly discourage murders,
   while being relatively friendly to farmers).

 - From the viewpoint of society as a whole, there is no shortage of
   babies.  Quite the contrary, most of our problems would be much
   reduced if population growth was slower.  The capacity for babies
   to make a contribution to society is extremely limited.  On the
   contrary, the effort involved in raising them costs society quite
   a lot.

 - Of course, for society to try to restrict the birth of babies would
   make a lot of individuals very unhappy, causing depression and
   revolutions and such.  Individuals like you and me want our babies
   very much, no matter what they cost us to raise.  A sane and stable
   society will respect our desire for babies.  And after all, society
   does need enough babies to make a new generation, and if there are
   people willing to do the work of raising them, that's terrific.
   Here, the needs of the individual and the needs of society are in
   perfect harmony.

 - However, babies that their parents don't want have very little value
   to society.  To force a productive member of society to bring yet
   another baby into a world with too many babies doesn't do any good.
   Not only is it a burden on an over populated world, but it isn't
   even as good a risk of becoming a productive member of society as
   a baby that is wanted by someone.

 - The right to life is not something that comes for free just because
   you have human genes.  You need to provide some value to someone.
   Some people, like the folks who recently beat Matthew Shepard to
   death, or the folks who bombed the federal building in Oklahoma
   provide more negative value than positive value, and their right to
   life is generally consider low to non-existant.  We generally try to
   give everyone a lot of benefit of doubt when judging their worthiness
   to live, be we do make those judgements.

 - As far as value to society goes, a baby is a zero, or in these days
   of overpopulation, even a slight negative.  However, my unborn baby
   has some non-intrinsic value - I value him.  I am personally
   committed to doing everything in my power to raise him to be a
   useful and positive contributor to the society of man.  His existance
   adds to my personal desire to make this a world worth living in.
   That's where all of the value of that baby to society resides, and
   it is primarily on the basis of preserving that value that I claim
   that society should aide me in protecting the life of that child.

 - An unwanted baby does not have that kind of value.  Its parents
   are not prepared and willing to make the effort needed to ensure
   that it will be eventually worth the food it eats.  True, there
   are lots of potential adoptive parents who'd like to adopt the baby,
   but they would be equally happy to adopt any other baby.  There
   really are plenty of babies in the world.  We don't need to bring
   more babies into the world for people to adopt.

 - Babies are human from conception, but they aren't part of human
   society until they are loved and wanted.  When a parent says, "I
   want this child," then that child gets the rights of a human being.

 - The rule allowing three months to decide on an abortion is not
   because the baby somehow gets a soul at three months.  It's because
   three months is adequate time for a woman to find out she is
   pregnant and make a thoughtful, considered choice.  Once that time
   is past, society assumes the parent has made a commitment, and will
   hold them to it, holding them responsibile for the child.  It's
   a reasonable time period to make an informed realistic choice.  It
   has nothing to do with the time it takes to grow a baby.  It has
   to do with the time it takes to grow a parent.

 - Pro-choice means that if you ask someone why they became a parent,
   the answer will never be "well, I got drunk and the condom leaked."
   The answer will have something to do with wanting a child, and
   wanting to be a parent to the child.  In an overpopulated world,
   we should always have good reasons to add another baby.

Yes, I really believe that the value of humans is socially determined. 
I expect there will be questions about vegetables and homeless people
with no ties to anyone.  I can answer those, with arguments deriving
from the complexity of society and humans and the many kinds of value a
person can have and the difficulty of judging that value.  Unborn babies
are uniquely simple in their social connections.
   


#153 of 404 by katie on Sat Oct 24 13:57:42 1998:

(Yes, I have often found it unimaginable that I could stretch that far,
but I don't think that`s what you meant...;-))


#154 of 404 by brighn on Sat Oct 24 17:03:09 1998:

Senna> If you honestly don't see how saying, "Both sides are stupid" is an
insult, then it's pointless to discuss it further.

insult, n. 2. any gross abuse offered to another, either by words or actions;
any act or speech meant to hurt the feelings or self-respect of another.

That definition does not qualify "true" or "untrue." I think nearly everyone
would agree that my calling you ugly would be an insult, whether or not you
are.

There, I said it was pointless to discuss it further, and then discussed it
further. Why? Because it amuses me to do pointless things, and besides, it's
as on-topic as six-screen diatribes on abortion in the GLB conference... or
did this cross-linked? =}


#155 of 404 by senna on Sun Oct 25 00:16:22 1998:

Uh, Jan, some of the assertions you make there are extremely, extremely
disturbing, and that has little to do with abortion.

Kenton, arguments concerning when the soul enters the fetus are relevant if
they are true.  However, as it is quite impossible for you to prove that they
are true, I highly recommend you argue on terms that people understand, rather
that attempting to establish personal religious viewpoints as rules that
govern others that do not believe what you do.

That's always annoyed me.


#156 of 404 by suzie on Sun Oct 25 00:51:16 1998:

Jans *really* smart and cool but I dont think anyone here understands him.


#157 of 404 by kenton on Sun Oct 25 02:13:31 1998:

Chuckle.  My thoughts are not necessarily even close to fact, but they are
my thoughts.  If your interested in what I have to say, read it.  If not skip
to the next entry.   But in my lifetime, I have learned much by exchanging
even offbeat ideas with others.

If you were caught in a flood and were swimming to shore with a small child
on your back, but were tiring quickly, would you rid yourself of the child
and save your life?  The fact is some would and some wouldn't.  Would you (if
not tired) push the child off because you didn't know if you could feed him
or her once you reached shore?  By an above argument, I guess the answer is
the same for this question.

I don't think anyone has a right to life.  By the same token, I don't think
anyone has a right to decide who lives and who dies.  The challenges of
population increase can be met with out killing babies.  Some sociologists say
that the society which values life the highest,  extract the highest penalty
for the taking of life.  I guess our society needs some healing.

My grandmother  was nearly 50 when she became pregnant.  She didn't want that,
but had no choice.  She told me that she was quite despondent at my uncle's
birth. Yet she lived in the same house with him as a widow and under his care
for more than 20 years.  The child she didn't want, became her mainstay and
shining light. How many aborted children would have been a great blessing to
their parents or another.  Do mere mortals have the foresight and wisdom to
make such choices.  I don't think so.


#158 of 404 by drew on Sun Oct 25 02:50:03 1998:

I would like to see some substantiation for this 8 cell limit for being
capable of being made twins or quadruplets. Why not 4 or 16 cells?


#159 of 404 by rcurl on Sun Oct 25 05:23:24 1998:

#157 implies that either children are required to care for their aging
parents, or that it is impossible for anyone else to do so. Neither is
true in my opinion. I cannot imagine that "wisdom and insight" calls
for having as many children as possible to ensure one's eldercare. I
prefer a society in which people prepare in their life for their own
old age, and consider themselves lucky if someone(s) wish to assist
in that care out of love or perhaps some less altruistic motive.


#160 of 404 by md on Sun Oct 25 15:19:52 1998:

That seems hardly worth debating next to "I don't think anyone
has a right to life" (in #157). Why not throw out liberty and the
pursuit of happiness while you're at it?


#161 of 404 by maeve on Sun Oct 25 18:41:06 1998:

re 152...gosh..that was rather impressive..


#162 of 404 by lumen on Sun Oct 25 23:04:56 1998:

ah, gridlock. :P


#163 of 404 by kenton on Mon Oct 26 03:45:50 1998:

Rane, you missed the boat with your response about # 157.  In fact you missed
the pier.

Mike, you win the booby prize.  I wondered who would be the first to recite
from the preamble.  But in my humble opinion, that is exactly what is being
done to many tiny babies.  It proves that our constitution is only good for
some.  If you don't want someone included, just make up some arbitrary ruling
to exclude them.  Take black and white and mix them.  Now you have a grey
area, so make up your rules to fit your desires.  First start with the very
young and unborn who have only their uncaring mother to protect them.

Then add the very old, especially those who are blind and deaf.  They don't
understand anyway.  Get rid of them.  Add the feeble minded and people with
terminal diseases.  They are just a load on society.  Finally add people who
are blonde and have green eyes.  And don't forget those who don't believe as
you do. Like homosexuals.

Abortion just got the ball rolling.  Where will it stop?


#164 of 404 by brighn on Mon Oct 26 06:36:09 1998:

Suzie, can we avoid the Hero Worship at the expense of insulting the rest of
the conference?

Kenton> #157 is meant as support for your argument, but seems like support
against it. You ask, "If you were swimming to shore from a shipwreck, and had
a child as added weight, would you let the child die to save your own life?
Some would and some wouldn't." This is *exactly* the position most women who
seek abortions are in: Frequently, they've become pregnant by accident, and
they have a choice: Abort the child, or risk their career, their education,
or whatever else... in short, either drown the child, or risk letting the
child drag you down. I know of at least two women in this situation: Pregnant
early in their college career, they chose to carry the child to term; now,
without a college degree, they can't find a decent, well-paying job, so the
child is destined to live with the mother in the lower classes... the child
has metaphrocially dragged the mother down. Now, both of these women chose,
of their own free will, the baby over the degree... in short, they chose to
risk drowning themselves in order to save the child. But, as you yourself
point out, others would chose to let the child drown. You seem to have no
judgment call one way or the other; you make it a statement of fact. I agree;
the judgment call is up to the mother.

A woman who is pregnant and doesn't want to have a child has two choices:
(1) Abort the fetus
(2) Bring the fetus to term and either raise it or put it up for adoption.

Let's look at (2). If she chooses to raise it herself, she needs to examine
the likelihood that it will significantly affect her livelihood, which impacts
her happiness, which impacts her ability to raise the child. Perhaps she will
decide that the child is worth the sacrifices, and that she can look beyond
the problems to give it the love it needs to thrive. Perhaps she will decide
that the child is an albatross, and resent it for as long as it lives. If she
chooses to put it up for adoption, she risks placing it in an already
overfilled and overbureaucracized adoption system; perhaps it will find a good
home, perhaps a terrible one, perhaps it will wind up in foster care, hopping
from dysfunctional setting to dysfunctional setting. When the child is older,
perhaps it will love it adoptive parents as if they were birth parents, or
perhaps it will pine for the mother that abandoned it, in its view, and wonder
who she was.

Let's look at (1). Perhaps she will walk away from the clinic and never think
of the child again. Much more likely, she will lie awake wondering what the
child would have been like, whether she will ever get the chance to h ave a
child when she wants to... she might hear the voice of the child as she tries
to sleep; she might picture it in her nightmares. Abortion takes reality and
makes it potential, and we are left wondering about the potential, stuck in
a quagmyre of "what ifs."

I am not female. I am not ever going to be in the position to choose. But I've
talked to women who've gotten pregnant accidentally, both those who chose to
abort and those who chose to carry through. Above is an amalgam of precisely
the questions that each of them went through in their decision.

Anyone who thinks that the decision to abort is easy, or made lightly, is
sadly mistaken. Perhaps there are a few women out there who use it as a form
of birth control. But of the women I've talked to, who've been pregnant and
then, by their own volition, become unpregnant, the decision was filled with
introspection, guilt, and meditation. 

"Do you think women want to kill their own babies?
 If you got your own twisted baggage, then, maybe."
              -- Consolidated

This is entirely different that ridding society of undesirables. Abortion is
about a mother choosing between what she perceives of being a trio of
unpleasant choices: Abort, raise, adopt. (Abortions that aren't medically
necissitated, that is.)

Comparing that to murderers (as Jan does) or to social undesirables, such as
the elderly and gays (as Kenton does) belittles both the issue of abortion,
and the relevant issues of crime management and fringe members of society.


#165 of 404 by md on Mon Oct 26 11:36:29 1998:

Re #163, when societies start down the slippery slope you 
describe, it isn't because government gives individuals power 
over their own lives, as in Roe v. Wade.  It's because government 
attains power over individual lives, as in Mazi Germany.  You're 
right about selective rights, though.  The "life, liberty and the 
pursuit of happiness" language applies only to "men," as I recall.  
But that's as it should be.  ;-)

Anyway, why did you say you don't think anyone has the "right to 
life," of all things?  That's an incredibly strange position for an 
anti-abortion person to take.


#166 of 404 by danr on Mon Oct 26 13:42:25 1998:

Why does it seem every 'serious' discussion turns into an abortion debate?


#167 of 404 by mta on Mon Oct 26 16:14:25 1998:

It doesn't actually happent hat way -- but it happens often enough over the
years to often seem thatw ay. ;



#168 of 404 by md on Mon Oct 26 17:12:50 1998:

Who's the idiot who introduced the abortion topic into
this item in the first place?


#169 of 404 by brighn on Mon Oct 26 17:18:02 1998:

me

I made an analogy between militant gay-bashers and militant pro-lifers, and
offended senna.

Then we slid down that proverbial slippery slope.


#170 of 404 by albaugh on Mon Oct 26 17:23:33 1998:

Not to be confused with sliding down a slippery tunnel...  ;->


#171 of 404 by md on Mon Oct 26 19:12:45 1998:

[Gack.  I thought it was me, brighn.  I never would've used
the word "idiot" otherwise.  1,000,000 apologies.]


#172 of 404 by brighn on Mon Oct 26 20:27:14 1998:

[Maybe it *was* you, after all. I honestly don't remember. Nor do I care.
We're debating abortion on a teensy BBS where those of us who on't agree with
us aren't going to change their minds anyway, and getting carpal tunnel and
inflated heads doing it, so I guess we're both idiots. =} ]
[The preceding was a joke, for the humor impaired.]
[MD doesn't strike me as humor impaired, otherwise I wouldn't've made such
a joke.]


#173 of 404 by senna on Mon Oct 26 23:27:18 1998:

That was a joke?  I took it as a mortal offense :)

(the preceding was sarcasm, but my sarcasm is hard to pick up anyway)

At least we haven't turned to insulting each other entirely yet.  Debates lose
all of their appeal when people decide that the reason the other person holds
a different opinion is because they are mentally challenged and decide that
a quick path to winning the debate is to enlighten them to their stupidity.
Take politics, for example.


#174 of 404 by janc on Tue Oct 27 02:54:35 1998:

Interesting.  I'd expected resp:152 to raise at least a few flames. 
It's pretty far from the politically correct pro-choice party line.


#175 of 404 by kenton on Tue Oct 27 03:21:29 1998:

If people didn't have opposing views, there would be no debate.  I personally
argue both sides of an issue (with myself) to try for a better understanding of
the  issue....And for the smart asses...I haven't lost an argument with myself
yet.  This conference has helped me gain a better understanding of the issue.

Never the less, if I knew that a woman was going to have an abortion, and
opportunity presented itself, I would try to dissuade her.   

I only know of two women, who have had abortions.  The first aborted a female
baby because her live in  only wanted a boy.  The second has had 7 abortions (
or so she claims).  To me , both of these women have an ugliness that goes
clear to the bone. And I'm not talking about appearances.

Back to the homosexuals.... There is an ice skating champion named Rudy Galindo
or something like that.  Many of his mannerisms, appear to be very female in
nature. Is this learned or inborn?  Do all homosexuals have mannerisms and
characteristics of the opposite sex?

Cows when deprived of a bull will hop each other.  In fact this is one way to
determine when to artificially breed them.  I have also observed incarcerated
dogs of the same sex humping each other.  But this action seems to be triggered
by limited or no access to the opposite sex.  Human prisoners may exercise this
same phenomenon.

But what about people on the outside.  Is homosexuality a natural choice or a
learned perverted action?  Is it a matter of personal choice or a case of "I
can't help it".


#176 of 404 by janc on Tue Oct 27 03:40:04 1998:

Kenton slipped in.  But I'll post this response anyway.

I suspect that there is a reason why an awful lot of serious debates
turn into abortion debates.  It's probably the same reason why so many
people use the abortion issue as an acid test for choosing who to vote
for.  I think this country is divided between two different moral
viewpoints, and I think the abortion issue happens to be the one that
most starkly falls across that cleft.  There is no other issue where
both sides feel they are so clearly right, and the other side is so
clearly wrong.  A lot of other issues divide along similar (but never
really identical) lines.  Not all gay-bashers are pro-lifers, nor vice
versa.  Not even close.  But there is enough correspondence in people's
minds so that when they try to fortify their positions on either side of
the gay question, both sides tend to reach for that stone that feels so
solid to them - the abortion question.

I experimented a while back with making the claim that I'm *both*
pro-life and pro-choice.  Logical enough.  Life and choice are both good
things.  I argued that 1.5 million abortions a year in this country is
too many and that something should be done to reduce the number.  But I
argued that illegalizing abortion would be a very ineffective way to
reduce abortions.  The abortion rate was very high even while it was
illegal, and there is no reason to believe that illegalizing it again
would save a large fraction of those 1.5 million babies.  Certainly it
would kill lots of women in backroom abortions, and it would be done at
the cost of losing women a great deal of freedom.  It's a lousy way to
solve the problem.  Better ways would be to do things like making birth
control more readily available, improving public education about birth
control, and throwing lots of research dollars at developing safer and
more effective birth control methods.  This way, women who don't want
babys would be more likely not to get pregnant, and thus the abortion
rate would fall, while actually increasing women's practical freedom of
choice.

I figured this was the perfect solution.  The best of both worlds.  At
very least should be a program that both sides could agree on, even as
they continue the debate about the legality of abortion.

(I also figured that by grabbing both positive terms, "Pro-Choice AND
Pro-Life," I'd have all the good turf, leaving anyone who disagreed with
me stuck with defining themselves negatively, calling themselves
"Pro-Choice and Anti-Life" or "Anti-Choice and Pro-Life".  I love to
fight dirty.)

Fat chance.  The notion that there is might actually be common ground
between "Pro-Choice" and "Pro-Life," that there exists a reasonably
practical program that could further the stated goals of *both* sides,
was thoroughly and completely unwelcome.  I never found a single person
from either side who liked the idea.  Objections were not to the content
of the argument, but to the notion of blurring the boundaries between US
and THEM.  I was thoroughly and generally ignored.

The abortion debate is NOT about abortion.  Nobody cares as much as all
that about that specific issue.  It's really about a whole complex of
moral values that happen to be reflected in the standard formulations of
the two sides of that one issue.  That's why people love debating it,
why all other issues feed into it, and why nobody likes me messing with
the stereotypical "Pro-Life" and "Pro-Choice" positions.

My guess is that as time passes the particular deep issues that are
bugging society will shift, and the abortion issue will simply cease to
be interesting to people.  In a century people may look back at the
abortion debate with the same puzzlement that we look back at debates
over how many angels can dance on the head of a pin.  Solutions to the
abortion problem can be found as soon as we actually want them.  But
right now we don't want them, because we like having the abortion issue
as a nice way to divide the good people from the evil people in minds.


#177 of 404 by mary on Tue Oct 27 04:01:32 1998:

I don't think of pro-lifers as evil.  I do think of the abortion
debate as being about a woman's right to terminate an unwanted
pregnancy.

Even if I didn't already know this I'd suspect the author of
that last response could never be pregnant.


#178 of 404 by janc on Tue Oct 27 04:09:02 1998:

Responding to Kenton about homosexuality, inherited or learned:

Sexual preference is a preference.  It works like all other preferences.
There are lots of sexual options, of which hetrosexuality,
homosexuality, and asexuality are just a few.  Everyone has some
preferences among them.  Those preferences originate pretty much the
same way all preferences do.  To some degree you are born with your
preferences, but they are modified by your culture, your experiences,
and your education.  A person who hates broccoli may be able to
cultivate a taste for broccoli (or they may not - there is a known
genetic component for that preference).  Genetic or not, preferences may
shift with time.

If I stick you in jail and offer you only broccoli and brussel sprouts,
you will probably start eating whichever of those you prefer, no matter
how low they both are on your list of preferences.  You may even get to
like them.  Or you may get to hate them worse every time you eat them,
but still eat them.  Same thing happens if I stick you in jail and offer
you only celebacy or homosexuality.

There is no real difference between sexual preferences and other kinds
of preferences, except that we are wired so that sex of any kind is
emotionally charged.

As for mannerisms - these are culturally determined.  You'd probably
think a man who comes up and gives you a big hug and a kiss is acting
feminine.  Or he might just be Russian.  Everyone in our culture knows
what kinds of actions fit what kinds of catagories of people, and
consciously or unconsciously they choose.  They may choose them to hide
what they perceive themselves to be, or they may choose them to
broadcast their identity.  The latter is a bit more common, so there is
at least a decent chance that people acting in ways you think of as
"gay" really are gay.  But don't bet on it.  People are vastly more
complex than that.


#179 of 404 by other on Tue Oct 27 05:25:56 1998:

by the way, the act of mounting is, in the dog world, a way of establishing
dominance in social relationships, not just a sexual behaviour.  male and
female dogs alike engage in this activity, without regard to the sex of the
recipient.  dogs usually only mate when the female is in heat.


#180 of 404 by headdoc on Tue Oct 27 12:18:22 1998:

You would never think my husband is feminine when he gets up and gives
another man a big hug and kiss.  And he isn't Russian (well, maybe some of
his ancestors were).  Hugging is not a mannerism, it a culturally acquired
manner of greeting someone you care for a lot.  Only in some parts of America,
with some dichotomized people, is it ever thought of as sexually determined.
(Jerry will hug those guys, also because he doesn't let other people's biases
effect his behavior.)  

I can also take issue with another point you raise, Jan.  Some predisposition
towards sexuality is innate.  Some sexual orientation is a preference.  When
you use the word preference, I always assume volition.  I have seen and worked
with very young children who have shown clearly that they have a gender
orientation which differs from their biological structure.All people are born
with the propensity to be sexual.  The valence towards males and females may
be viewed on a bell shaped curve continuum with the majority falling in the
center (with a strong hetero orientation).  After early childhood and taking
into account genetic factors, the rest is acculturated.


#181 of 404 by brighn on Tue Oct 27 16:01:35 1998:

(Shoot, system went down and I lost my first paragraph, which was,
basically: Jan, I agree with you entirely about abortion. I don't
know who you were talking to that didn't understand your points.
Only more verbose than that, because, well, I'm verbose.)
>
>Actually, you statements reminded me of a Bill Hicks comment (sampled on
>Tool's "Third Eye"): "It's not a war on drugs, it's a war on personal
>freedom." Were drugs legal, I wouldn't take them (I drink very little
alcohol,
>I don't smoke, I avoid caffeine and only take over-the-counter medications
>when I'm unbearably ill); but I'm against their prohibition on grounds of
>principle. And yes, I've seen what drugs do to people, in the same way that
>I've seen what prostitution does to people, in the same way that I've seen
>what abortion does to people, in the same way... I don't care. Taking
>responsibility away from people because they can't handle it isn't the
>solution. Personal freedom is the MOST IMPORTANT concern... all others are
>secondary.
>
>"But wait!" cries the detractor... "This is a slippery slope! That means I
>should have the right to kill other people, and you're detracting from my
>personal freedoms in stopping me!"
>
>Nope, nope, nope. I have the right to get stoned. I have the right to risk
>my own life getting stoned. I do NOT have the right to get stoned and drive
>on the sidewalk and kill and injure others. My personal freedoms end where
>yours begin.

Homosexuality> I like the food analogy, and have used it myself. Somebody
asked (elsewhere, I beleive) how one can "choose" to be a lesbian (in
the context, for political reasons), and the food analogy response is:
The same way some people *choose* to be vegetarians, while others don't.
Some vegetarians get physically ill from meat, either for medical reasons
(allergy) or, much more commonly, for psychological reasons (they can't
rid themselves of the image of a slaughterhouse, for instance). My mother-
in-law can't eat turkey for the second reason. Some vegetarians, though,
could eat meat, but choose not to... some (like Selena) even crave meat 
from time to time, but still avoid it.

At any rate, why on Earth does anyone CARE what anyone else does, so long
as it stays out of your own space? 

((Show of hands... can any of y'all tell I'm a libertarian?))

I admit there are questions that are difficult to answer. Let's take 
public nudity, for instance. I feel that I have the right to not wear
clothing, if I choose. But you may feel that you have the right to protect
your children from seeing a naked adult man. Both are legitimate rights,
so who gets their way?

Let's take public displays of affection. One of the things that those who
oppose gay rights say is that they don't want to see two men kissing each
other, and they don't want their kids exposed to that. In fact, they oppose
PDAs in general, but feel taht heterosexuals, who tend to be much less open
in public, are within acceptable tolerance levels.

Let's take pornography. Psychologists feel that exposing young children to
hardcore pornography unduly traumatizes them. I feel that I should have the
right to view whatever I want to.

So who wins?

Well, we've only had the legal system we've had for a few centuries. Before
that, what was the answer? Social values, mores, and regulation... personal
ethics and responsbility were tantamount, and when those were abuse, people
were ostracized. 

My girlfriend has four children, all under the age of ten. They've been 
over to my house. I haven't shown them my porn mags, not because I think
it's against the law, and that I risk imprisonment, but because I don't
think it's appropriate for them to see it, any more than I think it's 
appropriate for them to see ultraviolent movies, like Terminator and Die
Hard. If I had a boyfriend, I wouldn't drop to my knees and suck his cock
in the middle of a store not because it's illegal but because it's not
appropriate behavior (and who knows, I might do it a few times for the
sheer thrill of it, but not on a regular basis)... just like I'm not
openly sexual with my wife or GF in public because it's just not 
appropriate.

"But," say the detractors, "it's wonderful that you have a strong sense
of ethics, but not everyone does, and we need protection from them."

BULLSHIT. Telling the government to protect you and yours from the bad,
filthy people doesn't make them go away. Instead, it changes people from
thinking about ethics to thinking about laws... people stop doing things
because they're right or wrong, and start doing things because they're
legal or illegal. Instead of blaming themselves when they do something
inappropriate, they start blaming the government for daring to catch them.
It starts becoming a game... can I suck another guy's cock in public 
without getting caught? Can I wave my wang in front of a six-year-old?
When there are no legal limits of behavior, there are no legal limits 
to test.

All right, I'll shut up for now. =}


#182 of 404 by drew on Tue Oct 27 21:19:41 1998:

Count me as another who is Pro-Choice and likes Janc's idea of improving birth
control.


#183 of 404 by brighn on Tue Oct 27 21:47:13 1998:

Actually, it's unfathomable to me why anyone -- pro-choice or otherwise --
wouldn't agree with the statement, "It would be good to come up with ways to
decrease the number of unwanted pregnancies."


#184 of 404 by rcurl on Tue Oct 27 22:10:02 1998:

But they would not agree with *how*.


#185 of 404 by jiffer on Wed Oct 28 00:19:38 1998:



#186 of 404 by kenton on Wed Oct 28 03:17:54 1998:

Re  181  Your statement (When there are no legal limits of behavior, there
are no legal limits to test.) is seemingly accurate, but the word ignore should
be  substituted for test.

The phrase Pro-choice is a good one, which conjures up all sorts of imagined
rights.  I am curious about the cross section of women who get abortions. 
What percentage are married?  How many have had more than one abortion?  How
many had medical problems that influenced them?  What are their social
standards or range of affluence?  What percentage have had more than just
moderate mental problems resulting from their choice?  How many abortions occur
because the mother didn't want the inconvenience of a pregnancy?  What is the
addition to the GNP due to the abortion industry?  How many abortions occur
because the partners "took a chance"?

And figuring percentages, how could one compare the numbers of the babies who
would have had successful, happy, full lives to the numbers of those who should
never have been born.

I've asked some of those questions to point to this question: What makes an
abortion justifiable?





#187 of 404 by rcurl on Wed Oct 28 04:42:41 1998:

It doesn't have to be justified. It is the *right* of the woman.

Why are you curious about all those things? What would you do about
it if you knew. Actually, there are lots of statistics like that somewhere,
perhaps on the web. The important information, I think, would be that
which might provide some guidance to reducing the number of unwanted
pregnancies. I much prefer contraception to abortion as a means to
prevent/eliminate  those.

However your question about all those successful happy kids that don't
get born seems to suggest that you think that every ovum ever produced
should be fertilized and a baby produced, regardless of the means
to support same and, ultimately, the capacity of the earth to sustain
people. 


#188 of 404 by i on Wed Oct 28 05:13:56 1998:

Abortion (when you could go ahead and have the baby) strikes me as far
more justifiable than buying a fancy sports car (when you could give the
money to groups that feed starving children in the 4th world).  


#189 of 404 by senna on Wed Oct 28 20:14:52 1998:

Actually, Rane, you believe it is the right of the woman.  And under the law
it is the right of the woman, and that is because the supreme court has
determined it to be the right of the woman.

Um, Kenton, what does it matter?  If your view is correct, and abortion is
murder, then who cares who does it and why?  If your view is incorrect, and
abortion is a right, then who cares who does it and why?  The only grey areas
are situations like rape and when the mother is at risk, which are fairly
obvious causes for abortion on both sides, and they are small percentages.
Someone who is excersizing a right doesn't need "justification."  I don't need
to be "justified" to speak freely.  You're attempting to make a point which,
while relevant to you, isn't relevant to others.  The best you can accomplish
is to establish that you have solid reasons for believing what you believe.
Changing the minds of people who believe something else is virtually
impossible, and 20+ years of this country's experience should pretty much
verify that.  



#190 of 404 by void on Wed Oct 28 20:59:18 1998:

   re #175: kenton, would you please tell me exactly when you made a 
conscious choice to be heterosexual?  is it a natural choice or a 
learned action?


#191 of 404 by lumen on Thu Oct 29 02:46:53 1998:

Ah, love that liberalism vs. conservatism at work

it's all a matter of perception and paradigm

and I'm tired of the subject..can we go on?


#192 of 404 by rcurl on Thu Oct 29 03:04:28 1998:

On to what? The course of the discussion here is up to you, too.


#193 of 404 by senna on Thu Oct 29 11:31:47 1998:

Uh, yeah, drift away.  

My choice to be a heterosexual was carefully made.  At the age of 12, when
encountered with the issue, I took it very seriously.  First, I read all the
material I could explaining the advantages and disadvantages of the various
choices of sexual orientations.  Then I listened and attended lectures
outlining the various issues involved.  Then I talked to people who had made
both choices about why they made those choices and how they thought their
choice had panned out.  I carefully investigated the activities both choices
would involve until I knew the ins and outs of everything, and scheduled a
viewing so I could see the processes in action.  And, finally, to make my
choice, I went to a beach.  I saw a couple women walking buy in thongs, said
"Oh, daaaaaammmmmnnnnn," and decided to be heterosexual.

The preceeding paragraph is sarcastic.


#194 of 404 by headdoc on Thu Oct 29 16:07:25 1998:

lol senna.  Very clever.


#195 of 404 by suzie on Fri Oct 30 01:48:42 1998:

ROTFL!!


#196 of 404 by kenton on Fri Oct 30 02:06:38 1998:

I guess the only reason that the supreme court decided the Roe vs. Wade in
the way they did, was because the baby had a joke for a legal team.  So it
all boils down to how good of an attorney do you have.

Public opinion is a powerful tool and drives society.  With proper answers
to the questions I asked, a more moderate approach could be taken to making
abortions so readily available.  If babies lives could be saved within the
process of abortion, I wouldn't care how many abortions happened.

I see abortions as murder, because they end a life, a human life. I care and
obviously lots of others care too.

Unwanted pregnancies are a tragedy, but killing does not make it right.

I would like to see a law that would give all aborted babies the same rights
as those born by Caesarean section.  They are both extracted from their mothers
by unnatural means.  Such a law would help mothers to be, to realize that 
their babies are truly human beings.

In addition, if human rights were unconditionally given to the unborn
(regardless of fetal age), where wife beating, etc. occurred, resulting in the
death of the child, greater penalties could be imposed on the assailant.

I firmly believe that a woman should have the right to decide whether she wants
to have a child or not. But the time to exercise that right is before the child
exists. I do not believe that any human has  the right to murder or cause to be
murdered any human regardless of age, physical development, ability, worth,
heredity, or stage of mental development, etc.


#197 of 404 by lumen on Fri Oct 30 02:33:02 1998:

Put the abortion issue to bed-- I grow tired of it.  Opinions are like
buttocks-- everyone's got one, and they all stink.

Anyway, I thought we were talking about Matthew Shepard's untimely death and
homophobia in general.

Anyone see the ABC News special on it?  They had a gay filmmaker who did a
documentary of interviews with men who had murdered homosexuals.  They talked
a little about perceived attitudes, etc., etc.


#198 of 404 by senna on Fri Oct 30 09:56:48 1998:

The abortion issue will die when it dies.  It's easy to ignore the responses
and the item is forgettable if necessary.



#199 of 404 by mta on Fri Oct 30 15:19:35 1998:

I didn't catch that documentary, Jon.  Could you give a brief synopsis?


#200 of 404 by brighn on Fri Oct 30 20:18:17 1998:

The only post that will irritate me every single time I read it is one that
says, "Shut up because I'm sick of hear ing it."

Of course, Joe, you're free to be irritating.
=}


#201 of 404 by void on Sat Oct 31 11:53:20 1998:

   kenton, i'll repeat my question: when, exactly, did you make a 
conscious choice to be heterosexual?


#202 of 404 by lumen on Sun Nov 1 00:51:49 1998:

Misti, I'll do my best-- it was a while ago, and I didn't take notes..
but I gotta go now.  I'm sure you could get a copy from ABC News..they do
videotapes for educational purposes.

more to come..


#203 of 404 by kenton on Sun Nov 1 03:31:34 1998:

Re  #201   I don't recall saying I was a heterosexual.  But I am.  And I don't
recall making a choice.  Should I?  Because I grew up observing all
heterosexual relationships, I was not aware that any other existed.  But am
I a product of what I have seen in an impressionable age range, or did
heterosexuality come natural to me?

At age 10 I thought that girls were the pits, yet had a girl for a buddy. 
She was 11, played catch, climbed trees, went fishin', and bikin' and could
beat the tar out of me.  She lived about 1/2 mile from me and was about 1 mile
closer than any guy.  Because my brother (12 years my elder) was married to her
sister, she and I had occasion to spend a good deal of time together.

When I got around guys, she ceased to exist, even if present.  When she got
around girls, she persisted in chasing me until I slipped or got cornered.
Then I got a kiss for every girl present (from my girl buddy).  As I remember,
this was very humiliating for a 10 year old macho man.  When both of us were
around our own gender, we had a different perception of each other.

The point is, although we spent a lot of time together, neither was influenced
to become anything other than what we were.  I moved away at age 11.

At age 14, I saw her again and my interests were radically different from
those of a 10 year old.  But unfortunately our wrestling days were over.

If a man in a mental institution thinks he is Napoleon, he obviously needs
help.  He thinks he is someone, who he is not.  A women trapped in a man's body
is in the same condition, yet acceptance of homosexuality denys this type of
person mental help.  Do I miss the flight with this analogy?


#204 of 404 by snowth on Sun Nov 1 04:33:24 1998:

(Not that I agree with the statement, I just don't feel like arguing about
it tonight...)

 But to pick a different point... Why does the guy who thinks he's Napoleon
*need* help? He's not hurting anybody, and as long as it doesn't interfere
with the way he lives _his_ life, how does it matter?

Or maybe that's just me.


#205 of 404 by senna on Sun Nov 1 05:00:00 1998:

Kenton, you're using extremely bad arguments to support a point.  It makes
it very difficult to respect your position if that's all you can offer.  I
know quite a few people who hold similar views to you but are much, much more
intelligent about it.  How do you know what it's like to be a homosexual? 
Have you ever been a homosexual?  Try to look at things from the other side
occasionally.  It's possible to be intelligent and rational and not agree with
you.  This applies to everybody.  


#206 of 404 by rcurl on Sun Nov 1 06:05:00 1998:

I don't understand why kenton thinks it matters at all what sexual preference
a person has. There is no such thing as "a woman trapped in a man's body".
There are just people, with varying degrees and types of sexual drives.
Why are they not all considered equal? 


#207 of 404 by mdw on Sun Nov 1 07:36:52 1998:

There are people who feel they are a "woman trapped in a man's body",
and there are homosexuals.  The two are entirely different things.  The
former is likely to consider an operation in sweden; the latter is
perfectly happy "as is".  In classical greece, homosexuality was
considered more or less the norm--if anything, people who were only into
heterosexual sex would have been considered "sick" and "in need of
help".  Genetics isn't as simple as XX/XY.  There are also XO, AIS, &
various other oddities.  For most of these, there is no "cure" or "quick
fix", and society doesn't always deal well with these people.


#208 of 404 by kenton on Sun Nov 1 22:21:32 1998:

Re 205 I don't know any homosexuals nor have I practiced homosexuality.  I
never made any claims to being particularly intelligent.  Perhaps you can
point out the error of my responses, so I can amend my ways. Show me how
homosexuality benefits the home and family and  the nation.  Show how it
benefits the individual, especially the one who was beaten to death.  Do the
same with heterosexuality.

Rane, everyone is not equal.  They all (in USA) have a constitutional right to
pursue happiness, but some are much better equipped to do that. 

 I don't understand women, because I am not one.  And I don't understand
 homosexuals
because I am not one. Anyone who wants to twist these two sentences beyond what
I mean is welcome.  Anyway, I don't throw rocks at either group.

I want to know what causes a homosexual to be homosexual.  Is it learned or
hereditary?  Or is it just plain perverted?

Classic Greece, ancient Rome and Sodom and Gomorra are all history. May they
rest in peace.




#209 of 404 by scott on Sun Nov 1 23:02:19 1998:

Ah, so all the ancient Greeks are now dead, so they must have been doing
something wrong?

OK, I'll bite.

Homosexuality might be a very valuable response to overpopulation.  By
redirecting sexual drives to unions that cannot produce offspring, population
growth is slowed and massive die-offs (from limited resources) prevented.


#210 of 404 by klg on Mon Nov 2 00:21:57 1998:

So that's the reason why most of the population in China is
homosexual?


#211 of 404 by cyklone on Mon Nov 2 00:46:20 1998:

Re #208: Well Kenton, if contibuting to culture can be considered a "benefit"
to a nation, then there are far too many contributions to list here.
Homosexuals' contibutions to art, music and literature are well documented
and have been lauded and embraced by heterosexuals as well . . . .


#212 of 404 by mta on Mon Nov 2 00:50:27 1998:

Homesexua;ity can also be a benefit in a "traditional" family/tribal setting
since a certain number of non-reproducing adults will (at least theoretically)
be free to help with the care of their siblings children, improving the odds
that more of those indirect descendents will grow up to pass on the family
genes.


#213 of 404 by rcurl on Mon Nov 2 03:16:32 1998:

Re #208: the question should be, how does homosexuality (or any other
sexual preference, including heterosexuality) *harm* "the home and family and
the nation"? There are more than enough heterosexuals to maintain the
population, and homosexuals (and others) are just as capable as heterosexuals
to have fine homes and families. And don't go into issues of "public health".
Heterosexuals were the main public health problems in the days of syphillus
and many other sexually related diseases. These are public health questions,
not life style questions. I don't know how homophobia arose, but I
suspect it arose in primitive tribes where public health problems were
less controllable for lack of information.


#214 of 404 by katie on Mon Nov 2 03:53:58 1998:

kenton, you most probably know several homosexuals.


#215 of 404 by i on Mon Nov 2 04:39:05 1998:

Well, if the people living in an area double their population every 100
years (extremely easy if food, etc. is somewhat plentiful), then the
population will grow by a *factor* of something over 1,000,000,000 in
3000 years.  Obviously starvation/disease/war/etc. would (rather brutally)
cut off population growth LONG before there were 50,000,000,000 people 
on the land that once supported a little tribe of 50.

Simplistic?  Yes.  But this little example illustrates fairly well the
fact that humans need ways to keep their population growth in check.  
Esp. in the small tribal situations that humans are adapted for, homo-
sexuality is good for that.  Male homosexuality reduces tensions in the
tribe involving male competition for females.  Etc.  Given more time to
evolve in primitive small tribes, i suspect that homosexuality would 
become much more common in humans.  

Most other social species have more restrictive ways of keeping population
growth in check - usually involving suppression of sexual activity by non-
dominant individuals.  Some human societies use such strategies, but i
don't think it's really seen at the small tribal level.


#216 of 404 by remmers on Mon Nov 2 04:48:12 1998:

Re resp:214 - I was about to make a similar remark.


#217 of 404 by mdw on Mon Nov 2 05:45:06 1998:

Everything I have ever seen indicates that sexuality, in general, is
determined biologically not culturally.  It's not as simple as
either/or, however.  While most people prefer the opposite sex, and a
few prefer the same sex, there is also a significant fraction that can
go "either way".  Sexuality is not its own separate island of behavior;
it's tied up to other things, and so there is some % of people (some
authorities claim 10%) who are into various forms of bdsm.  Even though
sexuality is not determined culturally, most cultures do have their
ideas on what sexuality "should be", which in our society leads to a
significant number of people who might be homosexuals through biology,
but who choose to pursue heterosexual relationships instead.  Some
authorities claim that many people in whom homophobia is strongest, may
well be examples of this "repressed" homosexuality.  That is, what they
fear may not be the other person, so much, as what is in themselves.

Human sexuality is actually unusual in the animal kingdom.  In most
species, including most mammals, "sexual activity for reproduction" only
happens at very particular times, and the rest of the time, females are
just "not ready/not interested".  In most of the great apes, females
have a monthly cycle (like humans) but are only interested in sex during
one small part of their cycle (unlike humans).  Males are still ready
for sex most of the time, but the only male who gets to mate with the
females is usually the dominant (or alpha) male.  The other males are
out of luck, well, at least so far as females go.  They can, however,
have sex with each other, and they may use this as a social method of
expressing dominance relations (the lower male gets to assume the
"female" role.) Presumably, such behavior also helps them to "practice"
having sex, and keeps the appropriate organs exercised and in peak
shape, in case they become alpha male.  In most mammals, the female does
most of the child rearing, and the male may only be there for the sex
part.  Cats are a good example of this; feline sex basically works like
rape.  The male does his part, it appears to be necessary that the act
cause some pain to the female, and the male departs.

The reason humans have such "unusual" sex may be related to our
intelligence.  Because we're so much smarter, it takes much longer for
us to mature.  This is because it takes us longer to learn how to do our
thing.  That means the mother needs to spend more time child rearing,
which makes it more important that she have help.  Sex helps do that, by
providing the human male with a reason to stick around and stay
pair-bonded.  There is actually only a period of about 3 days in the
month when human females are fertile, and yet sex is still possible and
enjoyable most of the rest of the time.  There are some other
interesting "unusual" aspects.  Humans are pretty much designed to have
sex face to face (although obviously other positions are possible).
That makes it possible for us to socialize while having sex.  Most other
mammals, including most of the other great apes, are designed to have
sex with both partners, well, facing the same way.  The male enters from
the rear.  Human sex also lasts a lot longer than in most other mammals.
If I remember right, with horses, chimpanzees, dogs, and cats, the act
is something like 10-15 *seconds*.  In addition, human females enjoy sex
just as much as human males.  With most other species, sex looks more
like something the females endure.


#218 of 404 by lumen on Mon Nov 2 07:44:50 1998:

quick quip about the ABC News commentary-- the filmmaker is gay (did I mention
that?) and what was interesting was that many of the murderers perceived gay
males to be hitting on them or one of their friends.

I'm not sure how to get a copy of the tape-- try cruising around the web.

Be advised that the news segment does contain some very graphic scenes-- they
did show photos of a murder scene, complete with blood, broken glass, and the
body.


#219 of 404 by senna on Mon Nov 2 23:20:04 1998:

Guess what, Kenton.  Something doesn't need to be "benificial to the nation"
to be alright.  Freud has argued, quite compelling that religion is not
beneficial to the nation.  Religion still exists despite this.  Your beliefs
have yet to be proven correct, so why are you asking for proof of the
contradictions?  Your arguments are weak and close-minded, and an embarassment
to people who share some of your views for more legitimate reasons.  



#220 of 404 by brighn on Tue Nov 3 03:45:46 1998:

#217> What is your evidence that sexuality is biological, unless you're making
the argument that the vast majority of people are biseuxal? The twins studies
are highly inconclusive, and that's the best evidence... the other (such as
an observation that some gay men have significantly lower levels of
testosterone) is even more "tendency" related. 

I've never seen *anything* that would come close to convincing me that
biology determines sexuality.

As for BDSM, that's cultural. One might convince me that some aspect of it
is biological, in the same way that addictions might be biological, while
specific addictions (to alcohol, for instance) are cultural.


#221 of 404 by rcurl on Tue Nov 3 07:39:38 1998:

Of course biology *dominates* sexuality. All organisms have reproductive -
sexual - organs and 99.9% of them try to use them. Humans are no different
than all other organisms in this regard. However there is also a great
variety of behavior out on the statistical tails, which departs in one
way or another from the "norm". That is where homosexuality - in any
animals - is located: uncommon behavior (which does not decry it in any
fashion).


#222 of 404 by brighn on Tue Nov 3 19:13:18 1998:

But that's not the same thing as saying that sexual orientation is
biologically determined. Rather, that's saying that organisms will tend to
engage in heterosexual sex (for reproduction) unless significant cultural,
environmental, or biological forces induce them not to. It doesn't even make
a clear distinction between which is predicted, heterosexuality or
bisexuality, since both heterosexuals and bisexuals are capable of enjoying
heterosexual sex, and are hence capable of enjoying reproductive sex.

In other words, it says that *not* wanting to have *heterosexual* sex is,
broadly speaking, anti-evolutionary. But, by extension, that would indicate
that any *strong* genetic determiner for homosexuality should evolve out of
the species, which would (in turn) suggest that homosexuality (as opposed to
bisexuality or heterosexuality) is cultural and environmental, with a *weak*
genetic/biological influence.

But the opposite isn't true. There is no evolutionary motivation for choosing
between organisms that want to have homosexual sex and those that don't, hence
there's no evolutionary motivation for choosing between bisexuality and
heterosexuality.


#223 of 404 by janc on Tue Nov 3 22:23:03 1998:

Kenton's comment about not knowing any homosexuals reminds me of my own
history.  I was raised in a somewhat old-fashioned and protected family,
at a time when homosexuality didn't get as much air play as it does
these days.  I don't think I really even encountered the notion until I
was in my early teens.  My immediate response was to find the notion
thoroughly disgusting.  Not a reasoned response, just a gut reaction.

With a bit more thought, I decided that what people want to do in their
bedrooms is not my problem, but that I certainly didn't want to hear
about it.  I didn't think gays needed to be punished or cured or
anything, but I did think they should be *quiet* about it.  They can be
gay as they want to be, but please don't bother me with it, and by all
means, stay off the evening news.  Sex should be private.  I thought
this was a reasonable and generous stance.

That's pretty much the way my thinking worked, until I started getting
involved with M-Net, where suddenly I found myself, for the first time
in my life, regularly interacting with people who I knew to be gay. 
Actually getting to know real, live gay people, as opposed to just
imaginary gay demons made a huge difference in my thinking.  I found
that suddenly there was a large and diverse set of people, many of whom
I genuinely liked and respected, who were homosexuals.

It's a lot easier to disapprove of gays in the abstract than in the
flesh.  For me, this was a dilemma.  I discovered that these people who
I liked were in a catagory that I had considered disgusting.  So I had
two basic choices - decide to stand by my prejudices and write off these
people, or decide to stand by the people and write off my prejudices. 
(Well, I guess there is another options, the "I hate all gays except the
ones I know" option, but I'm not good at that kind of thinking.)

Anyway, once I decided that gays are OK, the "gays should keep it
private" thing collapsed too.  It's not like hetrosexuals keep their
sexual relationships quite.  I *like* walking down the street
hand-in-hand with my best beloved.  Why shouldn't gays want to do so
too, without fear of condemnation?  Everyone's sexuality is a big part
of their identity, and as hetrosexuals we routinely and constantly
express our sexual orientation in public in lots of large and small
ways.  It's a hundred per cent acceptable, and it should be for gays as
well.

I think that my initial reaction to homosexuality is really a reaction
to unfamiliarity.  Sex role assumptions run through everything we do,
and if, like me, you were raised with certain fixed assumptions, having
them suddenly twisted on you can make your stomach turn, especially if,
like me, you aren't very emotionally adventurous.

You don't get to choose your prejudices.  They get foisted off on you
whether you asked for them or not.  You do get to choose what you will
do when your prejudices hit reality.

To some degree, you also get to choose what prejudices you pass onto the
next generation.  I think I've matured a lot, but in spite of my
intellectual stance, I'm not completely comfortable with homosexuality
on an emotional level, and I probably never will be.  It's hard to get
past your early training.  But you can change the early training the
next generation gets, but doing your best not to let any lingering
prejudice be reflected in your words or actions.


#224 of 404 by jaded on Tue Nov 3 22:30:51 1998:

p


#225 of 404 by headdoc on Wed Nov 4 00:16:24 1998:

really nice posting, Jan.  Although my background was completely different,
you made it easy to understand where you are coming from and how it happened.
Separating the intellectual from the emotional response, also helps
understanding what you are thinking and feeling.


#226 of 404 by i on Wed Nov 4 00:50:20 1998:

My own experience is similar to Jan's.  As usual, he says it far better...


Re: #222 - I don't agree with your orientation/evolution logic, brighn.
In humans, sexuality could be very strongly determined by a complex of
independently-inherited genes or a similar pseudo-random mechanism, and 
evolution could favor that set-up.  Humans can easily make more babies
that they can feed and care for - taking some adults out of the breeding
population is usually *good* for the group's overall reproductive fitness.
In the small groups where humans evolved, a homosexual's genes will be
very well represented in the breeding population, so they will be conserved
if a homosexual minority is of benefit to the group.  In a wolf pack, only
the alpha male and alpha female reproduce - why hasn't evolution stamped
that out in favor of all adult wolves reproducing?

On a related subject, evolution may be incapable of stamping out genetic
homo- or bi-sexuality if underlying genetic mechanism is very complex, 
gives some slight benefit to individuals without the critical mass/combi-
nation of genes to be homoi- or bi-sexual, or is replenished by common
mutations of "heterosexual" genes.  All sorts of blatently-bad-for-both-
individual-and-group genetic disorders exist in humans, and evolution
has (unfortunately) been unable to stamp those out.   


#227 of 404 by senna on Wed Nov 4 01:20:41 1998:

Good post, Jan.  Realizing the prejudices that we *do* have, and we all have
them, is an important part of dispelling or at least dealing with them.


#228 of 404 by kenton on Wed Nov 4 02:42:48 1998:

I would hesitate to quote Freud on a whole lot.  While he unveiled new ideas,
many of his theories have found disfavor lately.

I am surprised to hear that modern, primitive cultures practice homosexuality.
It must be why they are nearly extinct.  I would like to know the names of
those tribes, if you have it handy.

I suspect that the reason only the dominant wolves of a pack breed, is because
the others are last years pups.  Packs seldom get large.

Pigeons, geese and some other birds mate for life and both share rearing
duties.  Foxes both share the care of the young.

I asked for reasons why homosexuality benefited ... etc.  I got one good
reason. Population control.  The idea of a homosexual being creative has
nothing to do with homosexuality.  There were also a few questionable "facts".

Re:  M. I.  I only use tact when it is to my advantage.  I expect to change
no ones mind in this conference.  Apparently, I have stepped on your toes.
If you are a homosexual, say so.  Don't be ashamed.  I'll still like you, but I
will not like what you do.  I trust I haven't left anyone guessing about the
way I feel about things.  But some others haven't been so forth right.

Perhaps, I should have earlier said that I am unaware of knowing any
homosexuals."  However, I do know a guy who had his testicles removed and
began taking hormones.  Hey, what ever turns him on.


#229 of 404 by danr on Wed Nov 4 03:11:59 1998:

You're unaware of them, I'd bet, because you've obviously closed yourself off
from them, Kenton. Only the most militant would bother to debate this with you.


#230 of 404 by eieio on Wed Nov 4 04:14:24 1998:

To agree with JanC towards the end, yes, I think everyone should have the same
rights to show affection.
 
Being a straight guy, I can put a picture of my sweetheart on my desk at work,
talk to my boss about the movie "we" went to, hold hands at a company picnic,
and kiss each other goodbye at the airport.
 
Could I do any of those things if I was in love with a guy? My gut tells me
that I probably could, and nearly everybody I'd encounter would be basically
okay with it. But our society is such that the potential negative reaction,
even if there's a slim chance of it happening, is so severe that most people
in the situation would tend to keep their feelings hidden, or at least held
back somewhat around strangers. And that's a shame.
 
But.
 
That said.
 
I'm COMPLETELY EFFING SICK of Anne Heche and Ellen Degeneres. Every time I've
seen them making a public appearance, they're SO in your face about clinging
to each other. When I see straight couples being that deliberate and
ostentatious about displaying themselves, usually it has been a sign of
trouble in the relationship. In other words, the couple is insecure about
their situation with each other, and so maybe if they convince someone else
that everything's fine with them, then perhaps they can convince themselves.
So they don't miss the opportunity to trumpet themselves to a single passerby.


#231 of 404 by mdw on Wed Nov 4 06:25:43 1998:

"Modern primitive" societies by definition haven't developed
agriculture, and don't have much resistance to rock and roll music.
It's as simple as that, and has little to do with their views on
sexuality or anything else.

In a wolf pack, chances are most of the members of the pack are more or
less closely related to each other.  A "gay uncle" or "maiden aunt" can
still help propagate her genes by helping to raise his or her nephews
and nieces.  I don't know about wolf packs in particular, but in many
species (I believe walruses and monkeys fall into this class), the alpha
male doesn't last very long.  He is, after all, leading a high stress
life with a lot of challenges, and tends to burn out pretty fast.  His
successor will almost certainly be a "younger male", and in some
species, that means he'll also have had plenty of homosexual experiences
as he advanced through the social ladder to gain the experience to
successfully overthrow the old alpha male.

With domesticated animals, particularly animals in zoos, we often create
social situations that are not much like what the animals would
experience in the wild.  It is not uncommon, in these situations, to
have "breeding" problems.  Either the mother doesn't know how to raise
young (never having seen it done), or in some cases, the male literally
does not know how to have sex.  I wonder how many of these mating
problems arise through the successful efforts of zoo keepers to keep
their animals from protraying "undesirable" sexual behavior, such as
homosexuality, or masturbation?


#232 of 404 by rcurl on Wed Nov 4 06:38:14 1998:

I think the evolutionary aspects of homosexuality are quite simple - it
doesn't matter much, so there is little selection. What evolutionary
pressure would there be? The species propagates just fine. Having some
members that don't doesn't matter. There are many species that have
neuter members - the colonial inspect workers, for example. With all
of the complexity of sexual differentiation, I am not at all surprised
by a variety of outcomes. 


#233 of 404 by katie on Wed Nov 4 06:56:52 1998:

kenton, how can you posiibly know what any individual gay person does?
You said you'd still like someone if you found out he/she was gay, but
wouldn't like what he/she does. NOt all gay people do things you would
find disagreeable, and many straight couples do things that you would.


#234 of 404 by lumen on Wed Nov 4 07:13:33 1998:

the struggle continues..


#235 of 404 by rcurl on Wed Nov 4 07:17:36 1998:

Better not tell kenton what men and women do with each other......he'd
become a heterophobe as well as a homophobe.


#236 of 404 by senna on Wed Nov 4 13:54:41 1998:

Now now, let's just let Kenton deconstruct himself here.  



#237 of 404 by brighn on Wed Nov 4 23:12:23 1998:

On evolution and sexuality:
There are two possible hypotheses. One is that biology strongly determines
sexuality. The other is that it doesn't. My discussion of evolution was meant
to illustrate the problem with the first hypothesis. Rane and the other person
support my view that the first hypothesis is flawed while causing me to infer
that they think I support it.

Rane was the one who said that sexuality was biologically determined, not me.

In re the question of why alpha maleness doesn't cause non-alpha-male traits
to evolve out, there's a simple answer:
Look at the Middle East. Look at Ireland. Look at Yugoslavia. Look at China.
Look at Australia. Look at Capitol Hill. 

Then tell me that aggression *isn't* selected. We are the most intelligent
species; it could be said that we are the most evolved. We are also, by far,
the most aggressive.


#238 of 404 by lumen on Thu Nov 5 01:34:34 1998:

re #237: as a species, aren't we one of the largest in number, if not the
largest?  I would suppose, therefore, that aggression is therefore selected
biologically to keep numbers down.

or maybe I'm not understanding this.


#239 of 404 by kenton on Thu Nov 5 04:41:22 1998:

Re #233 Katie, what I know about homosexuals is based on what I have read.
And I read a lot, about many things, and from a variety of sources.  The main
thing I don't like (associated with homosexuals) are the sex acts.  I
find the thoughts of them disgusting.  The idea of sucking a penis which has
just been removed from an anus, makes me want to vomit.  Yet some here, would
castigate me for my strong minded aversion to these practices.  I figure that
some of these practices are not conducive to good health. I am aware that not
all homosexuals get so extreme in their "loving".

I have asked some valid questions about what causes a person to have homosexual
tendencies.  Congratulations to those who are truly considering those
questions.  I would tend to be more understanding of homosexuality if I was
sure that it was not some perverted action.  In other words, if the aberrant
behavior was influenced by social setting or heredity was the cause.

I have found that  some of the people who claim to be the most open minded are
really just the opposite.  And I am curious about some of you.

In my line of work I meet about 2 to 3  people a week, with whom I manage to
establish a working relationship.  I have yet to meet an open and
practicing homosexual.  Perhaps there are more of them in Michigan.

Rane, If I want to know about women, I'll contact you the expert.  Don't worry
about overloading my systems,  M. I. will reconstruct me.


#240 of 404 by brighn on Thu Nov 5 05:37:29 1998:

Not all homosexuals suck penises immediately after they're removed from an
naus. Few, I imagine, do.
You may wish to sit down for the next revelation, Kenton:
Some heterosexual women suck penises after they've been removed from an anus.
Few, I imagine, do.

This revelation will, quite possibly, hit you even harder, so try to take it
slowly:
There is *nothing* that a homosexual man does in homosexual sex that at lest
some heterosexual women don't do. Anal, fellatio, rimming, fisting, you name
itt, and some women will do it... some will even enjoy it.

In fact, short of mutual acts (such as fellating while being fellated), there
is nothing that homosexual men do that heterosexual couples don't do.

Oho! But gays do them *more*, and are more *extreme* and more *blatant*...

Pishposh, you're being naive. I could direct you to some very extreme
depictions on the web involving heterosexual acts. For the sake of our beloved
audience, I won't get graphic with the details. Suffice to say, homosexuals
hardly have the market cornered on unhealthy, unhygeinic sex (and nor are most
homosexuals unhealthy or unhygeinic, at least when educated).


#241 of 404 by senna on Thu Nov 5 08:27:13 1998:

*What?!?*  I thought all heterosexuals did missionary 100% of the time!  This
is disgusting pornography!

Note the sarcasm dripping all over that statement.


#242 of 404 by scott on Thu Nov 5 11:56:55 1998:

(Brighn just said what I was going to say, only much better)


#243 of 404 by i on Thu Nov 5 13:58:24 1998:

If finding another person's private actions disgusting is a reasonable 
criteria for declaring anything illegal, immoral, etc. (vs. not-to-be-
done-in-public), then how many new laws do we need against how many things
that someone, somewhere might do?  And if you black-list groups based on
what a few members might do, you've pretty much outlawed human life. 


#244 of 404 by johnnie on Thu Nov 5 14:53:07 1998:

Kenton sez: "In my line of work I meet about 2 to 3  people a week, with 
whom I manage to establish a working relationship.  I have yet to meet 
an open and practicing homosexual."  

I'm wondering what kenton is expecting.  That instead of shaking his 
hand they're gonna grab his ass?  That they'll be dressed in pink suits 
and carry a purse instead of a briefcase?  

Lord knows I rarely introduce myself by saying, "Hi, my name is 
John--and I'm heterosexual."  And the subject rarely comes up during 
subsequent business conversations, especially if I realize or suspect 
that the person with whom I'm conducting business has deep disgust for 
my desires for and relationships with the opposite sex.



#245 of 404 by rcurl on Thu Nov 5 15:56:47 1998:

I think that kenton's remark that he has "yet to meet an open and
practicing homosexual" says it all. He has met dozens I bet, but there is no
way to tell, besides the fact that it is none of his business. 


#246 of 404 by cyklone on Thu Nov 5 21:12:02 1998:

Not having met Kenton in person, I cannot say this for certain, but he may
also project an attitude that causes normally "open" gays to become
somewhat less so. I suspect that gays, much like other minorities, develop
a pretty good second sense of who is "cool" and who isn't . . . . 



#247 of 404 by brighn on Thu Nov 5 22:29:33 1998:

I know, as a bisexual Pagan polyamorous Dom, having a sense of who can and
will try to use my alternative lifestyles against me is a simple matter of
survival. The wrong word to the wrong person, and I could wind up ostracized,
harassed, or worse.

So yes, I'd say so, Cyklone.


#248 of 404 by lumen on Fri Nov 6 00:59:42 1998:

I imagine that Kenton is still holding fast to a preconceived notion of how
homosexuals act, dress, have sex, etc., etc.  The misconception must be so
strong that maybe he has indeed witnessed some exceptions, but may have turned
a blind eye to it.

If Paul doesn't mind, I think bisexuals can be included in this case as far
as man-to-man sex is concerned.  For the sake of reason, there are some things
that people won't do.

Not all homosexuals have anal intercourse, or at least from articles I've
read.  Bisexuals can be choosy, too.  One of my friends told me man-to-man
anal sex and kissing didn't interest him, but fellatio and cuddling did.
Of course, I'm sure *all* men and women insist on having a penis washed before
it is stuck anywhere else-- well, most of them.  Some aren't so clean.  Some
only have anal intercourse in certain situations.  Some men like women to
penetrate them anally with a strap-on (forgive me if I offend some readers,)
and I don't think they are necessarily bisexual.

I've heard it explained that many hets are uncomfortable with the idea of
homosexual sex because they have to imagine themselves doing it to a degree,
consciously or unconsciously, and that is definitely uncomfortable to them.
But many of them forget that bis and homosexuals do many of the same things
heterosexual couples do-- cuddle, kiss, say kind and loving words, caress,
fondle, hug, massage, smile, laugh, cry, moan (when making love), argue,
delegate, share, help, desire children, etc., etc.

This brings me back to my point that not all homosexuals and bis fit the
stereotypes.  There are exceptions to the broad generalizations, although
there are often still factors that make so-called gaydar and bidar work-- yes,
I do believe that there are some observable differences between hets, bis and
gays, even when they're not having sex (although I think bis can be tricky).
But that doesn't necessarily describe it all-- all it means is that our
society still espouses the concept of gender-- that social roles must be
assigned according to sex.  Bis and homosexuals cross the barriers of those
roles, be they in a very few or many ways.

But part of that is for identification purposes.  We may dress, act, talk,
walk in various and intricate ways, but that is so we can recognize each
other.  I'm sure that the complexity grew out of some security from those who
would harm us-- things were coded to avoid scrutiny-- but some don't make an
effort to especially express themselves.  You wouldn't really guess they were
bi or gay unless you really got to know them, or if they told you.

Myself-- I'm sure I look fairly straight.  My clothes don't say much, although
if you really knew me, you might notice I'm happy when I'm fairly well-dressed
and color-coordinated.  I'm extremely artistic, but so are some very straight
people.

I don't follow any particular trends in anything, so it's hard to be pegged
with a certain sexuality.  Sure, I like listening to British New Romantic
bands, and I have the long bangs some of the old school cake boys used to
sport, but I'll bet some straights followed some of those trends, too. 
Yeah, I like to street/disco/club dance, and I'm a maniac on the floor,
but..so..?  Sometimes I have a beard, and sometimes I don't-- and the beard
has been full, a goatee, a Don Juan, George Michael-style-- and I'll bet that
throws a lot of people.  Some of the music I listen to is not just by gay
artists-- some are bi-- but does that necessarily say anything?

Hey, I used to be uncomfortable around the g/l/b community.  The gays were
sometimes flighty, the lesbians all seemed very leery of me, and I had no idea
who the bisexuals were.  But I still managed to make a few friends-- and boy,
was I surprised when I found out their sexuality as well as mine!  I used to
think that gays were either femmy or macho in a funky sort of way, that
lesbians were men-haters, and bisexuals were folks I hadn't figured out yet.
(Well gee, that's funny-- I am bisexual.)  My preconceived ideas started
crumbling when I met some warm, caring folks in the community who seemed
rather comfy with themselves, even when I met other g/l/b's who were obviously
a little neurotic.

The first woman to wipe away my tears was a lesbian.  Not even my mother had
done that for me until much later, I think.  Alder tried to act tough, but
she just melted when she saw me crying huddled up in a dark room.  After that,
she always checked up on me to make sure I was ok.  I appreciated that,
because I am manic-depressive and my mood swings hadn't been stabilized yet.

My sister has had a lot of ups and downs-- probably a 5 on a six-point Kinsey
scale who called herself lesbian for a while.  We used to fight a lot, but
she still trusted me enough to share some of her problems-- including the day
she met a man she could not only stand, but liked.

Strangely enough, most of the folks I came out to were in a similar
situation-- even if a few didn't admit it at the time.  The more people I met,
the more I realized the g/l/b community was just like the population at
large-- but the orientations of attraction were different.

I'm not really practicing, although I've had a few experiences.  Julie and
I joke about 'window shopping,' and we still make comments on sexy bodies or
either sex-- which gives others in same-sex relations pause sometimes. 
Really, it's kind of weird-- some folks think that because we're Mormon and
getting married, we're kinda supposed to disappear, or at least put on
blinders and then attach them to each other.  We were watching 'Celluloid in
the Closet' with our G.A.L.A. group, and the video showed a number of clips
of homosexuals in the movies.  One had a scene of a man taking his shirt off,
and I said, "Check out that six-pack!" to which Julie and I then chorused a
lustful "Ummm-hmmm."  Immediately, one of the girls said, "Hey-- you guys are
supposed to be getting married!"  Hmmm.  Well, we won't think sexual
thoughts-- we're pretty religious-- but it doesn't stop us from noticing. 
Julie tells folks, "You can look, but don't touch the goods."

So do I fit Kenton's notions or no?


#249 of 404 by md on Fri Nov 6 03:08:06 1998:

Well, they *do* all like Judy Garland.  You can't deny that.


#250 of 404 by senna on Fri Nov 6 05:42:00 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 :)


#251 of 404 by anderyn on Sat Nov 7 01:20:42 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. 


#252 of 404 by e4808mc on Sat Nov 7 01:42:30 1998:

So why can't you still write about it? Did she force you out of the group?


#253 of 404 by kenton on Sat Nov 7 02:15:35 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.


#254 of 404 by anderyn on Sat Nov 7 02:54:59 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.


#255 of 404 by rcurl on Sat Nov 7 07:57:24 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. 


#256 of 404 by cyklone on Sat Nov 7 15:42:52 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 . . . .



#257 of 404 by rcurl on Sat Nov 7 15:47:28 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).


#258 of 404 by cyklone on Sat Nov 7 19:46:09 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 ;)


#259 of 404 by void on Sun Nov 8 01:49:22 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?


#260 of 404 by kenton on Mon Nov 9 04:03:54 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.


#261 of 404 by rcurl on Mon Nov 9 06:45:16 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). 



#262 of 404 by brighn on Mon Nov 9 06:51:03 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?


#263 of 404 by lumen on Mon Nov 9 08:03:50 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.


#264 of 404 by maeve on Mon Nov 9 16:43:33 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..


#265 of 404 by brown on Mon Nov 9 18:18:10 1998:

I'll just agree with Katy's first line and quit there.
not too sure this  is worth it
<bob ponders>.



#266 of 404 by brighn on Mon Nov 9 22:14:51 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'. =}


#267 of 404 by mdw on Tue Nov 10 00:16:05 1998:

Kenton would have been considered a sexual pervert by the average
ancient greek.


#268 of 404 by lumen on Tue Nov 10 01:20:45 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 :) )


#269 of 404 by brown on Tue Nov 10 03:22:27 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


#270 of 404 by joe on Tue Nov 10 03:43:51 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.


#271 of 404 by mdw on Tue Nov 10 04:32:18 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.


#272 of 404 by senna on Tue Nov 10 05:18:28 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.


#273 of 404 by janc on Tue Nov 10 05:26:17 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.


#274 of 404 by maeve on Tue Nov 10 11:54:24 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


#275 of 404 by cyklone on Tue Nov 10 13:58:50 1998:

Interesting that when Kenton was challenged to define "perverted" he could
not. He was challenged to explain how "poor mental" health led to
"perversion"  and he could not (he merely stated that it must result from
"low self-esteem", which totally ignored the fact that many well-adjusted
Grexers enjoy the acts he condemned). So, rather than address these
issues, he falls back on the "more with me than thee"  argument that is
(a) highly suspect in terms of whether it proves the point he claims it
proves, and (b) totally irrelevant in terms of explaining his previous
statements. In other words, the best he could come up with is "UM students
didn't support a special day for gays, therefore, all acts of
non-missionary sex are perverted and the result of poor mental health."

A few items back there were some statements about the Wizard of Oz.
Kenton, you're not in Kansas anymore, or Pleasantville, or anywhere else
where everything exists in black and white. You need to get a heart and a
brain.  At the very least, get a clue . . . . 



#276 of 404 by headdoc on Tue Nov 10 18:08:38 1998:

There is a remote (?) possibility kenton is putting us all on. . . .


#277 of 404 by janc on Tue Nov 10 20:10:08 1998:

There is always that possiblity, but I'm happy to take people at face 
value.  I'd much rather be occasionally fooled than to be distrusting 
everyone.


#278 of 404 by lumen on Tue Nov 10 23:43:20 1998:

re #276: now *that* would be interesting


#279 of 404 by mta on Wed Nov 11 00:19:28 1998:

Well, if so kenton has done Grex a great service.  There have been some
fascinating posts in this item!  (Re resp:276)


#280 of 404 by bookworm on Wed Nov 11 00:26:51 1998:

No, judging from the information and the rate that it continues to appear,
I'd say he's serious.

I think you said something at the beginning of this about being open minded,
didn't you? (or am I just imagining things) If that is so, why do you continue
to use words like "fag" and "pervert" etc when you know (at least I assume
you know) that they are offensive.  I hope you're not trying to convince us
to stop being gay/bi/lesbian or whatever.  A lot of the people who post on
this conf. have been the way they are most if not all their lives.

Homo- and bisexuals are people.  I agree that they shouldn't "rub it in
people's faces.  I'm not altogether fond of Hets who do that (and they do,
did you notice that?)  I think that one's sexual orientation should be kept
private, except in circustances such as these.  I don't mind discussing it
if people ask me about it.  I'm not ashamed to say I'm bisexual, even if I
haven't had any physical experience with a MOTSS.  If people asked me about
it, I would tell them flat out how I felt (in as far as I was able to do so)
Just as parentss are supposed to explain to interested children, how babies
come about.  I would try to be circumspect.

I think that, if hets want to have a het pride day, I would probably support
that, just as I'd support gay pride if they had a gay pride day here.  I think
that open-mindedness refers more to the acceptance of people regardless of
who they are or might be and regardless, further, of what they do or don't
do in the privacy of their homes or out in public for that matter.

I do have to agree that those who sleep around are worse, but more because
I think that people who do that, needlessly put themselves and others at risk
for dangerous, even fatal diseases.  

Jon has promised me he will get tested before we get married.  Just to be
safe, I may get tested myself.  I have a lot of respect for Jon because he
loved me enough to be up front with me about the experience he mentioned to
you and because he still loves me enough to get tested.

Maybe we should abandon this conversation and talk about something worthwhile
for a change.


#281 of 404 by lumen on Wed Nov 11 00:30:12 1998:

Hrm..still, it has always fascinated me that the naysayers have more of the
traits they so condemn than they'd like to admit, in some cases.


#282 of 404 by i on Wed Nov 11 02:17:41 1998:

Real or pseudo, kenton's a pretty interesting character.  He seems willing
to expose his views to an audience that does not agree with them, interested
in learning from their reaction, and good-humored in the face of a rather
hostile reception.  I suspect that many of "us" wouldn't fare as well in
his shoes.


#283 of 404 by rcurl on Wed Nov 11 03:12:26 1998:

He does try to put many of us in his shoes, by responding stubbornly and
in nearly total disregard for the opinion of others. 


#284 of 404 by i on Wed Nov 11 03:57:08 1998:

To be "in his shoes" as i meant it would mean that you were alone in an
item where everyone else more-or-less held kenton's views, and felt free
to let your know how wrong you were....


#285 of 404 by jazz on Wed Nov 11 17:03:20 1998:

        There's a bit of confusion here regarding the idea of sexuality - in
terms of that an individual is a sexual being and has a sexual drive - and
what Edward Hall calls (somewhat confusingly) bixsexuality - the division of
the two biological sexes into different roles and assigning sexual meaning
to those roles.  The two don't overlap completely.

        That's one reason that homosexuality (and especially bisexuality) isn't
something that'd be eliminated by natural selection - sexuality has a far
broader use among humans and recent homonids than just reproduction!


#286 of 404 by senna on Wed Nov 11 17:59:07 1998:

Heh.  This item is amusing.  Amazingly, it hasn't turned into mnet yet :)


#287 of 404 by albaugh on Wed Nov 11 18:20:06 1998:

Re: #283 - Rane, c'mon, you of all people can't be serious!  :-)

Re: #280 - I find use of the word "gay" to mean "homosexual" to be offensive.
Let's everybody get offended!


#288 of 404 by brighn on Wed Nov 11 19:45:05 1998:

"perverted" means "abnormal"
Is homosexuality "abnormal"?
"abnormal" means "not normal."
Is heterosexuality normal?
"normal" means one of two things:
(a) the modal/medial behavior of an object within a particular group
(b) occurring naturally (plausibly) within an otherwise healthy member of a
species

(a) is easy to figure out. The mode of a group is the most frequently
occurring characteristic of that group; the median of a group is the
statistical average of a numerical characteristic. Short of Kinsey's numeric
scale of sexual experience, which has since changed into a scale of sexual
interest, it's difficult to determine a "median" of sexuality. All the same,
I'd wager that the median of sexual experience is around 1.5, mostly
heterosexual; the mode of sexual experience is certainly heterosexual, though
it's uncertain whether the mode of orientation is heterosexuality or
bisexuality... it certainly isn't homosexuality.

So from a statistical standpoint, homosexuality is abnormal.

(b) is the one people really spend all the time arguing about. One the one
side, same-sex behavior occurs in non-humans, and even non-primates, but it's
unclear whether this can be classed as "homosexual" in the same way that it's
unclear that human sexual terms at all can be applied to non-humans, since
they contain clusters of emotions as well as behavior. In my last post, I
point out that the APA doesn't consider homosexuality in and of itself a
mental illness, and there are plenty of humans who are practicing homosexuals
but who are not intherapy for any other reasons, so it appears that, on a
subjective level, homosexuality does, in fact, occur in otherwise healthy
members of the community.

Unfortunately, this is a subjective assessment. While not all homosexuals are
in therapy, incidence of mental and social dysfunction is clearly higher among
the hemosexual population than among the bi/heterosexual population (let me
make it clear that the bisexual population is a transient one, in that it
patterns like the heterosexual one in certain regards and like the homosexual
one on others). The standard -- and I think viable -- argument for this is
that what causes the mental and social dysfunction is not the homosexuality
per se, but societal lack of acceptance of it. 

So the preponderence of evidence in this matter says that homosexuality is
normal.

However, we still haven't looked in depth at the *opposite* issue... is
*homophobia* normal? 

Inasmuch as homophobia is a form of xenophobia -- fear of strangers, or people
who are different -- yes. A certain level of xenophobia is necessary from an
evolutionary standpoint. Inasmuch as my genes are attempting to find others
which will help them strengthen and propogate within the population, I should
be seeking out people of a similar genetic background, and avoiding people
who don't suit my genetic reproductive needs. Homophobia comes from the same
source that racism, sexism, etc., come from: an externaliztion of what is,
for almost all of us, an internal process: a drive to maximize our own genetic
effect on future generations.

Note that sexism is on the list. While our reproductive systems know that we
must mate with a member of the opposite sex in order to reproduce, our genetic
coding demands that we avoid the opposite sex as much as possible, if we wish
to propogate our own (obviously superior) genes.

These drives, as much as they occur within the brain, go on within the
"lizard" or "amphibian" brain... the oldest portion of our brain. We consider
it vulgar when people *who hold beliefs we don't* act on their inbred
xenophobia, and yet are generally unaware when we act on them ourselves.

Indeed, homosexuality is, in part, rooted in the same drive: Avoiding the
opposite gender. This xenophobic model not only predicts homophobia, it ALSO
predicts homosexuality *as a natural phenomenon*! It contains two main
directives:

(1) Seek those who are similar to you
(2) Avoid those who are dissimilar to you

Taking to its extreme, this xenophobia-driven genetics does NOT strengthen
the species, it ultimately destroys it. If everyone were homosexual, and
refused to even ACT bisexual, the species wouldn't survive long enough to
develop methods of artificial insemination (as a species, now, we are free
to become 100% homosexual, but old habits die hard). Even in a heterosexual
world, this xenophobia has led to inbreeding, which leads to increased birth
defects and decreased immunity. In order to prevent total genetic xenophobia,
genetic development has also evolved to FORCE members of a species to mate
with outsiders or risk annihilation.

Hence, on a genetic level, we must follow a balance between:
(a) Opposites attract
(b) birds of a feather flock together

We must include JUST ENOUGH foreign genetic material into our pool to maintain
health, but in the main, we must reinforce our own genetic make-up.

There it is, from my own spin on genetics. 


#289 of 404 by rcurl on Wed Nov 11 22:19:47 1998:

The median is the Q-50 - the 50th percentile. It is not the statistical mean.


#290 of 404 by brighn on Thu Nov 12 00:21:18 1998:

I don't believe I said or suggested that mean and median are the same. 
I suppose one might infer that from my using a non-integer for the Kinsey
scale, since it's generally presented as an integer scale, but I also use
half-points (that is, for me, the Kinsey scale runs 0, .5, 1, 1.5, 2, up to
6, as opposed to the more traditional 0, 1, 2, ... up to 6). (Statistical
medians always have to be one of the points on the scale; it can't be between
points on the scale. Means, being mathematical averages, can be between points
on the scale.)


#291 of 404 by rcurl on Thu Nov 12 05:07:58 1998:

(Sorry for being picky, but I'm teaching a stats course this term, so
could not resist 8^}. You wrote "the median of a group is the
 statistical average of....." in #288.)


#292 of 404 by brighn on Thu Nov 12 05:24:09 1998:

Ah. Point taken. "Average" non-rigorously is ambiguous between mode, median,
and mean, but true, in statistics, it's typically synonymous with "mean."

Now that we've bored everyone else. =}


#293 of 404 by rcurl on Thu Nov 12 05:26:59 1998:

(average cannot mean mode or median as neither requires taking an average
(of two or more things)....keep it under your hat.....)


#294 of 404 by scott on Thu Nov 12 12:00:47 1998:

Hey, dammit, quit drifting!  This item is about perverts, and how they 
sometimes beat up gay people!


#295 of 404 by mta on Thu Nov 12 14:39:24 1998:

Statisticians aren't perverts?  <mild shock>

;)


#296 of 404 by senna on Thu Nov 12 17:05:14 1998:

I read an amusing and highly biased article against Christianity in the paper
yesterday. Nice to know that Christians can be victims of rabid prejudice too.


#297 of 404 by brighn on Thu Nov 12 18:02:03 1998:

"average" in the sense of "typical"... "the average person has two arms"
refers to a mode or a median, but certainly not to a mean (since there are
some one-armed people out there, and no three-armed people that I'm aware of).
The mode of "number of arms" is 2, the median is 2, but the mean is
1.99999995, or something like that.
Likewise, we could either say, "the average American family has 2.3 children"
or "the average American family has 2 or 3 kids" (mode) or "the average
American family has 2 kids" (median)

I'll give you the math argument, but in everyday speech, "average" is
ambiguous, dammit. ;}

Statisticians are perverts only inasmuch as they enjoy teaching it to others,
making them sadists (and hence, according to the APA, mentally ill). ;}


#298 of 404 by rcurl on Thu Nov 12 22:26:35 1998:

In other words, perverts?


#299 of 404 by gregb on Fri Nov 13 16:59:15 1998:

Re. 223:  Good post, Jan.  I don't remember where/when I first heard about
gays, but I do remember thing, "Yuck, how can anybody do that?"  But even
though I was from a conservative family, for some reason I never picked up
my parents views on a lot of things.  My opinion was--and still is--that 
what people do is their own biz, as long as it's legal and doesn't hurt
anybody.  Since then, I've met a few gays and don't think anything of it.
I will admit, however, I was a bit taken aback when I saw lesbians kissing
at a party I went to, but just accepted it as a new experience.


#300 of 404 by rcurl on Fri Nov 13 17:22:47 1998:

Its just putting allowably exposed body parts together, like shaking hands.
Why should anyone notice? 


#301 of 404 by brighn on Fri Nov 13 17:58:11 1998:

Because it's dirty, sick, and perverted.
Not like when straight people do it.
That's fine.


#302 of 404 by brown on Sat Nov 14 09:01:07 1998:

actually (um re:299)
can't say i still don't take notice to ( for ex:) lesbians kissing..
well, i notice ANY PDA's to some extent
but it isn't the "norm" for the general public
(for lack of better words)
and even most of my female friends (most being gay/bi) 
are rather discrete.
hmm, Can't say what i feel or think really, just that i take
notice..
I'm living downtown "boystown"
Chicago's version ofgreenwich villiage basically
rainbow flags fly for more than a mile from my place on Northalstead
it is impossible to find a bar or store that doesn't  um 'cater' to
gays yet every weekend on my way home from work i "notice" the boys
on their way home from the bars
<no snickering>
o.k. so at this point i think i lost track of ANY point i may have
been trying to make but ah-well ;)


#303 of 404 by joe on Sat Nov 14 16:39:47 1998:

Measures of Central Tendancies are not very useful when trying to determine
the average sexual orientation of a population since it is completely unknown
just how many people in this world are homo, or bi. It's also nearly
impossibly to obtain an unbiased, totally random selection of the population.
Sexual orientation is a personal issue for most people and a lot of people
really don't like to share that info with others. I remember working for
Greenpeace some years ago. Management decided to do a diversity survey, but
the only minority that was excluded was a catogory for gays and lesbians. I
was a little pissed so I called the woman that did the research and she
explained to me that she originally created a catagory for gays & lesbians,
but as she was calling each of the offices around the country, no one would
give her information on how many gays & lesbians worked for the country
because they didn't know, nor would anyone step forward to be counted. I
instructed her to redo the survey and include a catagory even if I was the
only person on the list. She eventually did, but I thought it was a bit
ridiculous that out of an organization with over 10,000 employees throughout
30 different offices throughout the country, including San Francisco, that
there was only one openly gay person-- and Greenpeace, the world's largest
environmental organization, was one of the most liberal and progressive
organizations on the planet.

The point to all of this is that the power of statistical validity if greatly
reduced with a population selection that does not represent the true
population. Now, having said that, back to the regular discussion...


#304 of 404 by bru on Sat Nov 14 20:58:02 1998:

or maybe there aren't as many gay people as you wish there were...


#305 of 404 by joe on Sun Nov 15 18:40:41 1998:

well, I've never bought the "one out of ten" theory, but I'd like to believe
that there's more of us than 1 out of 10,000. This is just a prime example
of how skewed statistical research can get. Imagine how impossible it would
be to get accurate data on how many minorities lived in the US if all of them
were somehow able to disguise themselves as Anglo Americans. The data would
be useless.


#306 of 404 by bookworm on Tue Nov 17 05:59:38 1998:

For the sake of those of us with short attention spans.  Could I convince you
guys to keep it to less than a page, please?


#307 of 404 by lumen on Tue Nov 17 07:26:05 1998:

re #302: Wow, I've gotta see this place..

re #303: I think *everyone, everywhere* has their biases, hiding places,
myths, etc. etc.  Even minorities and minority-friendly groups exclude some
people.

i.e. it is interesting to note that even people of color have derogatory terms
for those of mixed ethnicity


#308 of 404 by brighn on Tue Nov 17 15:12:34 1998:

#306: Do what I do. Skip the long posts. There's no reason why everyone should
have to read everything posted here... it's not like this is a job or
anything. It's a conversation, and, as with real life, you might miss things
that some people have to say, or find them uninteresting. Life goes on.


#309 of 404 by brown on Wed Nov 18 07:53:46 1998:

sorry brighn, did you say something?


#310 of 404 by brighn on Wed Nov 18 17:48:30 1998:

I may have had a technical problem... post #309 was blank.
Did anyone else have that problem? ;}


#311 of 404 by keesan on Wed Nov 18 23:40:52 1998:

Just got around to reading this very long discussion.  I respect Kenton for
supporting his beliefs, particularly as they differ from those of most of the
other participants in this conference (in other words, they are, at least for
grex, 'abnormal').  Kenton, if you are still around, could you explain to us
how you happened to have opinions on homosexuals when you say you never knew
any?  Where did you get your facts?  I suspect they may be close to majority
opinion for people where you live (very rural Pennsylvania), in which case
this is a valuable chance for people in grex to actually have a civil (most
of the time) discussion with someone trying to explain the reasons for such
opinions.  I also strongly suspect that if Kenton actually knew as many
homosexuals as the average person in Ann Arbor (and knew that he knew them),
his opinions would change.
        To draw a parallel, Kenton was a highly active participant in the
dowsing discussion (a few agoras ago, linked to paranormal).  He grew up in
a society where it was normal to dowse, and began dowsing from an early age.
Rane, on the other hand, who does not know any dowsers personally (at least
not any close friends or relatives), does not believe dowsing even exists,
or if it does, a rod going down in someone's hands is something they do by
choice.  I thought dowsing was a big hoax until a few years ago, because of
the silly stuff I read about angels and earth spirits and dowsing for lost
keys and the like.  That was until Jim, who has never lied to me, dowsed on
his very first try, and consistently, even with his eyes shut.  He has no idea
why it works for him and not for me.  I will probably never learn to dowse,
Jim learned immediately, other people may be able to learn after a while.
Similarly, some people have always had homosexual feelings, some never will,
and some may have them only if exposed to certain environments.  
        I think it is wonderful that there is a such a broad range of
individual talents and features, that is what has allowed humankind to spread
into so many different environments.  Even if one feature, say the ability
to dowse or to develop a strong emotional and physical attachment to a member
of the same sex, is not particularly advantageous in most environments, in
the long run is has obviously been beneficial to society, since it persists.
(Schizophrenia, Tay-Sachs, sickle-cell anemia, and some other diseases also
benefit society under certain conditions, just not the individual.)
        Rane, I suggest that some day you watch Jim dowsing, and Kenton, I
suggest that you take the time to read the discussions in the glb conf, in
order to collect more facts on which to base your opinions.
        I also thought I did not know any homosexuals until I came to Ann Arbor
(where this is not something to hide), but then one day my mother mentioned
that her best friend's son, who had gotten divorced, had AIDS and was living
with another man.  And a friend from high school mentioned that his brother,
who had gotten divorced (in both cases there were children), had move to
Provincetown (a gay community on the tip of Cape Cod).  Which all goes to show
that you can't spot a gay person unless they want to be spotted.  I have known
lots of men with mannerisms and interests closer to the norm for women, and
vice versa for women, and most of them were not homosexual.
        Sorry for the long entry, but it is my only one.  And I want to say
that I am glad that Kenton has been willing to tackle most of grex in defense
of what he believes to be right, just as I am glad that Rane persisted in
challenging just about everything I said in dowsing - it gets people thinking.


#312 of 404 by rcurl on Thu Nov 19 05:04:29 1998:

Watching Jim douse wouldn't prove anything as there are not time and
resources to set up a double blind experimental test. No dowser has
ever passed one, however, so I would be properly skeptical.


#313 of 404 by senna on Thu Nov 19 07:50:55 1998:

Oh, goodness, not THIS discussion again.


#314 of 404 by rcurl on Thu Nov 19 17:55:55 1998:

I think I should have spelled it dowse. I might be interested in seeing
Jim douse.  8^}


#315 of 404 by keesan on Thu Nov 19 19:12:55 1998:

While we are at setting up experiments, how about one in which Jim dowses for
gays, blindfolded?  Or a statistical analysis of the relative percentages of
dowsers who are and are not gay?


#316 of 404 by brighn on Thu Nov 19 21:31:20 1998:

One thing about finding water when I'm dousing though, it's 100% reliable.
Whenever I've doused, I've found water. In fact, the water had been in my
hands, and has been doing the dousing. =}


#317 of 404 by senna on Fri Nov 20 01:03:44 1998:

Hahahahaha


#318 of 404 by lumen on Fri Nov 20 06:12:48 1998:

 :P


#319 of 404 by remmers on Fri Nov 20 12:55:20 1998:

Subsequent banter aside, I though Sindi's resp:311 was excellent. It
always amuses me when people assert that they "don't know any
gay people".  They probably know a number but are simply unaware
that they're gay. This speaks to some pretty prevalent erronoeous
stereotypes about what gay people are "like". In my less enlightened
days I held to some of those stereotypes myself. My enlightenment was
quite similar to that described by Jan Wolter in an earlier response.


#320 of 404 by kenton on Sun Nov 22 03:28:05 1998:

I guess that many people who claim to be open mined are fooling themselves.
I have known some to do things that were against their "normal" way of
thinking, just to prove they weren't predudiced.  Could I legislate a
prohibition of homosexuality, I wouldn't waste my time.  Change must come from
the heart.  Can I carry on a normal (normal for the majority) man to man
relationship with a homosexual man?  Yes, as long as he does not come out of
the closet.  Can some of the readers here carry on a relationship with me
inspite of my strong opinions about homosexuality?   Well???


#321 of 404 by mta on Sun Nov 22 15:08:19 1998:

As long as it doesn't come up, yes.


#322 of 404 by brighn on Sun Nov 22 17:56:04 1998:

My inability to carry on a relationship with Kenton would not be stemmed in
his homophobia.


#323 of 404 by i on Sun Nov 22 19:54:07 1998:

Somehow the `can't have a normal man-to-man relationship with an out gay'
in #320 strikes me as odd.  Is this like `can't have a normal person-to-
person relationship with a woman', or `can't have a normal friendship with
a Jew', or ???

Would it make a difference, kenton, if the homosexual man was really 
committed elsewhere, so he had no more sexual interest in you than you
have in, say, Barbara Bush?  


#324 of 404 by kenton on Mon Nov 23 01:25:12 1998:

Good question.  Perhaps, I would be ashamed to be seen with a homosexual. 
But, I doubt that.  As a general rule, I don't care what people think of me or
my actions.   I am, of course, speaking of my personal life.

Paul, your response of 322 puzzles me, because I have neither a fear of nor
hatred for homosexuals, mainly just curiousity.   Now a murderer would be a
different matter,.....maybe.


#325 of 404 by keesan on Mon Nov 23 05:48:26 1998:

Kenton, have you ever had any personal contact with someone you knew was
homosexual?  I think you said you had not, so how do you know how you would
react?  


#326 of 404 by md on Mon Nov 23 12:46:46 1998:

Apropos being seen with a gay friend:

I used to have lunch a couple of times a week with a gay friend
when I lived in NYC.  He was a "Village People" sort of gay, if
you know what I mean.  Very macho looking but *too* macho, what
they used to call a "clone."  No one looking at him would have
any doubt as to his sexual orientation in those days.  It never
bothered me to be seen with him -- he was a nice guy and an old
childhood friend of mine and we'd been buddies forever.  One day,
however, we were on our way to a restaurant, joking and laughing,
and out of the corner of my eye I noticed my ex-shrink walking past 
us.  He'd been staring openly at me and my friend.  This was a
man whom I'd regaled for almost a year with tales of heterosexual 
woe -- the breakup of my first marriage, several false starts on 
new relationships with New York women.  I'd terminated "therapy"
with him, which had consisted mainly of gripe sessions anyway, 
a few weeks earlier when I'd finally hit it off with a woman in 
my building, and I was still feeling slightly guilty about it.  
"Oh, shit," I said, "that guy was my ex-shrink."  My friend 
practically collapsed with laughter.  "I love it!  Now he's 
thinking, 'What did I do to that patient?!?'"


#327 of 404 by jazz on Mon Nov 23 17:14:40 1998:

        Using the word "normal" shoots you in the foot when you're discussing
formal cultural standards (in the Edward Hall sense for the anthropology nit-
pickers in the crowd) - largely unspoken social conventions - which American
culture is steeped in.  What your define as a "normal" friendship may not be
a "normal" friendship for someone else;  nor may your "normal" heteroseuxal
relationship be similar to their "normal" hereosexual relationship.

        That said, I'd be interested in hearing what the difference is to 
Kenton between a closeted male gay friend and an uncloseted one.  One would
think that a closeted male gay friend *wouldn't* choose him as a confidante
about his sexual preferences, but one never knows ...

        It's an interesting comment about "fooling one's self". 
Openmindedness, to my understanding, doesn't mean that you accept things on
an even level with those things you accept - you're never going to be as
comfortable with someone else's sexual preferences as your own the way you're
never going to be comfortable in someone else's house as your own - but rather
to give things which may make you uncomfortable the benefit of hearing them
out *desipte* the fact that they make you uncomfortable.

        But that's just me. :)


#328 of 404 by senna on Mon Nov 23 20:41:33 1998:

I should hope Kenton wouldn't be ashamed to be seen with a homosexual.  Or
else he'd have to be ashamed to be seen with a recovering alchoholic, or a
guy who cheated on his wife 15 years ago, or a woman who cheated on her taxes
last year, or just about every other member of the human race.


#329 of 404 by brown on Tue Nov 24 00:04:46 1998:

um?
tsk tsk steve


#330 of 404 by lumen on Tue Nov 24 03:40:14 1998:

re #328: Reminds me of what a Christian friend of mine said to me at work.
She believes homosexual activity is a sin (as many Christians do), but then
she notes that we are all sinners.  If having homosexual sex is a sin, is this
sin therefore greater than other sins, as some claim?  And if this is so, then
should they be ostracized?  She doesn't think so.  Let me explain why I think
not, as well.

The Biblical accounts of Jesus of Nazareth state that he made friends that
were considered questionable.  They include the following:

1. Publicans, or Roman taxcollectors.  These poor souls were probably not paid
a living wage by the Romans.  They often overtaxed the people so they might
be able to have enough money to live on.  One could agree this was a dishonest
practice, so Jewish leaders considered them outcasts, besides the fact they
worked for the Empire.

2. Women who worked as prostitutes.  If a woman did not have a family or was
disowned, this was one of the few ways of making money.

3. Samaritans.  They were looked down upon by pious Jews because they had
married outside the covenant, and engaged in foreign practices, although they
kept the law of Moses to a substantial degree.

4. Other sinners.

This is interesting in light of the fact that Jewish leadership had become
less spiritual, or religious, and more political.  Interpretation of the law
had become quite ritualistic, and there were several factions in the religion.

Now I don't doubt that homosexuals were included in the list, but they are
not noted.  When the law was created, some homosexual practices were tied to
foreign religions, and it is very likely the practice was excluded in the
Jewish religion because of their outside influences.  In fact, it has been
noted that many of the Ten Commandments distinguish the Judaic faith from
religions at that time that threatened to consume it.  Another example is the
prohibition of graven images (or idols) that was common in Egyptian belief.

Even if homosexuality per se is contradictory to the principles of Judaism
and Christianity, that doesn't mean it doesn't exist and isn't a problem. 
Even though the glb community may dislike the writings of Paul, some scholars
have theorized that 'the thorn in his side' may have been his way of saying
he was homosexual.  Therefore, his advice of celibacy may have been
misinterpreted by early followers.  In any event, I understand that some gay
Mormons remain celibate to remain strong in the faith.  This has been
encouraged at times, and they have been compared to women who have not had
the opportunity to marry.

There are also Mormons who have been widowed, or have separated.  Widows and
widowers may choose to marry again, but not all.  Those who were sealed
(married for eternity) remain sealed to the spouse who has passed on.  Some
separate, but do not obtain a cancellation of sealing, or what is informally
known as a temple divorce.  Of course, one cannot remarry while the sealing
is still in effect, and I have never heard of those who obtain a second
sealing.  This is why Mormons tend to look at marriage as a one-shot deal.
Therefore, there are other singles who are abstinent, but are not gay.

Of course, this does not sit perfectly well with me, because I know of many
disgruntled g/l/b (mostly g/l; so sue us for het privilege) Mormons who leave
the church or discontinue their activity because of its policy.  One of them
is my sister, as I have said before.  I would rather hope that these people
would choose to commit to only one person of the same sex if that is what they
choose, thereby following very similar principles that constitute the LDS
(Mormon) definition of the law of chastity.  Therefore, such people would
remain faithful to their partners, and abstain from sex until they were
chosen.

I understand some believe this is fruitless because society has not accepted
a concept of gay marriage, and some gay Mormons are probably quite upset that
they cannot attend LDS temples or hold the Priesthood.  But I would think that
it would be easier to continue to attend an LDS congregation and remain true
to their core beliefs, rather than denounce some of them (besides the ones
they aren't allowed to participate in) to fit in to another Christian
congregation that is tolerant of g/l/b lifestyles.  Despite the fact that
homosexual sex is not accepted in the LDS Church, it has been made quite clear
that they are loved and accepted.

Other options have diminished.  The Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-Day Saints, a splinter church that formed after the death of founder
Joseph Smith, has been accepting of homosexual couples (who likely followed
principles I described above), but has recently denounced the Book of Mormon
in order to receive money from Christian organizations.  The church has been
bankrupt for years.

I would bet that many gay Mormons who have left their church practice serial
monogamy, and have changed some of their standards almost in retaliation. 
Most, I am sure, do so very quietly.  In any case, this saddens me.

If you'll forgive my tangential wanderings, my point is that even the most
conservative and outwardly pious people have problems that effect their
happiness.  Let me suspend the word 'sin' for a bit.  Alcoholism,
homosexuality, and mental illness are just a few of the things that are not
sins-- but are conditions that may impinge on people's happiness.  Anything
out of moderation can fit this category, too.  Everyone's got problems and
perceived imperfections.  Rarely, if at all, are these imperfections portrayed
in ways that are beneficial, and much of the time, they are seen as things
that make people inferior or harmful.

In any interest group, you have radicals and conservatives.  Radicals are
always pushing for change, and conservatives try to keep things as they are.
Believe it or not, both groups are beneficial.  Conservative g/l/bs are rather
invisible because they either aren't heard or don't raise their voice.  Garry
Trudeau's portrayal of Mike's politically conservative boyfriend probably
isn't a myth, but you don't guess these folks are gay.  Most probably stay
in the closet, or carefully hide themselves.  But it's a shame their views
don't get heard much; stereotypes probably wouldn't be a prevalent if they
spoke once in a while.

I'm fairly moderate myself, and I do think that the medium is rather happy
at times.  It puts me in a good negotiating position, and it is easier to see
opposing ends of an argument, for me, sometimes.  I'm fairly mellow, too, so
I rather enjoy talking a subject out.  I wouldn't doubt there are a lot of
people in this category.

In terms of sexuality, most people are said to be moderate, too.  As we said
earlier, Kinsey's proposal that most people are bisexual is puzzling sometimes
when so many identify as heterosexual.  But then, people are still really
uptight about discussing sexuality, as has also been said, especially if it
contradicts what is said to be the norm.

<ramble set= off>


#331 of 404 by brighn on Tue Nov 24 05:10:15 1998:

Kenton, I personally classify anyone who is incapable of having a serious
friend-based relationship with an openly homosexual person a homophobe. That
cliassification is niether universal nor unheard of.


#332 of 404 by rcurl on Tue Nov 24 06:16:36 1998:

Re #330: one sure does get tied into knots when one has to follow an
accumulated contradictory batch of tenets, and spend time worrying about
what other people do in their private lives. The knives that would cut
those Gordian knots are tolerance, acceptance of everyone as just human
beings, and only being concerned about *criminal* behavior that threatens
ones life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Sexuality is not the
business of anyone not directly involved. 



#333 of 404 by bookworm on Tue Nov 24 06:35:26 1998:

I don't believe anybody is "incapable" of having a serious friend-based
relationship with an openly homosexual person.  If you'll permit me, Paul.
I think what you mean is this:
Any person who fears homosexuals and homosexuality so much that their fear
interferes with any healthy, friend-based, relationship with an open
homosexual (or even conversation with said homosexual) is probably homophobic.

To my mind, this should not mean that we (meaning Gays, Lesbians, and
Bisexuals) should treat that person with fear or hatred (homophobophobia?).
We should attempt to make the person more comfortable, provide needed
information, not allow them to make us angry or fearful, and, when all else
fails, pity them.  I always feel sorry for someone who allows their fear to
stand in the way of a possibly rewarding friendship.

If fear and hatred should lead to violence on the part of the homophobic
against the homosexual, then it is advisable to fight for all you're
worth--spare nothing and take no prisoners.

Fear and hate should not be a reason for more fear and hate.  Our purpose is
to survive and thrive, not to denounce those who act in ignorance brought on
by fear of the unknown.


#334 of 404 by bru on Tue Nov 24 16:47:50 1998:

I for one have had quite a few homosexual freinds, doesn't mean I condone
their lifestyle.  


#335 of 404 by brighn on Tue Nov 24 19:46:39 1998:

332> Kenton is of the opinion, as many homophobes are, that he doesn't fear
or hate homosexuals, though. So your explanation doesn't work. He *is*
incapable of having a serious friend-based relationship with an open
homosexual at this point in his life because he says he is.


#336 of 404 by rcurl on Tue Nov 24 21:43:03 1998:

Re #334: it is not your business to condone or not.
Re #335: but he hasn't tried, so what he says may not be true.


#337 of 404 by albaugh on Tue Nov 24 23:02:05 1998:

Re: #336: It is not your business to tell people what they may or may not
condone.  So there!


#338 of 404 by brown on Wed Nov 25 03:13:32 1998:

yeah and my daddy can beat up yours.
sheesh........


#339 of 404 by brighn on Wed Nov 25 06:03:32 1998:

Kevin, it isn't your business to tell Rane that it isn't his business to tell
people what they can or can't condone.

I have a headache now.


#340 of 404 by rcurl on Wed Nov 25 07:40:25 1998:

Right! I think I have more right to tell someone they have no business
condoning or not condoning things that are not their business than they
have in telling me that I should not tell people that it is not their
business to condone (or not). Condoning/not-condoning is sticking one's
nose into other people's business, making them nosy parkers, if that
is clearer.


#341 of 404 by albaugh on Wed Nov 25 17:05:18 1998:

rcurl, there is no one on grex that thinks you wouldn't assert you have more
rights to do something you agree with than someone else has to do something
he/she agrees with.


#342 of 404 by rcurl on Wed Nov 25 18:47:43 1998:

Glad I made myself clear...  8^}


#343 of 404 by brighn on Wed Nov 25 18:53:27 1998:

I heartily request that you two stop the bickering.


#344 of 404 by keesan on Wed Nov 25 20:11:00 1998:

I find it amusing, but confusing.


#345 of 404 by rcurl on Wed Nov 25 20:54:30 1998:

Me too....bickering? It is just word play because the topic has been
so thoroughly ground up. 


#346 of 404 by lumen on Wed Nov 25 22:41:52 1998:

re: last debate-- I would suppose the idea seems ridiculous if you're not a
religious person.  But if you are, then refusing to condone might be an issue.
We're all for religious freedom here, and some of the major religions still
do not accept homosexual practices (sex, that is) in their tenets.

But that doesn't ban the homosexual from continuing to worship in that
religion.  Re: #332, yes, it is a Gordian knot sometimes, and I, for one, am
in one somewhat, but shessh, I chose my priorities.

However, I'll admit that it's really ultimately a private matter, and between
you and God or whoever your higher power is.  My beliefs are my own, so I keep
'em, however fandangled and tied up they may be.

I just hope folks would learn that no one can force you to do anything, nor
can they deliberately corrupt you or steal your soul.
(nope, neither God nor the devil nor anyone under the sun)


#347 of 404 by bookworm on Wed Nov 25 23:57:24 1998:

No need to be so defensive, Paul
No one likes to be told they are afraid (Phobophobia).  IT's difficult to
admit.  It's also typical for the human race to fear or hate that which it
does not understand.  Therefore, in one way or another we are all phobics.
Regardless of whether or not they really *are* afraid, We should not let
other people's rudeness or bad conduct towards us to make us angry.
That brings us down to their level.


#348 of 404 by brighn on Thu Nov 26 00:21:03 1998:

WHO THE FUCK IS BEING DEFENSIVE????????????

heh heh. sorry =}


#349 of 404 by bookworm on Thu Nov 26 00:30:17 1998:

LOL that was funny.


#350 of 404 by i on Thu Nov 26 00:43:22 1998:

<i chuckles>


#351 of 404 by senna on Thu Nov 26 09:34:19 1998:

The last 15 or so responses sent me into gales of laughter.

This is not good at 4:30 in the morning.


#352 of 404 by kenton on Fri Nov 27 02:27:06 1998:

Re 331   Your personal classification and $1.25 will get me a cup of
coffee.
   Maybe if I actually was aware of a practicing homosexual, I would
be afraid of him or her.  By associating with them, I may run into a couple
of nuts like those out West, who killed that guy.  Or I might be afraid of
catching aids from the sweat or a sneeze of a homo sexual, or I might hate
them because they are different than me.

You don't know how I would react to any homosexual, because I don't know.  I
know it is foolish of me, but I suspect they would be like my neighbor next
door.

My son-in-law doesn't understand me because I argue one way on here and the
opposite
 with him.  We have a number of computers and often work and surf in
the same room.  So when he hears me laughing, he reads what I read.
He is truly mystified by my apparent Jekyl and Hyde writings.



#353 of 404 by brighn on Fri Nov 27 03:03:58 1998:

Your opinions are worthless to me, too, Kenton. I was explaining my viewpoint;
I wasn't asking you to agree with it.


#354 of 404 by jazz on Fri Nov 27 13:58:50 1998:

        So what's it to be then?  If you know you have a problem with the 
openly homosexual, what is the problem insofar as you understand it?


#355 of 404 by albaugh on Fri Nov 27 16:15:38 1998:

If someone's opinions are worthless to you, why bother to "grex"?!


#356 of 404 by keesan on Fri Nov 27 17:02:17 1998:

I think Kenton is trying to be both honest and open-minded at the same time,
and I respect him for it.  He is not claiming to be perfect, he is also trying
to understand his own actions, which is more than many people do when they
react without thinking.  And he is trying to explain them to us, not justify
them.  If Kenton were not relatively tolerant of different sorts of people,
he would not be on grex, and I am glad he has decided to join us.  Is there
anyone here whose actions are completely rational?
        Kenton, you cannot get AIDS from someone sneezing on you, or from
saliva, as far as I know.  And many heterosexuals also have AIDS and are on
average more careless about protecting themselves from it.  Lesbians have a
lower incidence of AIDS than heterosexual men.  I would appreciate if you
could figure out just what would make you uncomfortable about being around
(or is it just being seen with?) a known-to-you homosexual.  Most homosexuals,
like most heterosexuals, are not going to indiscriminately attempt to have
sex with anyone of the proper sex.  They are probably not at all interested
in you in that way.  Is it possible that you would be uncomfortable not
knowing how to act with them?  That is understandable.
        Kenton, would you like to attempt to guess how many, and who, of the
participants in this discussion are homosexual or bisexual?
        I think most people act a bit differently depending on whether they
are with a man or a woman, and perhaps it is difficult for some people, when
with a gay man, to know whether to act as if they are with a man or a woman,
the signals are mixed and a bit confusing.  This might be more of a problem
for very feminine women or very masculine men, who are more likely to act
different depending which sex they are with.  (And there are some people with
emotional problems who try to eliminate their problems by eliminating the
cause, leading to gay-bashing).  Any comments on my theory?


#357 of 404 by suzie on Fri Nov 27 19:54:47 1998:

You are sooooo cool Cindy!!!


#358 of 404 by rcurl on Fri Nov 27 21:05:59 1998:

There is entirely too much public obsession with sex and sexual matters.


#359 of 404 by kenton on Sat Nov 28 01:16:40 1998:

Cindi, thanks for the analysis and defense, but I am trying to find out more
about the people on grex, than I am about homosexuals.  I suspect that a few
would try to beat me up physically or worse, if they had the guts or if they
were drunk.  In short they are closely related to the pair whose actions lead
to the death of the homosexual mentioned at the beginning of this conference.

But then I've been wrong about many things and maybe this is one of them.



#360 of 404 by scott on Sat Nov 28 01:24:53 1998:

Grexers generally don't tend to beat people up.

I imagine you'd have a hard time finding many (if any) cases of straight
people being beaten up by homosexuals.  OK, maybe in prison, but normal
societal rules don't apply in prison anyway.


#361 of 404 by rcurl on Sat Nov 28 03:39:10 1998:

I doubt that anyone here has the least interest in physically attacking
anyone, least of all Kenton. Is that another one of your obsessions,
Kenton? Of being attacked physically? It would go along with the fear of
the unfamiliar. 


#362 of 404 by albaugh on Sat Nov 28 05:45:10 1998:

I dunno, rcurl, your words often pack a wallop!  ;-)


#363 of 404 by mta on Sat Nov 28 16:30:02 1998:

Grexers are, in my experience, far far more likley to debate you to death than
to raise a hand in anger.

Verbal people, which you pretty much have to be to enjoy Grex, tend not to
react physically.


#364 of 404 by senna on Sat Nov 28 17:19:25 1998:

I need to hone my verbal wallop.  I try not to undercut people too much, 
because if I got really vicious I'd be able to really really get into 
it.  That's scary.  I have teachers with horror stories.


#365 of 404 by brighn on Sun Nov 29 18:37:05 1998:

Kevin> I grex out of an overwhelming sense of arrogance, since my opinions
are obviously so imoprtant to everyone esle, since they're mine. My purpose
is to amuse myself with the idiocy of others and to demonstrate to all
concerned how blindingly brilliant I am. Wasn't that obvious?

Rane, Kenton> It is my understanding that the chemical composition of saliva
is such that the HIV virus doesn't persist in it. The reason why you can
concievably get HIV from oral sex/French kissing is because there are
occasionally cuts in the mouth, particularly bleeding gums, esp. immediately
after brushing. If there is *fresh* blood in the saliva, there is (I suppose)
the remotest possibility of acquiring the virus. This is all my understanding,
which may be flawed, and I am not a medical professional or resource, nor am
I attempting to represent one.


#366 of 404 by lumen on Tue Dec 1 03:07:26 1998:

re #365: That sounds conceivable, honestly: AIDS is, after all, a blood
disease.  I am assuming that risk goes up when it is more likely that blood
will be involved.

I assume this is why anal sex is so risky-- the anus is dry and prone to tear
and bleed when penetrated and rubbed by a penis.  I think former Surgeon
General Everett C. Koop said something to that effect.

I don't think oral sex *causes* cuts in the mouth; perhaps this is why the
risk is lower.

I think it's also been established that a man is more likely to infect a woman
than vice versa.  That seems to be because of the biological plumbing, so to
speak.  Perhaps the incidence of women infecting men goes up when sex is
performed during a mense, but that seems improbable and most find it gross,
although some do it.

The fact that many women don't ejaculate during orgasm (usually through
stimulation of the clitoris and the G-spot, I believe) might explain why
lesbians are less at risk when they have cunnilingus.  Perhaps the only
factors that would increase rates would be ejaculation and cunnilingus during
menustration.  Sound even grosser?  Yep, that might be why the incidence is
so low.

re: the long homophobia debate-- again, I think the fear is just of homosexual
sex and attraction-- fearing that a homosexual may be attracted to you, or
that association with that person may taint the individual in the eyes of
others, who may assume that individual is homosexual and perhaps having
homosexual affairs, and hence, a fear of being associated with problems and
issues homosexuals face.

It seems to be a synergistic thing, and a reinforcer that is applied
throughout a network of people.  Homophobia isn't rooted in one person alone--
it's a system of roots in segments of society-- or it kinda grows along
runners, like strawberries..well, at least that's my take on it.

I'm surprised Kenton still has made no mention of bisexuals.  It's rather
ironic that fear and misunderstanding of them is actually undercommunicated,
or not in the way homophobia is, but then the issue blends into heterosexual
lines as far as those attractions are concerned, and there is no subculture.
Any bisexual expression, I guess, is assimilated into popular society anyway,
along with the few homosexual ones that have become acceptable through
connections to radical expression, I suppose (men accepting an earring, long
hair, etc., etc.. things that used to be connected to homosexuals).

but I would assume biphobia is very real..I, for one, didn't know what to
think of bisexuals.  In some ways, I thought they would be a threat-- hitting
on me at times they weren't attracted to women (I speak of bisexual men). 
And of course, there was no way I would know which way the attraction would
turn-- toward women, or men.

(Of course, most of you find this statement ironic, but I'll explain later.
If Kenton figures out the irony, maybe he'll understand better why homophobia
is so ridiculous.)


#367 of 404 by brighn on Tue Dec 1 14:06:24 1998:

Ejaculate and blood both carry the AIDS virus, but it also seems to me that
female to male transmission is less common than male to female because the
female system is designed to intake ejaculate (semen), whereas the male system
isn't, so it seems to me that the only way a male could get HIV from a female
is either by swallowing a significant amount of her fluids (ejaculate and/or
blood), or by the misfortune of having a small cut somewhere (possibly, by
getting it into the urethra and having it infect into the bloodstream). I
mention the urethra because men do occasionally get yeast infections there
(and they are, allegedly, significantly more painful when they happen than
female yeast infections are), and I know one person who admitted to getting
an e coli infection there, so things DO creep in.

All right, enough ick for one post. =}


#368 of 404 by mary on Tue Dec 1 14:14:27 1998:

There is a lot of misinformation in this discussion regarding the
transmission of the HIV.  The virus gets transmitted
when infected body fluids come into contact with blood, broken
skin or mucus membranes.  The lining of the sigmoid colon is
like the vagina so you don't need rips or tears to be at risk.
Splash infected blood in your eye and you have the same hazard.

The mucus membranes of the mouth would allow the same transmission but for
the pH of saliva, which makes the environment hostile.  HIV is really
quite a fragile virus.  Last I heard the CDC was stating that transmission
of HIV through kissing without the exchange of fluid was totally safe. 
Deep kissing, even though it had not been proven to be the route of any
known infections, could not be ruled out as a potential risk. 



#369 of 404 by mary on Tue Dec 1 14:18:07 1998:

Paul slipped in.  The lining of the urethra (even the part that
is in your penis at the glans) is mucus membrane and any infected
fluid in contact with that tissue puts the male at risk.


#370 of 404 by lumen on Tue Dec 1 17:41:13 1998:

re #367: I thought I had inferred that, but thanks for clarifying.  re
#367-369: yes, the urethra lining is mucus membrane, but is a lot smaller,
and usually, fluids aren't injected backwards through that opening.

<raunch = off>


#371 of 404 by brighn on Wed Dec 2 04:30:32 1998:

I don't know what you inferred, Jon.
If you mean that you implied it, then yeah, I was clarifying.

Quickie language lesson:
"I inferred x" means that, from what you said, I determined that x was true.
"I implied x" means that, from what I said, I meant for you to determine x
was true.
On an interpersonal communication level, it's typically better to say "I
inferred x" than "you implied x," because the latter is accusatory and may
be untrue. ("I feel that you implied x" serves the same function as "I
inferred x".)
End of lesson.


#372 of 404 by rcurl on Wed Dec 2 04:48:04 1998:

Slight correction: infer and imply do not concern truth, but only information
conveyed. "I inferred x" means that, from what you said, *I understand
that you are saying you mean x*. 


#373 of 404 by remmers on Wed Dec 2 12:58:00 1998:

(I disagree partially with Rane, but won't say why, so as not to
contribute to this line of drift. Let's get back to gay-bashing issues
and icky stuff.)


#374 of 404 by brighn on Wed Dec 2 16:21:11 1998:

That's not a correction, Rane. I wasn't discussing truth, I was discussing
perceived truth... If I want you to believe x but don't wish to say it
directly, I''ll imply it... particularly good for politicos.


#375 of 404 by rcurl on Wed Dec 2 16:37:03 1998:

(Sorry John...) By implying it all you are doing is conveying a view or
opinion. The inference of truth is a simple error by the inferee.


#376 of 404 by keesan on Wed Dec 2 18:58:29 1998:

I infer that Rane likes to argue fine points of vocabulary.


#377 of 404 by rcurl on Wed Dec 2 22:24:52 1998:

That is a case in point, as the inference is not true. You might infer instead
that I like to argue with pedants.  8^}


#378 of 404 by faile on Wed Dec 2 23:48:37 1998:

<jessi ducks, and asks someone to let her know when this blows over>


#379 of 404 by brighn on Thu Dec 3 01:43:15 1998:

#375> But an inference NEED NOT be false, either. I think we're arguing
objective vs. subjective truth, and it seems that for you a "truth" must be
objectively true... 
Let us say, in response to the question, "Did you and Monica ever have sexual
relations." I respond, "Monica and I did not have a sexual relationship. I
never had sex with Monica." I intend to imply that Monica nad I never had
sexual relations, which is a fair inferrence from my response. In order for
me to imply this, the truth value of "Monica and I had sexual relations" is
irrelevant... what is relevant is the truth value I want you to infer for
"Monica and I had sexual relations."

Which is what I said at the outset.

This is different from a presupposition. In saying, "I corrected you," you
pressuppose, "You said something inaccurate." Since I never said anything
inaccurate, you could not have corrected me.


#380 of 404 by rcurl on Thu Dec 3 05:11:37 1998:

I only infer from the statement made that you have said that you did not
have sexual relations with Monica (I also infer that you seem to get
around....). I have no idea what you intended to imply - I only know what
you said. This is especially true as the statement is ambiguous, as what
constitutes "having sex" is not self-evident. *I* have sex - I am male. A
man talking to a woman is a sexual relation (among many other things). I
think that what is inferred from that statement reflects more upon the
predilections of the inferee (perhaps, to "believe the worst"?)  than in
the content of the message. 



#381 of 404 by brighn on Thu Dec 3 06:38:33 1998:

I just forgot... are we arguing?
I think we're just saying the same thing and giving everyone else headaches.
I think we should both stop showing off. =}


#382 of 404 by senna on Thu Dec 3 13:51:51 1998:

My god.  It's a logic course.

Can I get credit for reading this?


#383 of 404 by rcurl on Thu Dec 3 16:18:11 1998:

Yes, but you have to pay tuition first. Send tuition to Grex, Office of
Admissions, and we will credit you.


#384 of 404 by brighn on Thu Dec 3 19:07:32 1998:

Actually, it's a rhetorics course.
Make checks payable to Paul Kershaw, Direcotr of Admissions.
Any amount will do.


#385 of 404 by md on Thu Dec 3 20:55:11 1998:

And we wonder why M-Netters find Grex boring.


#386 of 404 by brighn on Thu Dec 3 23:24:06 1998:

No ideas, m'self. I'm having a good time.
Aren't you, Rane?


#387 of 404 by senna on Fri Dec 4 13:53:30 1998:

That is such an insane idea that it might actually work


#388 of 404 by rcurl on Fri Dec 4 18:46:53 1998:

Yes, I find this much more interesting than the mucous membrane of the
urethra.


#389 of 404 by bookworm on Fri Dec 4 22:44:50 1998:

Kenton, don't let it phase you.  We're usually a lot nicer than this.  We just
have a tendency to be a tad defensive, don't we boys and girls?


#390 of 404 by brighn on Fri Dec 4 23:24:15 1998:

Not me.


#391 of 404 by mary on Sat Dec 5 01:48:41 1998:

Re: 33  I collect quite a following at cocktail parties with
that stuff.  Guess you have to be there.  ;-)


#392 of 404 by lumen on Sat Dec 5 04:53:31 1998:

re #390: heh.  whatever.  obnoxious, then


#393 of 404 by void on Wed Dec 9 22:16:07 1998:

   re female-to-female transmission of hiv: although it's often claimed 
that lesbians have a low-to-almost-nonexistent transmission rate for 
hiv, the truth is that no one really knows.  as far as i've been able to 
determine, there has been *one* study of woman-to-woman hiv transmission 
done, in 1991, involving less than 100 women, all of whom were either iv 
drug users, bisexual, or both (however, by the criteria used to 
establish lesbianism in that study, not even i would qualify).  i found 
the study by dint of digging around for quite a while at the cdc's web 
site.  if anyone's really interested, i could try re-finding the 
specific url for the study.  if anyone knows of any other studies which 
have been done since then, i will happily sit corrected and delightedly 
go off in search of them.


#394 of 404 by bookworm on Thu Dec 10 04:26:58 1998:

No offense meant to anybody, but this conversation is getting seriously
boring.


#395 of 404 by lumen on Thu Dec 10 04:37:54 1998:

Julie is easily bored


#396 of 404 by maeve on Thu Dec 10 16:38:32 1998:

(I've asked my mother if she knows about any studies like that void, 
and any decent general sites with that sort of information..)


#397 of 404 by void on Thu Dec 10 22:13:11 1998:

   thanks, maeve.  :)


#398 of 404 by e4808mc on Fri Dec 11 21:37:18 1998:

Re #394.  The next time you read this item, type "forget" at the prompt.
Solves your boredom forever.


#399 of 404 by jazz on Wed Dec 16 10:58:47 1998:

        Nice lesson on language.  I'll have to remember that rule, it's a
handy explanation of the difference.

        Kenton, don't worry.  Most GREXers are small or easily cowed.  But your
position, here, invites controversy and tongue-wagging (sic) and I'm sure
you're perfectly aware of it, though I'm unsure of your motives in doing so.
If it genuinely is to express your feelings about homosexuality, popular GREX
opinion be damned, more power to you.


#400 of 404 by danr on Wed Dec 16 17:27:11 1998:

I guess Kenton's given up as he hasn't responded for nearly three weeks.


#401 of 404 by lumen on Sat Dec 19 03:32:59 1998:

Hrm-- I wouldn't be so sure.  If it stretches to months, then perhaps he has
given up.


#402 of 404 by starwolf on Sun Dec 20 03:28:58 1998:

We can hope...


#403 of 404 by maeve on Mon Dec 21 08:10:18 1998:

oh dear, I had a letter but it's in my school account and I can't get to it,
but I believe the difficulties have to do with the general lack of blood to
blood contact involved..


#404 of 404 by bookworm on Thu Jan 7 00:33:45 1999:

re 398: Thanks, Catriona.  that's advice I may take to heart.

re 399: I'm with you, jazz.  Everybody's entitled to his/her opinion.  If you
don't like it, type "forget" at the prompt.


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