ShadowWarrior26
Experienced
- Joined
- Jun 5, 2005
- Posts
- 83
Too many gay rights activists (including straight allies) are strident, self-righteous and emotional. In addition, some gay activists invest too much of their identity in their alternative sexuality. A gay person who can vote for George Bush, like these folks interviewed by the gay paper, the Washington Blade, is my idea of open-minded.
Too many gays involved in the polarizing campaign for "gay rights" (and their allies) confuse disapproval of their sexual orientation with hatred and bigotry. They fail to understand that many Americans remain deeply uncomfortable with government "anti-discrimination" sanctions for gays. This results from legitimate moral and religious beliefs opposing homosexuality; and from concerns such sanctions may pave the road for attempts to legalize gay marriage, or compel questionable standards and conduct in public life.
Given the passions surrounding homosexuality, it is not reasonable to expect that public schools in all states will necessarily, and without question, allow gay-friendly curricula. Should it even be the purpose of schools to sanction alternative sexual identities? If gays, why not also transsexuals? It is perfectly sane to argue that these are, or should be, private matters. Unless we decide as a society it is the business of public schools to promote a range of sexual identities. So, a state legislator in Alabama (cue "Dixie," and b-roll of hooded Klansmen) wants books portraying gays in a positive light removed from public schools, and, natch, is labelled a Nazi by an official of the Southern Poverty Law Center. In Washington, State Senator Jeanne Kohl-Welles (D-Seattle) apologized after last week comparing discrimination against gays to The Holocaust. The ADL wasn't amused.
Last summer, gay activists mounted a vile "outing" campaign against Capitol Hill staffers who worked for Republicans thought to be favoring a federal constitutional amendment banning gay marriage - the idea being if you are gay and work for such a legislator, you must, de facto, be a self-loathing traitor to "the cause" - there is only one position that is acceptable. Cooler heads prevailed: the proposed Federal Marriage Amendment failed to make it to a vote because it would have deprived same-sex couples in state-approved civil unions of constitutional protections.
Gays have repeatedly used "outing" as a way to blackmail politicians
Too many gays involved in the polarizing campaign for "gay rights" (and their allies) confuse disapproval of their sexual orientation with hatred and bigotry. They fail to understand that many Americans remain deeply uncomfortable with government "anti-discrimination" sanctions for gays. This results from legitimate moral and religious beliefs opposing homosexuality; and from concerns such sanctions may pave the road for attempts to legalize gay marriage, or compel questionable standards and conduct in public life.
Given the passions surrounding homosexuality, it is not reasonable to expect that public schools in all states will necessarily, and without question, allow gay-friendly curricula. Should it even be the purpose of schools to sanction alternative sexual identities? If gays, why not also transsexuals? It is perfectly sane to argue that these are, or should be, private matters. Unless we decide as a society it is the business of public schools to promote a range of sexual identities. So, a state legislator in Alabama (cue "Dixie," and b-roll of hooded Klansmen) wants books portraying gays in a positive light removed from public schools, and, natch, is labelled a Nazi by an official of the Southern Poverty Law Center. In Washington, State Senator Jeanne Kohl-Welles (D-Seattle) apologized after last week comparing discrimination against gays to The Holocaust. The ADL wasn't amused.
Last summer, gay activists mounted a vile "outing" campaign against Capitol Hill staffers who worked for Republicans thought to be favoring a federal constitutional amendment banning gay marriage - the idea being if you are gay and work for such a legislator, you must, de facto, be a self-loathing traitor to "the cause" - there is only one position that is acceptable. Cooler heads prevailed: the proposed Federal Marriage Amendment failed to make it to a vote because it would have deprived same-sex couples in state-approved civil unions of constitutional protections.
Gays have repeatedly used "outing" as a way to blackmail politicians