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Okay, this is the part I don't understand. I have no idea how these two sentences go together. Wouldn't an undersexed male be more likely to visit an adult bookstore? This is where I got confused.
A person does not choose what day he is born. A person does not choose his skin color. A person does not choose his sexuality. When a person believes these things, morality is not relevant when considering sexuality.
To consider sexuality a moral issue is to be a homophobe and a hater. There are a lot of them. Plenty of queer people even wrestle with the issue themselves. To be a homophobe and a hater is to de-humanize the gays; it is to refuse to see the human spark that is within. To understand that homosexuality has nothing to do with morality and to understand that homosexuality is not a choice is to recognize and affirm human fucking dignity.
This is not news in the queer community.
I can see the viewpoint even if I don't understand it. As said, in my case, I can, and did, indeed choose. Mayhaps sexuality is not always as chemically induced as you would make it out to be. I have no doubt in many cases it is, but I refuse to believe sexuality is as intractable as nationality or date of birth.
I can also see that you personally have issue with this subject. I think you're letting your personal issues cloud your view of the topic. The topic is that a boy is being painted as a bad person for choosing to ask for a change of rooms. For asking for something anyone can ask for for any reason. The reason this is news worthy at all is that the gay community has chosen to take affront to it.
I can't speak for the majority of Christians seeing as I am not one myself, but many branches of that faith take exception to homosexuality and always have. Isn't Christianity supposed to be a faith of peace? And what about the Muslim faith? A faith that has existed for centuries? What is their stand on homosexuality?
We pagans are one of the few faiths that doesn't really take a stance on it. I don't speak for the rest of my faith either. I speak for myself and myself alone.
Would this have been different if a black or Latino kid had asked to be moved because his room mate was a southern white kid who's face book page said he had leanings towards the KKK? Would it be different if a Latino kid wasn't comfortable with a black room mate? Are we all supposed to be of the same mold? Has individuality and freedom of choice been suspended? From many reactions here they have been.
. When straight people don't agree or believe the same, they are haters... when GLBT hate, they are enlightened. Wow, that is an extremely judgmental, stereotyping generalization. You make GW Bush and his people look downright progressive and open!
So in other words, everyone that doesn't agree with you is a "hater"??? that's very simplistic. I hope you don't ever form the majority government, because i could easily predict the ensuing persecution of all "haters" in the name of morality. Goodbye freedom of speech and religion.
...i have learned that one of the least tolerant groups on the planet are the GLBT people - you can believe anything you want as long as it agrees with them. I found out something interesting in the lesbian circles too - i learned that there were those who felt attracted to women and there were those who hated men. Don't bother telling me this isn't true - my sis has dated both types and the man haters were militant. Don't bother arguing - this is my experience, and I'm sticking to it. When straight people don't agree or believe the same, they are haters... when GLBT hate, they are enlightened.
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There are plenty of dudes and girls i wouldnt want to room with. Some are certainly gay, some are certainly black skinned (to use your example).I find it interesting that no one has addressed my question. How is "I don't want a gay roommate" morally defensible when "I don't want a black roommate" is (presumably) not?
It is interesting just how accepting people are. Tolerance is a two way street.
Well - i for one was raised in a very open home - my mother is a life member of NOW, my gramma was a dyke before it was cool to be, and then my closest sis who started out straight, became bi, them lesbian. then she discovered she was a man in a woman's body. What was interesting is this - sis and i always talked, and as teens all she talked about was men, even though it was very acceptable in our world to be anything. then she later told me that sex with men hurt, and that was why she was bi. later she dropped men altogether, but told me she couldn't say she was born gay, but that it was just better. now, ten years later, she says she was born that way.
I still love my sis - always have always will, but i have learned that one of the least tolerant groups on the planet are the GLBT people - you can believe anything you want as long as it agrees with them. I found out something interesting in the lesbian circles too - i learned that there were those who felt attracted to women and there were those who hated men. Don't bother telling me this isn't true - my sis has dated both types and the man haters were militant. Don't bother arguing - this is my experience, and I'm sticking to it. When straight people don't agree or believe the same, they are haters... when GLBT hate, they are enlightened.
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ummmm, dude? I think your hipocracy is showing...
P.S. Your mom being in NOW and your granny being a dyke are their creds, not yours.
P.P.S. and yeah, I MUST be one of them "man haters". I'm sure there are a couple of other misogynic asshats around here who will agree with me on that. Oh, and nice homophobia, princess![]()
Your post makes little sense...
If someone wants to restrict your rights without any logical reason and without even knowing you personally, you don't consider that hateful?
So you met some lesbians that hate men and someone called them enlightened. How can you jump from that to making a bold generalization that all/most GLBT would think man haters are enlightened or that all/most GLBT's are intolerant?
I've met some wonderful lesbians at MCC, in AIDS volunteer organizations, at pot lucks. I even once was in Provincetown during some Wyomyn's festival where there were HUNDREDS of lesbians. Lesbians were every where I turned. Not once did I ever feel like any of them wished me harm, wanted to restrict my rights to marry, raise kids, or whatever. I'm sure there are exceptions; I just never encountered them. In the particular case of Provincetown, I did meet one hateful person. It was a Chinese tourist who had no idea what was going on. He stated that the women in Provincetown were disgusting and sick. (He probably assumed that I was a straight man and thus would sympathize.) I supposed based on the fact that he stated that I should (base on you logic) assume that most Chinese men hate lesbians. However, I won't jump to that generalization.
Personally, I frequently am at odds with the gay community on politics, because I view things much differently. For instance, I don't need a genetic reason to love another man, have sex with another man, want to marry another man, or whatever. Regardless if one day I'm proven right or wrong, the fact is if someone wants to deny my rights to be with my adult, mentally competent partner without any LOGICAL reason, then yes in deed such a person is a hater and in this case also a sexist. That fact holds whether the person who wants to restrict my rights is male, female, straight, bi, gay, transgendered, asexual, Christian, muslim, atheist, black, white, red, yellow, or pink & purple poky dotted.
If you want our rights restricted, then accept your own intolerance instead of throwing some illusive example of some lesbians who didn't bend over backwards to server you milk and cookies.
Who ever mentioned restrictig someone's rights? the straight guy is the one seeking his rights... the right to room with someone that he feels comfortable with. how does this restrict the gay boy's rights?
I rarely read the local newspaper and today I caught a glimpse of it; more specifically, I caught a glimpse of the syndicated column "Ask Amy." She was taking a response for an earlier letter about a kid going away to college and finding out that his roommate is gay, and wanting out of the assignment, but the college wouldn't immediately let him. Amy basically responded that the kid and the roomie would figure it out, either deal with it, or request to change rooms after the mandatory waiting period.
What upsets me is that the parent was so proud that the other siblings who had lived in a dorm prior to this child had successfully roomed with people of other creeds and cultures and races than themselves, but it seemed to be just fine to discrimate against the gay kid without even getting to know him first.
What if the upset student was a young girl, who was placed with a male in the same dorm room... ...very similar situation, no?
Just food for thought. I can see why one might be upset.
-Dan
Nope, not a similar situation at all. Not sure how you came up with that.
Nope, not a similar situation at all. Not sure how you came up with that.
There are similiarities. I can only think of two reasons to be against rooming men and women together. One is that you think he might force himself on her just because she is there giving him easy access. The other is for the comfort of both in that they may not want to be seen in states of undress or seen sleeping by someone that has a likelihood of being attracted to them. Both of these issues have the same rate of happening between a man and a woman as they do between 2 men if one is gay (or women if one is a lesbian). So unless you have another good reason to separate genders that has nothing at all to do with sex then it is similar enough.
There is a widely perceived fundamental difference between men and women. No college would ever have co-ed ROOMS. I haven't even heard of co-ed floors, but maybe they exist. I think the real root of it comes from protecting women from men...men are supposed to be driven by their sex drive. So we separate them.
But to say that gay people - male or female - are driven by their sex drive is not part of culture, it's just an assumption. The point is that gays are no MORE driven by their sex drive than straight people.
Hence, it is acceptable to separate the sexes, but to separate gay and straight students implies that gay people are more sex-crazed fiends than straight people. No, I don't see the similarity at all...
You mean gays and lesbians are EXACTLY THE FREAK'IN SAME AS EVERYBODY ELSE? Nah. How can we be the evil, devil worshiping spawns of Satan if we are the same as everybody else.![]()

There is a widely perceived fundamental difference between men and women. No college would ever have co-ed ROOMS. I haven't even heard of co-ed floors, but maybe they exist. I think the real root of it comes from protecting women from men...men are supposed to be driven by their sex drive. So we separate them.
But to say that gay people - male or female - are driven by their sex drive is not part of culture, it's just an assumption. The point is that gays are no MORE driven by their sex drive than straight people.
Hence, it is acceptable to separate the sexes, but to separate gay and straight students implies that gay people are more sex-crazed fiends than straight people. No, I don't see the similarity at all...
Oh lord, have you been reading Foucault too?![]()
I know you used the word "supposed". However,
Etoile,
You state: "...men are supposed to be driven by their sex drive. So we separate them..."
I know you used the word "supposed". However, if you truly believe that portion of your statement that I quoted, then how is that attitude any different than that of a straight guy who states that he cannot room with a gay guy?
What kind of tension would that be?4) gay guy living with str8 gal -- tension for the str8 gal
none2_none2 said:The fact is that the sex drive is indeed a huge impulse especially during those years where the hormones are raging. However, humans were given the brains to control it. If the gay guy can control his urges towards a male roommate, then we have to assume that a straight roommate can do the same towards a female. Otherwise, we are being the very hypocrites that some accuse GLBT's of being.
Etoile said:But to say that gay people - male or female - are driven by their sex drive is not part of culture, it's just an assumption. The point is that gays are no MORE driven by their sex drive than straight people.
Hence, it is acceptable to separate the sexes, but to separate gay and straight students implies that gay people are more sex-crazed fiends than straight people. No, I don't see the similarity at all...
Actually, I was just having conversation myself. I'm sorry if you thought I was upset or that you had struck a nerve. Trust me, I have conversations just like this with my classmates all the time - I can get passionate about a topic without being upset!I see I struck a nerve somewhere, and you are starting appear to me as much less enlightened than you have previously.Relax, my intent was not to upset. It was simply to stimulate conversation.