Queer or just strange? WLTM ...

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Walrus

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Mar 3, 2009
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That's the truth, it's like a lot of people campaign most strongly against the very things they don't like about themselves. People who quit smoking sometimes do the same and become the most vitriolic anti-smokers.

I bet K-Sound is laughing at that name, he was joking about gays tasting like butter recently :D


Yep... I remember stating that I wouldn't be doing a review of that 'juice' any time soon :)
 

MrsJaaxx

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Feb 16, 2009
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Quote from Kate: They sometimes get a bit worried that we might make them turn pink with purple spots or that we're contagious or something.

Well, I read the first 10 pages or so and I am pretty sure I am still not a homosexual, nor purple spotted. Sadly, I will not qualify for the new social group. But on the bright side, my staying on the heterosexual team is a wonderful and positive thing in light of my upcoming May wedding to a man! If this thread had "turned" me I would have non-refundable deposits to contend with!
 

Kate

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Jun 26, 2008
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Luckily I have a never ending supply of bikkies ;)

teaandbiscuits.jpg
 

taukimada

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Re: Sen. Chris Buttars

Keep an eye on the news... sometime in the near future I predict that this guy will either be caught in a bus station men's room, or outed for soliciting homosexual prostitutes.

It almost always seems that the most adamant right-wing anti-homosexual politicians/'family values' proponents are closeted gays themselves.

On a lighter note, with a last name like that how can he not be?


i get the felling he likes having his buns buttared
 
i get the felling he likes having his buns buttared


How else do you think he gets his head up his (insert name of orifice here)??? If his head ever comes out from there, you'll hear the "pop" across the pond.

Methinks he doest protest too much?

Just found this thread, interesting conversations - and quite a few laughts. Just had to toss in my .02
 

angel.white

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Some people just seem to need to oppress somebody. I try to avoid people and stories like that and hope I never have to deal with them in person.

The laugh about it is that a lot of those people consider themselves good christians :rolleyes:

What would Jesus do?
But wait, I thought you guys were the ones doing the oppressing!?

Sin City

lol

Anyway, I'm mostly straight, which means straight with a flair for androgyny. I also think trannies are hot.
 

angel.white

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I've known some really great people who consider themselves religious, some of the best people I've known. None of them were fundamentalists though, such a consuming hatred can't be healthy, psychologically or physically.
My boss is religious, he's one of the coolest people I know, like he doesn't force his beliefs on his son, for example. Still, my childhood was much more fundamentalist, I actually read and handed out Chick tracts as a child! Though I wasn't quite as extreme as the views they present, like I didn't think Catholics were evil, and while I did think that homosexuality was a sin, I wasn't like angry or hateful about it or whatever.

But that one I posted did make me laugh, about how the evil homosexuals were in league with Satan and out for blood (even typing that makes me giggle).

Despite what this tract might indicate, a quick search at fbi.gov reveals Table 1 - Hate Crime Statistics 2007

Which shows that of the 1,265 sexual-orientation motivated hate-crimes in 2007, only 22 were anti-heterosexual. So the sensational nature of this tract doesn't reflect truth.

Still, it is amusing to see truth turned on it's head so completely.

And lastly, as a converse, I think this real-world example is quite telling.
YouTube - Funny Story of Gay Pride Parade & Fundementalist Christians ~
 

Lika

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Fundamentalism really can seem like an illness, I'm sure a lot of extreme beliefs are mental illness. If we weren't used to extreme religious views because they have been normalised in our society we would think of them as psychotic, they certainly fit that definition.

They can't seem to help themselves, so ...I call it lifetime conditioning.
 
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