Quote:
Originally Posted by VipertheSniper
I don't know what to say Skybird, but you should hear yourself talking.
I can understand a certain dislike for people parading on Christopher Street Day, because it's not our business what sexual preference they have, but if someone is attacked our insulted because of that, it's still homophobia in action. Just because someone openly displays his homosexuality it's suddenly ok? Don't think so.
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Maybe you want to listen to yourself first!? "Someone openly displays his homosexuality"...? Maybe I am also a sexophobe then because I oppose sexual intercourse on the traffic crossroad, and am against certain kinds of porn movies being shot as intended provocation in public space, on the boulevard, within sight of passing pedestrians...?
I take offense from that thing happening and me needing to witness it, and I rate it as an attack on my private integrity and widely established, long since upheld moral standards and taboos with which I have grown up - like most other people in our countries too. Leave the sexually more delicate private stuff where it belongs: in people's private homes, and clubs and etblissements.
When I got attacked, I struck back. When I get hit, I hit back. When I see somebody provoking somebody, and the latter shows a natural defending or angry reaction to that, I couldn't care less.
Which means I help the gay man who behaved like any ordinary person around and without reason suddenly gets beatenm up by somebody. When he provoked his attacker first by word or deed, I lose interest to do so. And not only becasue he is gay, but I would lose interest with any "victim" provoking the other beyond a certain degree.
When you put your hand on the hot stove, expect to get burned.