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The Sash Now residing in Epsom - How Posh 05 Mar 15 1.43pm | |
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Quote imbored at 05 Mar 2015 1.37pm
Quote The Sash at 05 Mar 2015 1.26pm
Quote imbored at 05 Mar 2015 1.11pm
Quote The Sash at 05 Mar 2015 8.18am
Quote Jimenez at 05 Mar 2015 2.00am
Quote imbored at 05 Mar 2015 1.54am
Quote Jimenez at 05 Mar 2015 1.27am
LGBT & no mention of (I)meaning Intersex whatever that happens to be/is. So it should LGBTI to give it it's proper name. Anyway back on point Matt is right too many people are getting pigeon holed (no disrespect to pigeons)this in my opinion what causes a lot of these prejudices in the first place. As I said to the very keen student just the other day asking people about 'Gay Rights' "How many more rights do you need?' In some states Marriage perhaps? People do not pop out of the womb defining themselves as gay. The other side of the coin is that the law itself has differentiated, which is also a fixation on sexuality. How exactly do you get to a point where it doesn't, by 'not' talking about these issues? Increased visibility and discussion is the precise reason laws change and people are less likely to be excluded.
Edited by Jimenez (05 Mar 2015 2.03am) The reason 'gay rights' gets more vociferous coverage and spotlight in things like football, church, politics et al here rather than. oh lets go for Iran, is simple. Its easier for those doing the hollering and shouting and far cosier and safer. A gay couple doesn't get entrance to a Clacton B&B or the worlds ugliest tranny doesn't get to try on a wedding dress in Addiscombe and its the second coming of Hitler, all the while people all over the world are jailed, beaten and killed for their sexuality by regimes that wouldn't take very kindly to your waving your rainbow flag in hot pants in downtown Tehran...
Russias attitude towards gays has been very widely condemned and there are groups abroad working with that community. Various campaigners have travelled over starting from years back only to get the s*** kicked out of them just like the local gay population. It's tremendously difficult to change attitudes in your own country let alone someone elses. The Uganda 'Kill The Gays' Bill was only dropped as a result of diplomatic and sanctions pressure. Government action is often the primary way to bring about political change in other nations. We see and know that already with issues across the board. As for the B&B, by this logic you'd be fine with a B&B having a 'No Blacks' policy then? If so, then fair enough, but do we really want to go back to that? I think it's useful that people know beforehand that they can purchase a service open to the public and receive it, rather be turned away for being fat, gay, christian, black and so on.
Err well no funny enough I wouldn't - you seem to be missing the point.
First world trivialities. As stated, there are significant efforts to combat these issues abroad but it's not easy. Arguably efforts other than governmental ones routinely fail or have the opposite 'reject the west' effect. Using silly or unrepresentative examples such as that tit in the frock doesn't pertain to reality. Most gay people obviously don't behave that way. What one needy individual does doesn't reflect on a whole group of people.
An exaggeration - obviously, however the general argument holds. The first world meaning of being 'oppressed' because of sexuality - we don't actually know the meaning of the word.
As far as the rules go, it's a website not a democracy - Hambo 3/6/2014 |
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imbored UK 05 Mar 15 1.56pm | |
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Quote The Sash at 05 Mar 2015 1.43pm
Quote imbored at 05 Mar 2015 1.37pm
Quote The Sash at 05 Mar 2015 1.26pm
Quote imbored at 05 Mar 2015 1.11pm
Quote The Sash at 05 Mar 2015 8.18am
Quote Jimenez at 05 Mar 2015 2.00am
Quote imbored at 05 Mar 2015 1.54am
Quote Jimenez at 05 Mar 2015 1.27am
LGBT & no mention of (I)meaning Intersex whatever that happens to be/is. So it should LGBTI to give it it's proper name. Anyway back on point Matt is right too many people are getting pigeon holed (no disrespect to pigeons)this in my opinion what causes a lot of these prejudices in the first place. As I said to the very keen student just the other day asking people about 'Gay Rights' "How many more rights do you need?' In some states Marriage perhaps? People do not pop out of the womb defining themselves as gay. The other side of the coin is that the law itself has differentiated, which is also a fixation on sexuality. How exactly do you get to a point where it doesn't, by 'not' talking about these issues? Increased visibility and discussion is the precise reason laws change and people are less likely to be excluded.
Edited by Jimenez (05 Mar 2015 2.03am) The reason 'gay rights' gets more vociferous coverage and spotlight in things like football, church, politics et al here rather than. oh lets go for Iran, is simple. Its easier for those doing the hollering and shouting and far cosier and safer. A gay couple doesn't get entrance to a Clacton B&B or the worlds ugliest tranny doesn't get to try on a wedding dress in Addiscombe and its the second coming of Hitler, all the while people all over the world are jailed, beaten and killed for their sexuality by regimes that wouldn't take very kindly to your waving your rainbow flag in hot pants in downtown Tehran...
Russias attitude towards gays has been very widely condemned and there are groups abroad working with that community. Various campaigners have travelled over starting from years back only to get the s*** kicked out of them just like the local gay population. It's tremendously difficult to change attitudes in your own country let alone someone elses. The Uganda 'Kill The Gays' Bill was only dropped as a result of diplomatic and sanctions pressure. Government action is often the primary way to bring about political change in other nations. We see and know that already with issues across the board. As for the B&B, by this logic you'd be fine with a B&B having a 'No Blacks' policy then? If so, then fair enough, but do we really want to go back to that? I think it's useful that people know beforehand that they can purchase a service open to the public and receive it, rather be turned away for being fat, gay, christian, black and so on.
Err well no funny enough I wouldn't - you seem to be missing the point.
First world trivialities. As stated, there are significant efforts to combat these issues abroad but it's not easy. Arguably efforts other than governmental ones routinely fail or have the opposite 'reject the west' effect. Using silly or unrepresentative examples such as that tit in the frock doesn't pertain to reality. Most gay people obviously don't behave that way. What one needy individual does doesn't reflect on a whole group of people.
An exaggeration - obviously, however the general argument holds. The first world meaning of being 'oppressed' because of sexuality - we don't actually know the meaning of the word. If any individual is ejected from establishments because of sexuality in the modern example or race in the past, they have just as much right to stand up for the society they want to live in, as the business shunning them. I also think that efforts such as "kick racism out of football" and the recent steps into tackling homophobia are not universally negative or unwanted. We can all say 'people have it much worse elsewhere' but that could be used to tell absolutely everyone to stop addressing concerns closer to their sphere of influence, invalidating 99% of the threads here. When the black guy in France was kicked off the train and racially abused did we say "man up, extreme racism exists in some areas of the world, concentrate on that" or did we instead express that we have no time for such behaviour from football 'fans'. One other point, people are under just as much obligation to help others regardless of their own race, gender or sexuality. Arbitrary characteristics. It's not solely the role of women to try to address gender inequality around the world for instance. Edited by imbored (05 Mar 2015 2.37pm)
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jamiemartin721 Reading 05 Mar 15 4.11pm | |
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Quote Beaverwilly at 04 Mar 2015 4.50am
Why can't we just enjoy football without bringing gender, race, sexuality etc. into it? Personally I couldn't care less if you are tall, short, fat, thin, white, black, gay, straight... whatever just keep it to yourself as will I and concentrate on the sport which is why we are all here after all. You might not have an issue, I don't either, but it seems suspicious that there are no out gay players, and the game clearly has an issue with racism and a problem with gender (see comments arising from female commentators, female officals and the womens game in general).
"One Nation Under God, has turned into One Nation Under the Influence of One Drug" |
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Dweeb East London 06 Mar 15 5.30am | |
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Quote jamiemartin721 at 05 Mar 2015 4.11pm
Quote Beaverwilly at 04 Mar 2015 4.50am
Why can't we just enjoy football without bringing gender, race, sexuality etc. into it? Personally I couldn't care less if you are tall, short, fat, thin, white, black, gay, straight... whatever just keep it to yourself as will I and concentrate on the sport which is why we are all here after all. You might not have an issue, I don't either, but it seems suspicious that there are no out gay players, and the game clearly has an issue with racism and a problem with gender (see comments arising from female commentators, female officals and the womens game in general). There are in fact a large number of prejudicies within football still. It has taken over 40 years to get where we are with race and lets he honest we are still not 100% there. Nonetheless, how many Asian players or officials are in the UK professional game? I can barely remember seeing more than a handful of Asian officals in my 50 years of watching Palace, yet approximately 5% of UK population is Asian, as opposed to 2% gay. It is invariably when football uspporters feel "uneasy" which must also include an element of "mob behaviour" that issues arise. There is little if any issue within rugby about gay players or officals. I wouldn't want to argue with either Johnny Wilkinson or Gareth Thomas, let alone Clint Hill / Nigel "The Throat" Pearson!
Taking the bungy jump since 1964. Never to see John Jackson in a shirt again Sorry to see Lee Hills go, did we ever see Alex Marrow? We did January 2013 |
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imbored UK 06 Mar 15 4.34pm | |
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Quote Dweeb at 06 Mar 2015 5.30am
Quote jamiemartin721 at 05 Mar 2015 4.11pm
Quote Beaverwilly at 04 Mar 2015 4.50am
Why can't we just enjoy football without bringing gender, race, sexuality etc. into it? Personally I couldn't care less if you are tall, short, fat, thin, white, black, gay, straight... whatever just keep it to yourself as will I and concentrate on the sport which is why we are all here after all. You might not have an issue, I don't either, but it seems suspicious that there are no out gay players, and the game clearly has an issue with racism and a problem with gender (see comments arising from female commentators, female officals and the womens game in general). There are in fact a large number of prejudicies within football still. It has taken over 40 years to get where we are with race and lets he honest we are still not 100% there. Nonetheless, how many Asian players or officials are in the UK professional game? I can barely remember seeing more than a handful of Asian officals in my 50 years of watching Palace, yet approximately 5% of UK population is Asian, as opposed to 2% gay. It is invariably when football uspporters feel "uneasy" which must also include an element of "mob behaviour" that issues arise. There is little if any issue within rugby about gay players or officals. I wouldn't want to argue with either Johnny Wilkinson or Gareth Thomas, let alone Clint Hill / Nigel "The Throat" Pearson! A few rational, common sense posts in a row. You're spoiling us!
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jpiedra 11 Mar 15 10.33am | |
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Thanks for your indication Quote MileFan at 03 Mar 2015 9.41pm
Dear Sir, may I suggest you point your colleagues at the LGBT associations towards Brighton and Hove Albion football club
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