oxydolfan1
Well-known member
- Joined
- Sep 28, 2006
- Messages
- 1,764
"It's surreal reading some posts on this board which rant about my baseless hatred and unresolved psychological issues, and I wonder if the poster has ever held in his arms a living human skeleton that is 6'4" tall and weighs 93 pounds. I'd guess not."
You'd be wrong.
And it wasn't just personal for me. When I hit seventy-eight memorial services, I stopped keeping track....
It's irrelevant to the subject at hand anyway.
I've transcended my own personal losses. Almost twenty years ago, in fact. I couldn't dwell on them without becoming totally embittered and hostile to the rest of the world.
While I respect and lament those who haven't managed to harness their enduring pain into more constructive, compassionate goals, I'm not letting them dominate the world I live in or the community I am a part of. I do not receive condemnation for events that transpired 3000 years ago, 140 years ago, or even 65 years ago, and reject the idea that I can be "guilted" into allowing atrocities I had no hand in affect my clarity and judgement on approaches used in the here and now.
To understand the reluctance large numbers of the straight community have towards marriage equality, look to how many members of our own "world" treat them, with the same level of hostility and derision we once endured.
If you want to understand why members of our own community are ambivalent at best toward marriage equality "activists", examine closely the hostility and arrows the so-called "freedom from religion" crowd and the evangelical atheists have aimed inward, toward gay people of faith.
If you want to understand contempt and disgust with the methods and tactics used by marriage equality zealots, consider the negative and unanswerable attention they have drawn to the entire marriage equality movement as a whole, and examine the backlash the entire gay community is forced to put up with as a result.
If you are surprised at the amount of reluctance and concern you see, from such a large segment of a community that you'd think would benefit most from the initiatives at hand, consider the behavior or hardcore supporters of certain political candidates in the larger society, realize that it's not to put two and two together, see how manufactured outrage and intimidation can be used as a powerful political tool in the hands of such "high-information" elitists, and accept that many will reject "the means" employed outright.
Just my two cents.
You'd be wrong.
And it wasn't just personal for me. When I hit seventy-eight memorial services, I stopped keeping track....
It's irrelevant to the subject at hand anyway.
I've transcended my own personal losses. Almost twenty years ago, in fact. I couldn't dwell on them without becoming totally embittered and hostile to the rest of the world.
While I respect and lament those who haven't managed to harness their enduring pain into more constructive, compassionate goals, I'm not letting them dominate the world I live in or the community I am a part of. I do not receive condemnation for events that transpired 3000 years ago, 140 years ago, or even 65 years ago, and reject the idea that I can be "guilted" into allowing atrocities I had no hand in affect my clarity and judgement on approaches used in the here and now.
To understand the reluctance large numbers of the straight community have towards marriage equality, look to how many members of our own "world" treat them, with the same level of hostility and derision we once endured.
If you want to understand why members of our own community are ambivalent at best toward marriage equality "activists", examine closely the hostility and arrows the so-called "freedom from religion" crowd and the evangelical atheists have aimed inward, toward gay people of faith.
If you want to understand contempt and disgust with the methods and tactics used by marriage equality zealots, consider the negative and unanswerable attention they have drawn to the entire marriage equality movement as a whole, and examine the backlash the entire gay community is forced to put up with as a result.
If you are surprised at the amount of reluctance and concern you see, from such a large segment of a community that you'd think would benefit most from the initiatives at hand, consider the behavior or hardcore supporters of certain political candidates in the larger society, realize that it's not to put two and two together, see how manufactured outrage and intimidation can be used as a powerful political tool in the hands of such "high-information" elitists, and accept that many will reject "the means" employed outright.
Just my two cents.