bumbershoot
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2007
- Messages
- 69,750
Strait parents have the right to teach that it isn't. But seeing it en mass in a public place lends credibility and furthers the PC notion that goes against what some parents teach their children.
And what does this credibility you say would happen DO to the children?
My BIL is gay, and he fought it for YEARS. Dated women, looked at girlie magazines, hid it deep down because he knew that his parents would flip out. But DH says it was always just WEIRD, to see Paul with his dates. He never thought he was gay, but he was just never "right" with his girlfriends. (like on the old Ellen sitcom, how uncomfortable she was on dates with men, before she came out, it just wasn't "right") Finally he admitted it to himself, and then not too long later a boyfriend rudely outed Paul to my in laws.
And his parents did, indeed, disown him for 5 long years. His being gay was a big deal (MIL is Korean, and "there are no gay Koreans" as they like to delude themselves) especially b/c of the Korean thing, because he is also the oldest son and therefore predetermined to take care of the parents when they get old...it was a huge deal, and MIL had two heart attacks during the whole thing (second-born son had to move in with her to take care of her b/c of the rift).
Well she finally calmed down and realized that the "new" boyfriend (not the one who outed him; that guy was kicked to the curb instantly) was a nice guy, and they ended up repairing their relationship.
By the way, there weren't scads of gay people around my BIL, he just knew deep down that these women he was supposed to be dating were absolutely, utterly WRONG for him. No "approval" helped him see that he could date men, it just came from within. And no amount of DISapproval could ultimately stop him, unless he wanted to be miserable and live lies for the rest of his life.
You are who you are, and denying it just makes you insane. I could not one day "decide" I was gay no matter how much approval there might be in the world "for" it, and my gay friends either tried really hard to fit in but ultimately it didn't work, or they were who they were from as soon as people start fantasizing about other people (for me that was 3rd grade) and never "tried" to "fit in".
So really, what does the fact that there are people around them who are who they are DO to a kid?

And it doesn't matter HOW many times a person says "I mean no offense", if what they are saying is offensive. I've had to temper MANY a rant around here because I knew I would have to say "oh but 'no offense' to the normal people of that religion", and as soon as you have to tell people that sort of thing, you should just delete the whole message.
And if that article were what led the OP to ask these questions, shouldn't the fact that it was about WDW spark *something* in her brain that it's very likely different? Even just looking at the HUGE Orlando gaydays website vs the itsy Anaheim gaydays website shows a difference between the two.