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Old 11-05-2005, 07:41 PM
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SolInvictus SolInvictus is offline
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Default Local Homophobia

Hello everyone,
events in the local community, a very conservative area, is continuing its propaganda against the LGBT community. Citing that gays try to "convert" others, such as kids (which we all know is untrue).

This saddens and angers me. Dr. King said "we must fight hate with aggressive love." Yet, how do we fight ignorance and hatred? Sorry if this is too much of a sensitive topic, but it just distrurbs me that people believe such things... A local conservative pastor said "they go for the young ones."
Despite overwhelming evidence that most pedophiles are heterosexual, how does this nonsense continue?

Last year, a local deaf gay man was murdered just for being gay. Luckily, the murderers were sent to life in prison.

How can this injustice be fought? How can people be educated? How can the lies of the Religious Right be exposed?
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Old 11-06-2005, 12:27 PM
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Zerbie Zerbie is offline
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I think you're asking what's on everyone's mind here. While the topic is "sensitive" this is also what the forum is for, right?

I've been wondering the same questions my whole life. I have spent years waiting for someone to tell me an answer and how to go about 'changing things.' For me, it's time to take my own initiative and, whenever relevant to the conversation, dialogue about these issues with others.

The difficulty is when you encounter someone whose anti-gay views are so set in stone they refuse to even hear what anyone else says. Imo there is nothing to be done with such people. Our attention needs to be on the large silent middle ground of people who probably have ambivalent thoughts/feelings about LGBTs and patiently introduce them to the issues and arguments. Unfortunately, doing that takes a lifetime, and with all the anti-gay politicking goin on, its time we haven't got.
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Old 11-06-2005, 06:59 PM
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Thank you for responding Zerbie, and I like your answer. Good strategy, and yes, we must not waste time in getting equal rights. Thanks again - great advice.
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Old 11-07-2005, 07:28 AM
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It seems to me that the only way to combat this kind of thing is by the non-violent protest - obviously most people here will believe that or they wouldn't be here - but it's not just as simple as that. Sadly gay people face the same challenge that hated and downtrodden groups only have - in order to be accepted as normal, you have to be better than normal. Most people in society will not wake up to the fact that any gay individuals is "as good as them" - as moral, as upright, as caring, as honest - until they see, repeatedly, evidence of gay people being more moral, more upright, more caring, more honest than the average. It's not right or fair and it will be a slow process but in the case of a lot of people, that's probably all that will work.

But in the meantime, is needed is for more people in the straight community to stand up and blow the whistle on prejudice and hatred. I think prayer is needed that people in the mainstream churches particularly, people who are not gay themselves, even some of those who still have moral reservations regarding homosexuality, to stand up and say, "No! these people are my brothers and sisters! I will not tolerate hatred. I will not listen to distortions of the gospel. I will not stand by while they are rejected by their families and ostracised by the church". If only a few do it they risk ostracism themselves but if enough straight people stand up for their LGBT brothers and sisters, attitudes may start to change.
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Old 11-07-2005, 06:12 PM
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[QUOTE=Zerbie]I think you're asking what's on everyone's mind here. While the topic is "sensitive" this is also what the forum is for, right?

I've been wondering the same questions my whole life. I have spent years waiting for someone to tell me an answer and how to go about 'changing things.' For me, it's time to take my own initiative and, whenever relevant to the conversation, dialogue about these issues with others.

Gandhi says it better than anyone. "We must become the change we seek." The answer is clear though sometimes difficult. We must not be afraid to come out to people to let them get to know us as human beings that they care for and respect. If we are unashamed and loving, it will begin to change other people around us. There's a wonderful story about Lewis Smedes a well know bible expert who supposedly used to say that AIDS was God's curse on gays. Then friends of his starting dying of AIDS and he knew they were good loving faithful people. He was forced to change his views and ended up doing a fabulout video for Soulforce. So my answer is, "become the change we seek." Kara
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Old 11-08-2005, 07:48 AM
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Just a thought on this - I have recently been reading the Quakers' statements on gay marriage, and was unaware until the other day that they have been performing gay marriages for 20 years now. I know that carries a lot of weight with me, as I have a lot of respect for the Quakers, seeing them as honest, thoughtful and truly godly. Just that one fact may carry a great deal of weight with many Christians, and if you can get people to read their statements on the matter (search Google for "quaker gay marriage" to find documents published by the Society).

What impressed me most was that unlike some resolutions passed by denominations on gay marriage, which you could see as the church bowing to social pressure rather than truly following its convictions (this is what puts a lot of opponents off I think), the Quaker statements make it clear that they reached their position through prayer, consideration and humble dialogue with their gay members, who it seems they never considered excluding. They also passed their resolution before this was really a "hot issue" with most churches, indicating that they were not merely "going with the flow". That could go a long way to making people who have a fixed position on the issue start to really think.

Of course, it will not do much for those whose faith identity is so rooted in their own denomination that they cannot accept wisdom from a group with differing worship practices and organisational philosophy from their own (I'm sure there are Christians out there who consider the Quakers "dodgy"). But that's another argument entirely.
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Old 11-08-2005, 07:55 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Catt of the Garage
Of course, it will not do much for those whose faith identity is so rooted in their own denomination that they cannot accept wisdom from a group with differing worship practices and organisational philosophy from their own (I'm sure there are Christians out there who consider the Quakers "dodgy"). But that's another argument entirely.
That is what I was thinking as I started reading your post. My dad is a fundamentalist/charismatic. I remember him saying some things about Quakers that demonstrated he doesn't have any respect for them as far as their Christianity is concerned. I wouldn't be able to quote any Quaker writings to my dad because he wouldn't find them credible.
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Old 11-08-2005, 08:22 AM
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That's a bit of a bummer then.

Hmm.
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Old 11-09-2005, 06:50 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Catt of the Garage
I know that carries a lot of weight with me, as I have a lot of respect for the Quakers, seeing them as honest, thoughtful and truly godly.
Regarding my own family and my involvement with Soulforce, my parents made a step forward towards acceptance once they heard from voices that carried weight with them. They've sometimes slipped a few steps back, I suppose, since the anti-gay rhetoric is everywhere. But I remember telling my Dad that civil rights heroes from the 50's and 60's are involved in Soulforce. And he was like, "Ok, but they are just condemning the violence against gay people, right?"

I replied, "No, they are for full equality, marriage, adoption, and everything."

I could see that created what some Soulforce folks refer to as "cognitive dissonance."

cognitive dissonance - a state of psychological conflict or anxiety resulting from a contradiction between a person’s simultaneously held beliefs or attitudes
Microsoft® Encarta® Reference Library 2004. © 1993-2003 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

Here is a good resource for quotes:

MLK_Day_handout.pdf
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  #10  
Old 11-09-2005, 08:26 AM
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Default Thank You

Thank You, Jamie. Yes, I have support from my mom & stepdad & the UCC church I attend (ohucc.net). I just have to be closeted primarily due to the homophobia that is common in this area.

I'll look at that information - thanks again & God Bless You.
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Old 11-07-2005, 09:45 AM
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I think that I'm fortunate in that I haven't faced blatant hatred for being out. One of the things I feared most while I was in the closet was that I would be outted and that everyone, including those whom I loved, would hate me. I ended up in therapy with an eating disorder (thanks to the hatred I had for myself) about a year before I came out, and the outting wasn't really my choice, I was outted. What I found at that point was an acceptance and love from people that I thought would never embrace me as a gay man.
Now, about 2 years later, I find that I can insert relevant information into conversations. I don't get on the soapbox, but I do talk about how discrimination hurts me, and others, and ultimately our entire community, not just LGBT. Sometimes the conversation doesn't take off, and some times it does, but I always have the feeling that I may have given the person something to think about. and if you can get people to start thinking, that's a good thing, right?
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Old 11-07-2005, 04:03 PM
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Default Thanks

Good insight. Yes, nonviolence is the necessary way to go, and perhaps since we know how it feels to be discriminated against; we can use that to help others too.
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  #13  
Old 11-07-2005, 04:19 PM
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Default Our Story! The KEY!

Moving on and leaving the forum
God Bless

Last edited by Big-Cheese; 06-26-2006 at 08:19 AM.
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  #14  
Old 12-01-2005, 09:52 AM
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Default Injustice continues because we promote it with our silence

The questions being asked are "How can this injustice be fought? How can people be educated? How can the lies of the Religious Right be exposed?"

In answer to "What can we do?" I offer the following. We can look at ourselves as the solution, rather than hoping others will change. Our own transformtion is the basic tenent of soul force principles, and yet we continue to focus on what others are doing, with them being "the problem." I feel it is time we applied the same "criteria" to our own community that we do to others who we feel are not welcoming and inclusive of us. Why do we ask more of others than we do of ourselves? We ask others to take risks that many of our own community are unwilling to take. It is time to call our own GLBTA (yes allies too) community into accountability in the same way that we are calling society to accountability.

What I can tell you that we continue to learn from our journey, Gay Into Straight America, is that the power lies with US, not THEM. Our "fear of their fear" is larger within our GLBTA community (yes, allies too) than the "fear in them about us" that actually exits. We have not yet encountered one situation where people are "against" us. It is time for us to accept that the people to whom we focus so much energy on, although very vocal, are STILL a minority. If we mobilize our GLBT community in addition to the movable middle, we constitute a vocal majority, not a vocal minority. Too many of our potential vocal majority (including our own GLBT community) continue to remain silent and complacent, content to point fingers at "others," those we feel are the conservative bigots. Misguided energy folks! Roby and I feel that most of the people in our community continue to focus in the wrong direction for the solution. Many of us are looking "out there" to others for our empowerment and freedom, when the freedom we are searching for is available "within." When we accept 100% responsibility for creating the life we want, then we will shift and respond in new ways. That in turn will create the shifts in others that we are seeking. It won't happen the other way around. History shows that the courts usually lead the way, and that society lags behind. We are part of that society that lags behind. Let us each be a force to move it forward. Take a look at the article I wrote for the Soulforce website, and remember to "Stand UP Speak OUT...WE are the solution."
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Old 12-01-2005, 12:23 PM
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Wow - thank you & a great response. I'll check out the article soon.
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Old 01-08-2006, 05:58 PM
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It may not seem like it but I know that people can be changed... my mom had become friends with this guy online, he ended up to be very anti-gay, he would even meet up with friends from work and make fun of gays. But he was already really good friends with my mom and she said either you respect my point of view or this is good bye. This was a little bit of a wake up call for him, they went through a lot of times where they wouldn't talk to each other. Then he heard her talking to him about my 'uncle' who has AIDS and how she was taking him to the hospital he was really sick... over time he began to realize how rude he was being. Then she told him to go and listen to the song "What it's like" by everlast... (it's a good song if you haven't heard it) ... he payed attention to what she said, he met my uncle... and spent a little time with our family. When he went back home where they were making fun of gay people and when they asked him why he wasn't joining them... he said "It just doesn't seem funny anymore"... since this his life has changed he doesn't make fun of people like that anymore... now before judging he'll find out what's really happening.
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