NP: Excellent
point about a gay person struggling against «centuries of interpretation, theology, cultural norms, popular opinion, inherited sexual mores and so much more that a straight person has the luxury of summoning.»
Not exact matches
Here is a link to a video that is a powerful speech its from an older movie called the dictator, very good movie by the way, Anyway Charlie chaplin plays the part of hitler and uses a very powerful and memorable speach
about equality and the way life is moving,» https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WibmcsEGLKo» you have shown nothing but malice in these comments and you wonder why
gay's are protrayed as the «bad guys» in video games and movies and if you don't believe that then watch this» https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XdmJXHJLZ6M» the
point is I will respect the
person who is silent, holding a flag that has ever color before i Can or Will ever respect someone like yourself.
- when you are spreading lies
about the
gay community and blocking their civil rights
people have the right to
point that out to uneducated prejudice bigots like you.
- LIE, it's your uneducated prejudice opinions that forces
people to
point this out to the world, that it's you who is lying and don't comprehend the real facts
about the
gay community.
It's none of our business what MLK thought
about the «
Gay» lifestyle... hell, his battle for the
people of color's equality of life cost him his life; So, I'm sure he didn't have time to even discuss or ponder what
people choose to do with their affections, nor did he care at that
point.
All
About Eve Year: 1950 Directed by: Joseph L. Mankiewicz Starring: Bette Davis, Anne Baxter, George Sanders, Celeste Holm, Thelma Ritter, Marilyn Monroe Why it's essential: This movie used to get brushed off as essential for
gay audiences, and while it does pretty much function as the Gay Bible — in that there's a lot of fascinating history and memorable one - liners, but too few people are actually familiar with the text — we've long passed the point where it's acceptable to think of All About Eve as anything less than a cinematic class
gay audiences, and while it does pretty much function as the
Gay Bible — in that there's a lot of fascinating history and memorable one - liners, but too few people are actually familiar with the text — we've long passed the point where it's acceptable to think of All About Eve as anything less than a cinematic class
Gay Bible — in that there's a lot of fascinating history and memorable one - liners, but too few
people are actually familiar with the text — we've long passed the
point where it's acceptable to think of All
About Eve as anything less than a cinematic classic.
If each of these moments
points to a feeling of a dissolution of bonds, a thinning sense of what
gay (or indeed «queer»)
people have in common, rather than what unique experiences and encounters make them distinct, I wondered if this might be linked to a certain coyness
about what is, in some sense, the bedrock of sexual identity, namely sexual activity itself.