Saturday, August 6, 2011

Homosexual Twitchings


I'm watching people carefully these days. Toronto proudly claims that it is the most multicultural city in the world. Just simple empirical observation shows that this is probably true. And my apartment building reflects that. I wrote recently about a conversation between two people in an Indian language that interrupted my work, which took place in the small courtyard beneath my window. For some reason, and I think it is because a couple of people started doing this so more are following, that small area has become a "watering hole" for people to talk (loudly) to each other. So, I've decided to make these incidents a way to observe people, their movements, the way they communicate to each other, their dress and presentation, etc.

This new incident, which really lasted no more than twenty minutes (but that is still twenty minutes of mindless, careless, inconsiderate interruption by two men speaking in loud voices) provided me with insights on homosexual behavior. The one talking the loudest and in the most self conscious manner was clearly a homosexual. He had an agitated air about him. He was twitching throughout the conversation, and especially when the other man was speaking. He kept moving his hands around, scratching his shin, stretching his neck, balancing back and forth on his heels, flexing his back muscles, rolling his shoulders. When he spoke, his body movements (such as prodding the air with his index finger) were more pronounced than those of the other man, who hardly moved at all. If I were to make an assessment, he looked infatuated with the other man. At the end of the conversation, the quieter man gave the homosexual a goodbye hug and rode off on his bicycle, a hug which the homosexual extended just a little longer. I'm not sure about this hug, although it could be a way for this man to say that homosexuals are huggable people, and he's not afraid to be associated with one (or even get called one), and that he's in solidarity with them all. The usual "we are all equal" mantra of the elite whites of liberal society.

As for the constant nervous twitching, I can surmise that homosexuals are generally more agitated and less at peace with themselves.

A diverse culture isn't simply about race. It also incorporates all cultural varieties, including homosexuals. Such is the "equality" set up of liberal governments: immigration is good (even Muslim immigration), homosexuals can get "married," multiculturalism makes us better people, etc.

Of course, this equality is for others, and especially the other, the non-white. The white liberal elite is above everyone else, and the common whites are at the lowest echelon. Neither are "equal." Homosexuals, and others like the disabled, belong with the "equal" group of the non-whites, but probably at a lower level. The white liberal elite calls the shots, and this hierarchy gives it the manpower to restructure society based on multiculturalism and (everyone else's) more-or-less equality.