Friday, July 6, 2012

Silence In Front Of an Atrocity Is Worse Than the Atrocity


I took the photo above in a subway station. It is right there, in our face, two lesbians having a moment. A match.com ad for gays and lesbians, right next to a run-of-the-mill ad for a bank (National Bank of Canada, to be exact). Actually, a run-of-the-mill bank ad for gays and lesbians - "Visit us and find your savings" it beckons. I sat down to contemplate this. Gays are boldly going where they've never gone before: into our daily lives, along our main streets, in schools, churches, television shows. A woman was sitting on the other side of the bench, and I said to her, "Can you believe that we have to look at this, on a subway ad?" I took a risk, but I decided that being quiet in front of this atrocity was worse than the atrocity.

Surprisingly (this is multi-culti Toronto after all) she agreed with me. "I keep my eyes averted, and try not to stand too close to the poster," she said. That looks like it could be difficult, since, unlike me, it sounded as if this was a regular subway stop for the woman.

The aggressive homosexual movement will never become mainstream. Toronto had the "Gay Pride" parade this past week-end, which takes over the whole downtown. As he had announced, Toronto's Mayor Ford did not attend. He "planned" his trip to coincide with his family holiday in the lake regions of Ontario.

Mayor Ford "homophobe." What else can he be?

Recently, the pathetic CNN "reporter" Anderson Cooper, with his adolescent giggle and "danger zone" reporting, melodramatically announced: "The fact is, I am gay." Who didn't know that? He never made a secret of his "orientation," talking about his boyfriend like a giddy girl. I think this "outing" is his paranoia, where he can sense the negative mood against homosexuals, and like a spoilt and stubborn adolescent (the mental state of all homosexuals?) insists that "this is what I am."

Anderson Cooper, Hero

The useless Main Stream Media (via the Daily Mail) puts its arm around his shoulder with:
Cooper's sexuality has long been an open secret in TV circles, but for him to state it publicly is a brave and bold move.
What chutzpah he has!

Other useless "journalists" are saying that he "came out" for the ratings. Why would he do that? It will probably bring down his ratings, since ordinary people are not sympathetic to open homosexuals, unless they are the semi-funny sitcom actors on Will and Grace (and it is not "the gays" who make that show but the two ditzy straight women Grace and Karen, with their perennial gaffes).

Grace and Karen, from the sitcom Will and Grace. Ditzy straight women,
just the right kind of female friends for gays, and the right kind of
characters to take the attention off the gays so that straight viewers,
mostly female, can watch a "gay" show.