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- Newsgroups: soc.motss
- Path: sparky!uunet!noc.near.net!lynx!random.ccs.northeastern.edu!news
- From: gandalf@dworkin.ccs.northeastern.edu (Thomas M Farrell)
- Subject: Re: Homosexuals raising children
- In-Reply-To: mdrayton@sr.hp.com's message of Wed, 18 Nov 1992 20: 07:25 GMT
- Message-ID: <GANDALF.92Nov19101350@damon.ccs.northeastern.edu>
- Sender: news@random.ccs.northeastern.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: damon-gateway.ccs.northeastern.edu
- Organization: College of Computer Science, Northeastern University
- References: <25848@sybase.sybase.com> <BxxH8E.D2t@scd.hp.com>
- Date: Thu, 19 Nov 1992 15:13:50 GMT
- Lines: 32
-
- In article <BxxH8E.D2t@scd.hp.com> mdrayton@sr.hp.com (Mike Drayton) writes:
-
- Chris Black (black@lester.sybase.com) wrote:
- > In article <BxM8Cz.Jp0@scd.hp.com>, mdrayton@sr.hp.com (Mike Drayton) writes:
- >
- > |> I finally said "I'm gay" to my 9-year-old son...
- >
- > One thing you should be aware of (we should all be aware of; it's
- > pretty horrible) is that a lot of kids today use "gay" as an all-purpose
- > synonym for "bad". They'll say "that's so gay" in a situation where I
- > and my friends in our youth might have said "that's so stupid". So
- > maybe it's partly about the associations the word has in his circle.
-
- Yeah, I imagine so. I haven't heard things like "that's so gay" in
- person when I'm around kids that age, but I heard this morning that
-
- I don't know about you, but I've heard it from just about all ages. I heard it
- from some kids that looked like they belonged in kindergarden on the way home
- from work one day... I spoke to their mother about it and she reprimanded them.
- I hear it periodically from some of my closest friends... who are using it
- less and less because they're coming to realize that whenever they use the
- words "that's so gay" in a negative manner I'm going to chew them out about
- sensativity to minorities for the next hour. Last year at Thanksgiving dinner,
- one of my aunts (who was the hostess that year) said it, and I looked her
- in the eye and told her that she should not say offensive things like that.
- She apologized. (She did not yet know I was gay, either.)
-
- My point is that yes, people say these things often, and it desensatizes our
- kids and dehumanizes us. However, it has been my experience that polite but
- firm statements that this is not acceptable behavior or speech can have a
- positive effect on those around us.
-
-