Tuesday, October 31, 2006
growing up, and doing what's right for me....
Monday, October 30, 2006
why i didn't go to the statue of liberty....
Sunday, October 29, 2006
my response...to the bilble and the homsexual....
We sometimes use the Bible to our advantage when it can be a disadvantage
Terrance O. Gilbert PVAMU Alumnus, Freelance Journalist
In response to Otis Clayborne’s editorial that appeared, in the October 26th issue of The Panther, I wanted to offer more of a personal backed by professional opinion.
Everyone is entitle to believe what they want to believe, live how they want, and worship who they want, for it is a right afforded to us by being citizens of the United States and America, and in my opinion a God-given right.
It’s amazing how we (the African-American race) can magically use the bible to be the sole research for whatever topic we are arguing. Mr. Clayborne, you cited the same old typical scriptures, that all of straight society always quotes at the GLBT community. Leviticus 18 (man shall not lie with man), well this is my first argument I have laid with a few men in my 5 years of being openly gay with myself, family, and friends, I have never laid with a man a woman, but yet as another man my equal, for if I wanted to lay with a man as a woman I would get a woman. For you must be very careful because each scripture you use can be distorted for the fact of making the person challenging you look good.
While you were reading into your Bible so in depth did you happen to look over a few more of my scriptures that society often conveniently ignores, hmmm let’s see; Leviticus 19:27 You shall not shave around the sides of your head, nor shall you disfigure the edges of your beard. 28 You shall not make and cuttings in your flesh for the dead nor tattoo any marks on you. I am the Lord. For the most part we all get nice tapers, even cuts, and fades, so is this greater than homosexuality? What percent of the student body have some type of tattoo or piercing on their bodies, or was it only the class of 2002 that came to PVAMU and many of us made the infamous trips to Houston in the middle of the night for tatts and tongue rings both gat and straight?
It is the same Bible that was used by slave owners to justify the oppression of black slaves. So where do we as a people draw the line, do we simply just pick and choose what gets us into heaven and what does not? It is sad that so many of my peers preach what they want to instead of try to unite and find common ground when it comes to understanding the Source.
I often wonder when I read articles and editorials like the Mr. Claybornes’ I just have to remember that like many of my other peers it’s just a repeat of homophobic rhetoric recited by their pastors, and parents. It seems that anyone who challenges the rhetoric or the word must be a non-believer of a devil. The truth is when it comes to many topics and issues in the Bible, people often quote scriptures they like or is fitting for the situation, often without any knowledge of the real facts.
I am an openly gay homosexual black man living in Texas of all places, and life has not been a walk in the park. It is wrong immorally for me to love another man, yet it is okay for out community leaders, pastors, political figures, and parents to lie, cheat and steal. If no one else has said it I have. We can focus time and energy on slamming the gay community with irrelevant issues and use the Bible in pitiful attempts to justify ignorance. Walk around PVAMU and I promise you will find many more things along with homosexuality that indeed the Bible condemns.
In conclusion Jesus never discusses homosexuality anywhere in the Bible. I am a true believer in the word, and I have my own personal relationship with GOD, and I am on my own journey to a heaven that I truly believe exist. I just like everyone else was created out of sin, and I am not perfect, but at the end of the day when it is all said and done for Terrance Omar` Gilbert, God himself will have the last word. We must fist all learn to love each other as brothers and sisters.
Saturday, October 28, 2006
The Bible and the homosexual
The Bible declares in Hosea 4:6, "My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge."
E.L. Bynum, pastor of the Tabernacle Baptist Church in Lubbock, Texas, once said, "Many years ago it was not proper to speak in public about homosexuality. It was something that polite, decent people just did not talk about. They knew it existed, but they knew it was wrong. Religious people knew the Bible condemned it as a sin. Perhaps, too many Christians have been silent too long on the subject. In the last 20, years there has been tremendous change in public attitudes. This has come about through the influence of magazines, newspapers, and books, which have advocated a soft and sympathetic attitude toward this sin. Some doctors, psychiatrists, and psychologists have defended homosexuality. It has had an impact on public opinion. Now, the homosexuals are coming out in the open and bragging about their practice. Many "gay parades" have been held. Some cities have had "Gay Pride Week."
Webster defines homosexuality as being "characterized by a tendency to direct sexual desire toward another of the same sex." E. L. Bynum speaks the truth. Christians have been silent too long on this subject and it's high time that we discuss and expose it. Before I get into this, know that regardless of what man says about homosexuality, a true Bible believer must turn to the Bible for God's truth on the subject. It is here we will find God's eternal truth, which should settle this matter forever.
We find the first mention of homosexuality in Genesis 19:1-5. In this passage, we find that God has sent two angels, who appeared as men, to Sodom to warn Lot of the city's impending doom. Once the angels entered Lot's house, the men of Sodom surrounded the house and asked him, "Where are the men which came in to thee this night? Bring them out unto us, that we may know them." It is clear that the Bible uses the word "know" many times to describe a sex act between two individuals. "And Adam knew Eve his wife; and she conceived, and bare Cain," and, "Cain knew his wife; and she conceived, and bare Enoch" (Gen. 4:1, 17). Lot offered to give the men of Sodom his two unmarried daughters, which had not "known man," but of course they were not interested in women. They wanted men because they were sodomites. Then, shortly after, we find that God destroyed the city with fire and brimstone.
In the book of Leviticus, we find two explicit scriptures stating God's view on homosexuality. "Thou shalt not lie with mankind, as with womankind: it is abomination" (Lev. 18:22). "If a man also lie with mankind as he lieth with a woman, both of them have committed an abomination: they shall surely be put to death" (Lev. 20:13).
In the book of Romans, chapter one, homosexuality is pictured as being at the end of the road. It is at the lowest level of human depravity. For this cause, God gave them up unto vile affections, for even their women did change the natural use into that which is against nature. Likewise also the men, leaving the natural use of the woman, burned in their lust toward another; men with men working that which is unseemly, and receiving in themselves that recompense of their error which was met" (Romans 1: 26-27).
Homosexual ministers and ministers who condone homosexuality have written many articles defending its practice, but they never bother to explain Romans one. The reason is obvious. It cannot be explained in any way. It must either be ignored or denied. Widespread homosexuality in a society is a sign that God has given them up. If America continues to follow the widespread homosexual trend, it will destroy our civilization but, if you're homosexual, I have good news. Acts 3:19 says, "Repent ye therefore and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out." I strongly encourage you to not only follow this scripture, but to get involved in a Holy Ghost filled church that preaches every inch of the Bible.
i heart new york...
nyc is great. i am so ready for my big move to the city that never sleeps. i returned to TX last week for what is turing out to be my final trip to Texas as a Texan. new york was never a place I saw myself living until recently. the city for some reason became so attractive, and I had to see what it was all about. upon arrival i was in love with the city. new york city is like no other city in the world. so many people, so many things, and so much to see. part of what shaped my idea of nyc was trey, who changed the way i thought about things. it feels so good to have someone in yuor life that can show you things, someone you can talk to, and someone who when you are making the biggest move of you life, is going to be there to help you, and truly be there. my trip to new york was great, I told myself I was not going to be a tourist, but there were some sites I just had to see, I had to have my cupcakes from the magnolia bakery, and visit times square. it did help shape many things that will be diffet=rent from tx, for example i must now prepare to take little packets of mustarf with me everywhere, becasue it is unheard of on burgers in nyc for some strange reason....??
Updating This Weekend...
Thursday, October 19, 2006
Boy in the city....
Sunday, October 15, 2006
'Gayby boom' in Houston
City a favorite spot for gays and lesbians to raise families
By CYNTHIA LEONOR GARZA
Copyright 2006 Houston Chronicle
Four-month-old Jamison Dillemuth is too young to know the difference, but he looks like a mix between both of his mothers.
When Jamie Dillemuth, 29, and Baby Djojonegoro, 38, decided several years ago to start a family, they asked Djojonegoro's brother to be a sperm donor for the child Dillemuth would carry.
"The child will be part of us, both of us, not just Jamie," said Djojonegoro, who moved to Houston from Indonesia two decades ago when she entered college. Dillemuth, who is originally from the San Francisco Bay area, moved to Houston in 2000.
"It does have the stereotype of the cowboy town, but it has pockets of interesting, nonmainstream culture and people," Djojonegoro said. "And of course, in Montrose we feel very comfortable."
Despite its conservative atmosphere — voters here overwhelmingly helped pass a state constitutional ban on gay marriage, and Harris County judges tend to frown upon gay adoptions — Houston has become a favorite settling-down spot for same-sex couples raising children.
A study based on the most recent U.S. Census data found that gay couples here and in two other Texas cities — San Antonio and Fort Worth-Arlington — are more likely to have children than almost any other place in the country.
According to the study published in The Gay and Lesbian Atlas, considered the most comprehensive demographic look at where same-sex couples are distributed across the nation, the three Texas metropolitan areas rank nationally in the top five cities with the highest percentage of gay couples raising children. San Antonio is first, Houston is fourth, and Fort Worth-Arlington is fifth.
The numbers include children who are being raised by a biological parent living with a same-sex partner and those adopted by gay couples.
Nationally, an estimated 1 in 4 same-sex-couple households reports having children younger than 18 living in the home, according to Gary J. Gates, a researcher who co-authored the Atlas.
Cultural norms
"In general, same-sex couples and their kids live where other people have kids," Gates said.Because of cultural norms, minority same-sex couples are more likely to have children than their white counterparts, which may partially explain why gay couples in Texas — a state with a large Hispanic population — are more likely to have children, Gates said.
Houston lawyer Mitchell Katine, who together with his partner is raising two adopted children, sees a dichotomy in Texas between the conservative political climate and what is happening socially.
"I have to realize that a lot of people don't understand how two men who love each other" can also want children, said Katine, who defended two gay Houston men whose case led to the U.S. Supreme Court decision declaring the state's sodomy law unconstitutional.
"As the children get older and they start asking more questions, I'm expecting that we'll have a few questions that mommy-and-daddy families don't get," Katine said. "I don't think they're going to be difficult to answer, but I do expect that my children are going to have a few extra bumps in the road."
Two baby booms
Children with gay parents mostly fall into two groups: those with parents in previous heterosexual relationships and those with parents who formed families either through reproduction technologies, such as artificial insemination, or through adoption.In recent decades there have been two baby booms among gays — or "gayby booms" — said Beth Teper, executive director of the San Francisco-based COLAGE, Children of Lesbians and Gays Everywhere. The first happened in the 1980s when lesbians began using those reproduction techno-
logies. The second boom came in the 1990s when more gay men began adopting children.
Judges' willingness to approve adoptions by gay couples varies across Texas, and many gay couples don't risk going through Harris County's conservative courts. Katine adopted his children through a San Antonio judge, as did Joe and Stephen Milano, partners of 15 years who are raising two adopted children, Ruben, 5, and Alex, 3.
What bothers Stephen Milano the most about the gay-adoption debate is the "idea that gay people are somehow morally deficient and are, therefore, incapable of raising children. Or gay people are not stable and cannot, therefore, provide stable, loving homes that children need."
The families of gay people, many times, "lack the luxury to be as complicated or as dysfunctional as other families," said Abigail Garner, 34, an advocate for children of gay parents and the author of Families Like Mine. She also runs familieslikemine.com.
There's pressure to be perfect because the consequences — a parent might face losing custody of a child — can be real, Garner said.
Even a decade ago, the children of gay parents may never have expected their family to fit the "mainstream American family image," said Ramona Faith Oswald, an associate professor of family studies at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Legislative battles in recent years have propelled same-sex issues into the national consciousness, and "kids are listening and making their own sense of it," Oswald said.
Chloe Tippet, 15, who is being raised by two lesbians, has overheard the issue of gay marriage at Bellaire High School.
She said she once heard a female classmate question a boy's sexuality because he said he supports same-sex marriage.
"I guess some people think that anybody who thinks that gays and lesbians should have rights must be a gay or lesbian person, and it's kind of silly," she said.
"Sometimes, people will ask me, they'll see Mom and Karen together and they'll be like, 'Are your parents gay?' " Chloe said. She answers, "Well, yeah, they are."
Chloe doesn't argue about it. All she asks is that they respect her mother's choice. That usually ends the questions.
"I don't make them carry my flags for me," Michele DeChant, 49, said of Chloe and Tristan, 18, her children from a previous marriage. "You don't have to be the poster child for gay parents. They'll have their own battles to fight."
No evidence of unfitness
To April Gonzalez, her father's partner of 11 years, Wes Karnes,has been "just like a regular mother" while her own biological father, Mike Gonzalez, has been a typical dad, she said."In other people's bigoted minds, having gay parents — I'm not a normal person. I can't be raised as a normal child. There's going to be something mentally wrong with me, or they're going to turn me gay," said April, 17, a University of Houston freshman. "I'm just the same as everybody else."
The American Psychological Association takes the position that there is no empirical evidence that gay adults are unfit parents on the basis of their sexual orientation.
A review of research suggests that the development, adjustment and well-being of children with lesbian and gay parents are not markedly different from those of children with heterosexual parents, according to the association.
Taunted about parents
When April was younger and the family lived in the Port Arthur area, her two dads kept quiet about their relationship.There were moments living in small-town East Texas when April didn't want Wes coming along when her father picked her up from a friend's house. And in middle school, she was taunted by classmates about her parents' sexuality.
The stress "didn't come from us being gay and living our lives as a family. The stress came from other people telling her she has a faggot for a father," Mike Gonzalez said.
Living in Houston in recent years has been great, he said. Mike has been active in a gay softball league, and the family became active in the Houston Gay and Lesbian Parents group.
April, who graduated from high school a year early in May, said that in retrospect, having two fathers has "made me a stronger and more mature person."
Maybe next year Houston...
Cowboys all over Texans in 34-6 victory
Terrell Owens contributes three touchdowns in runaway win for Dallas
by John McClain
Copyright 2006 Houston Chronicle
IRVING - As the players walked slowly toward the tunnel that would take them to the visitors' dressing room at Texas Stadium, a guy wearing a Texans cap and shirt shouted to the players, "Ya'll are making it tough to be a Texans fan."
The Texans are testing the patience and loyalty of their fans after Sunday's second-half collapse against the Dallas Cowboys.
In turning a 6-3 halftime lead into a 34-6 defeat, the Texans continued to be roadkill. They haven't won away from Reliant Stadium since December 2004.
The Texans' latest defeat was caused by an abysmal second-half performance in which they were outscored 31-0 and destroyed mentally and physically by a Dallas team that had been as wet as the weather in the first two quarters.
"It's very frustrating because they just kicked our butts in the second half," coach Gary Kubiak said.
To add insult to injuries suffered by defensive tackle Seth Payne (torn knee ligament), offensive tackle Zach Wiegert (sprained knee), safety Glenn Earl (sprained neck) and offensive tackle Eric Winston (dislocated finger), Terrell Owens caught three touchdown passes in the second half — two from the unpopular Drew Bledsoe and one from popular backup, Tony Romo.
"It was a tale of two halves, and we got ours kicked," defensive tackle Travis Johnson said.
The trouble began for the Texans on Dallas' first series in the third quarter. The Cowboys went 68 yards in nine plays and took the lead for good when Bledsoe threw a 3-yard touchdown pass to Owens. He ran a fade route and took the ball away from cornerback Lewis Sanders.
At that point, the Texans (1-4) came unhinged. In the second half, they committed all seven of their penalties and turned the ball over three times on two David Carr interceptions and a fumble by kickoff returner Edell Shepherd. The Cowboys (3-2) capitalized by converting the turnovers into 17 points and a 27-7 lead early in the fourth quarter.
"We had a good feeling at halftime," defensive end N.D. Kalu said. "You could see it in our eyes. There was a lot of energy in the dressing room. That's why the second half was so disappointing."
Sunday wasn't the first time the Texans have collapsed in the third quarter. It all four losses they've given up a touchdown on the opponents' opening possession after halftime.
"The first drive of the second half usually sets the tone," Kalu said. "What happened to us is the sign of a young team.
"When something goes bad, our attitude is like, 'Here we go again.' Subconsciously, of course. We have to get out of that mode. The only way to do it is to have some success in those kind of situations."
It was quite a turnaround from a first-half performance in which the Texans played terrific defense and went to the dressing room with a three-point advantage, thanks to a pair of Kris Brown field goals, including a clutch 48-yarder as time expired.
"We challenged ourselves at halftime," Cowboys linebacker Bradie James said. "They came out firing and really wanted to win, but once we made our halftime adjustments, we knew what we had to do. And we did it."
And they did it on both sides of the ball and on special teams. Safety Roy Williams set the tone for the Dallas defense with big hits. The offense scored on five of six second-half possessions. Running back Julius Jones finished with 106 of Dallas' 170 yards rushing.
Bledsoe, who was booed unmercifully by the fans in the first half, threw two touchdown passes in the second. Owens, Terry Glenn and Patrick Crayton caught five passes each.
"We have our own issues to deal with, so if we're not scoring points on every drive, we're not happy," Bledsoe said. "They decided to come after us and blitz us quite a bit, and we didn't handle it very well early. Then we made some plays against it and started having some success."
Success is a foreign concept to a Texans running game that was even more pathetic than usual with 34 yards on 17 carries.
The passing game couldn't carry the team in this game because David Carr threw two interceptions that set up Cowboys touchdown drives. Carr wasn't sacked, but he still threw for only 128 yards before coach Gary Kubiak replaced him with Sage Rosenfels, who was 8-of-11 for 70 yards in mop-up duty.
Thursday, October 12, 2006
Learning to let it go....
One thing I have learned over the past couple of years, it is to let shit go. I have been here with my family for the past two weeks, and now I truly understand why I left home three years ago. In my family we all have different yet somewhat alike personallities. As I get ready to leave the state for a new state, and life in a new city, I sometimes feel bad for wanting to leave. I have had to often ask Terrance are you ashamed of where you have come from? No I am not, but not many people understand the mentallity of my family and people from my hometown. I am from Bryan, where it is a mid-sized city, with small town ways. Everybody knows everybody, and everyone's business. Growing up was hard for me I was alone most of the time, and I had a lot of issues that I have ended up dealing with on my own. When I became an adult I moved to Houston, TX, I developed a completely new lifestyle not just with me being gay, but with developing a "good life" for myself. I worked hard, attened college, made friends and associates as became a model young gay black man. Now that I am at home I see so many things that anger me, yet sometimes make me proud to be the person I am. My family accepts my lifestyle, but they have never really had to deal with it that much, because I have chosen to keep it to myself, and not force it upon them. I became more cosmo, started dressing better, and eating better foods. I developed a passion for mice things, and great style, something that my hometown lacks. As I look around I see so many people that went to school with doing nothing with thier lives. My family is content with their lives, and I am not. I don't want to be one of these black gay men that leave home, and never return or become so caught up in other things within the "lifestyle" that they get out of touch with reality. I want to be a man of subatance, style and someone who can respect where he came from, and use it the postive and negitive to fuel my rocket to succeed in EVERYTHING. Will I every have a great realtionship with my family, no, will I do all I can to work on it yes. But I have learned, and I do know sometimes you just have to let shit go....
Wednesday, October 11, 2006
National Coming Out Day...
Five years ago I came out. Coming out was something that shaped my life. I was a scared and confused 16 year old. I always had the belief that being gay was not something that you spoke of, and that it would cause more harm than good. Unlike many others I knew I was gay and acepted it within myself and my own heart very early on.
I will never forget when I told my mother, who already had suspected it. When I told her she was speachless for a few seconds, then she told me just becasue I was gay it didn't change anything. Even after those word from her mouth, and her supportive additude, I still fear rejection from her. I quickly got comfortable with telling others, which was good but made high school a living hell for me. I droped out of high school, attained my GED, and never looked back. Coming out has to be one of the hardest things for others as hard as it was for me. You have to be ready to accept the fact that no one might not understand, you almost, aways will be judged in one way or another, and you never know what to expect. People will say that they love you, and mean something completely different. For the most oart my closest friends were in denial, and once they saw it was a serious matter they accepted it. I will never forget the day my god father, the only real father I have had in my life for a long period of time told me that it was a part of the life that god wanted me to live for me to be gay. This was coming from old school, a deacon in the church, and someone that knew the bible from cover to cover. That convesation gave me a fuck the world additude. If others choose not to accept me for being the person god created me to be then fuck em and I don't need them in my life. Coming out was hard, but if I had to do it all over I would have still come out. I could not imagine living a lie or living in the closet because of fears of the blanket that society places on the gay community. Being gay I have found many more families, I have traveled, met interesting individuals, and been able to make differences in my communities. I have been the victim of a hate crime, and that gave me more of a voice and taught me that things happen to us and place the power in our hands to change things. Life is hard, but it is easier being OUT....Happy National Coming Out Day...
New Concept...
Tuesday, October 10, 2006
Trey's Birthday...
Sunday, October 08, 2006
House Of Dereon...Unique I must say....
Keyshia Cole, I never knew what I was missin....
Saturday, October 07, 2006
Just another day...
Thursday, October 05, 2006
Drunk on power, GOP wercks the public trust
Published on: 10/04/06
Cynthia Tucker -AJC
Drunkenness is getting a bad name.
A couple of months ago, Mel Gibson blamed his anti-Semitic diatribe on a state of intoxication. After resigning abruptly on Friday, former U.S. Rep. Mark Foley (R-Fla.) released a statement saying that he was going into alcohol rehab, suggesting that his sexually explicit overtures to teenagers in e-mails and instant messages were the result of a tendency to over-imbibe.
Presumably, however, Foley was stone-cold sober when he pushed for harsher sanctions against adults who do just what he did. As co-chairman of the Congressional Missing and Exploited Children's Caucus, Foley had achieved national recognition for his efforts to protect children against sexual predators. Indeed, he was a champion of legislation that makes it a crime under some circumstances to use the Internet to entice someone under the age of 18 to engage in sexual activity.
No word yet on whether the House leadership was too drunk to expose Foley last year and force him to resign then. But I'm guessing that House Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) and his colleagues were also intoxicated— with their own power. The GOP's stranglehold on the legislative and executive branches of government has not been good for them or for the country. It has bred hubris and encouraged abuses of the public trust.
On Sunday, recognizing a widening political scandal, Hastert asked Attorney General Alberto Gonzales to conduct a criminal inquiry into Foley's conduct. Earlier, though, the Republican leadership had tried to evade responsibility — didn't know, couldn't have known. Among other things, they've said repeatedly that the communications they learned about last fall were not sexually explicit, but merely "over-friendly." Some top Republicans — notably former House Speaker Newt Gingrich — even blamed the failure to expose Foley on political correctness. Gingrich told Fox News talk show host Chris Wallace that the GOP leadership would have been "accused of gay-bashing" if they had "overly aggressively reacted" to Foley's e-mails.
Nonsense. Let's be clear about what happened here.
A year ago, U.S. Rep. Rodney Alexander (R-La.) learned about message traffic between Foley and a 16-year-old page who worked for Alexander. The congressman turned to Hastert's staff, who notified U.S. Rep. John Shimkus (R-Ill.), chairman of the House Page Board. Eventually, Majority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio) and U.S. Rep. Thomas Reynolds (R-N.Y.), head of the National Republican Congressional Committee, were also told about the communications.
In a series of Internet exchanges, Foley inquired about the page's age, asked what the page wanted as a birthday gift and requested a photograph. For the sake of argument, let's pretend the 16-year-old was a girl. (That removes the issue of homosexuality, which tends to distort the debate.) What responsible adult doesn't view that communication from a middle-aged member of Congress as alarmingly inappropriate?
Hastert, by the way, is a former high school teacher and wrestling coach. He can't spot a predator? (A sexual predator is just that, regardless of the gender of his or her prey.)
Instead of immediately demanding Foley's resignation as co-chairman of the exploited children's caucus and launching a full-fledged investigation, House leaders simply warned him to cease communications with that one teenager. They accepted his assurances that he was just a friendly guy whose actions didn't merit further scrutiny. So when Foley's sexually explicit messages were revealed in the last several days, GOP leaders found themselves accused of a cover-up.
Of course, sexual misconduct is not the sole property of Republicans. Bill Clinton tarnished his own legacy with lechery and lies. In August 1998, I wrote: "... if Clinton remains in office, his will be a presidency badly diminished, lacking moral authority, unable to inspire trust."
Former New Jersey Gov. Jim McGreevey, a Democrat, took arrogance to new heights when he placed his lover on the state payroll as homeland security adviser. Lacking American citizenship, Golan Cipel was not even qualified to sit in on high-level security briefings.
But misconduct is all the more likely when one party is clutching all the keys to power. From Tom DeLay to Bob Ney to Duke Cunningham to Mark Foley, the GOP Congress has been rife with corruption — a cesspool of arrogance, recklessness and disdain for the public.
Power is intoxicating, and an inebriated GOP Congress has driven right off the cliff.
• Cynthia Tucker is editorial page editor. Her column appears Wednesdays and Sundays.
Making it hard for the rest of us...
As far the the page program is concerned, out of all of the footage I have seen over the past couple of days, I have not seen one black page. Now that I think about it I never had even heard of the program until this week, and as one associate pointed out to me it seems that it is yet another grooming program for upper middle class and rich spoiled kids....Foley wants to used the excuse that he was molested as a child, that it is sooo hard being an "out" republican, well that is bullshit...
I came out to a southern, single mother at age sixteen. I had fears that almost anyone would have when coming out at age sixteen. It is often said tha black mother and fathers take it harder than others. When I think of how hard it was to accept the feelings, and deal with them alone, and face them head on like a real man, it makes me sick to my stomach when I see these men that seem to have it all, amke such a big deal, and have people make excuses for their bad judgment calls.....
The rest of America who is already not so friendly nad caring to the thoughts, rights and concerns of GLBT Americans, will become more stupid and really not want us to have equal rights. When you see people like Foley and McGreevy enjoying their lives, having their cake and eating it too, and not caring about those of us who live this hard life everyday, and have to prove to people we are human beings, not aminals, or children of the devil.
Trust me this is notthe last you will see nor hear from me on these matters....