Talk:Slogans of anti-gay ideology
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[edit] Archives
- /Archive 1
Note: Old talk about the AKFD controversy that originally appeared here may now be found at Talk:AKFD and subpages thereof.
[edit] Pro-Gay Slogans
I think we need to start a page for pro-lgbtq slogans as well, just to balance things out. There are just as many slogans on our side as their are on the anti-lgbtq side, so I suggest they come out (ha, ha, horrible word play). I like "Gays Bash Back". (August 10, 2005)
[edit] Homophobic hate speech
Homophobic hate speech (Revision as of 18:01, 20 Feb 2004)
The neutrality of this article is disputed.
Homophobic hate speech is hate speech or is thoughtcrime directed against homosexuals which is taken to be homophobic.
This hate speech may refer to homosexuality in general, such as queer, fag, or poof. In an effort to neutralise homophobia, these words began to be adopted and redefined by the homosexual community in the 1980s, especially the word queer. All these words, though widely used by the homosexual community as a positive affirmation of their sexuality, can still be taken as hate speech in some contexts. One such context is within phrases or anti-gay slogans used by groups with a homophobic agenda, another common form of hate speech.
Hate speech directed at homosexuals may also refer to specific sexual acts that the speaker associates with homosexuals (e.g., fudgepacker, which refers to anal sex).
Occasionally, entire books which attack homosexuals and attempt to justify anti-homosexual views have been described as hate speech. A recent example was Sexual Revolution in South Africa: The Pink Agenda: The Ruin of the Family (2001) by Christine McCafferty and Peter Hammond, a South African book. In 2002, the sale of this was restricted to individuals aged 18 and over, though many were calling for it to be banned outright, accusing it of inciting hatred. Homophobic hate speech is now a criminal offence in many countries.
See also: homosexuality, anti-homosexual views, homophobia, homosexuality and morality, religion and homosexuality, List of sexual slurs
External links The South African Film and Publication Board on The Pink Agenda
--User:24.45.99.191, 21:26, 20 Feb 2004
The term "thoughtcrime" seems a tad absurd. As though this is 1984, and the "Queer Squad" is rushing to stop anyone who dares think against them. --AWF
[edit] Too generic phrasing
Not everyone would agree with both:
- Homosexuality is wrong is an "anti-gay slogan", and
- Every anti-gay slogan is hate speech
There is a small, but significant contingent of "love the sinner, hate the sin" folks who merely object to homosexual behavior on religious grounds and who believe themselves to be free of "hate" towards homosexual persons.
The article should reflect this, rather than endorse the idea that all opposition to homosexuality is an expression of hate. --Uncle Ed 20:16 Mar 19, 2003 (UTC)
- Hmm... How about... Homosexuality is wrong is an "anti-gayness slogan"? If you hate homosexual behaviour, and express opposition to it as a result, could that not still be considered hate speech, albeit directed towards a behaviour rather than a person? Incidentally, I think we should be more careful to distinguish between homosexual orientation (not all homosexuals engage in homosexual behaviour) and homosexual behaviour (not all homosexual behaviour is acted out by homosexuals). So in fact, there is a distinction to be made not only between the people and the activity, but also between thoughts and actions. From what you write, it's not always entirely clear (to me, at least) what you are referring to. -- Oliver P. 13:39 Mar 20, 2003 (UTC)
I think "Homosexuality is wrong" is not an anti-gay slogan since it isn't even a slogan; it is just an expression of opinion. AxelBoldt 19:14 Mar 20, 2003 (UTC)
[edit] Sebastian Bach's web
What the point of the external links "Sebastian Bach's official website"? --Ann O'nyme 06:23, 31 Aug 2003 (UTC)
- I agree. The article discussing his wearing of the t-shirt is interesting, but the web page doesn't have anything obvious about this matter and is horrendously ugly at times. The first link should be removed. --Shallot 20:58, 16 Sep 2003 (UTC)
[edit] "AIDS kills fags dead"
originally from Talk:Homophobic hate speech
Aids kills fags dead is not, imo, "homophobic hate speech". Here is the wiki definition of "homophobia" : "Homophobia" is an irrational hatred and fear of homosexuals or a similar feeling towards homosexual practices or homosexuality itself. I can't see any way in which anyone can say, honestly, that the quote "AIDS kills fags dead" is ALWAYS homophobic. In fact, in my experience, and certainly in the case of MR. Bach, it is used in a comedic fashion, without hatred or fear being the motivation. Additionally, I can't see how this quote can be viewed as irrational, being that it is technically accurate. The fact that it is harsh and profoundly un-p.c. does not make it irrational, hateful, or inspired by fear. That's my 2 cents. JackLynch
Well, it may not always be technically homophobic, but the term "homophobic" is regularly applied to any attitude in opposition to or disagreement with homosexuality advocates and supporters. I've even heard it applied to, for example, males who avoid public showers, so I don't see why this is any different. The term is used pretty loosely. Anyway, is there a better place to place the information? Maybe anti-gay slogan would be better. I can put the information there and change the redirects if people agree. Daniel Quinlan 18:44, Nov 17, 2003 (UTC)
Talk:AKFD/merge has some discussion by people who agree with JackLynch, as well as people who disagree with him. When considering whether people agree, it would be useful if the views of these people were taken into account. Martin 19:39, 17 Nov 2003 (UTC)
I think "anti-gay" slogan is prob the best place for it, but only if it can be linked to by typing "aids kills fags dead" into search. Thats how I came across all this stuff anyways. I like to type wild and wooly stuff into the search, and find scholorly explanations and talk page debates on the random and perverse subjects of my desiring. And I would like to think I am not alone, among the lurking public. JackLynch
- Okay, I'll move the redirects and current text later tonight unless someone beats me to it. Daniel Quinlan 00:22, Nov 18, 2003 (UTC)
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- Done. Daniel Quinlan 04:14, Nov 18, 2003 (UTC)
(to Martin) My plan is to merge the information into anti-gay slogan (which seems like a better location than homophobic hate speech in retrospect) and then move all of the discussion into a series of numbered articles, probably Talk:anti-gay slogan/Archive-AKFD-1 or something like that. Daniel Quinlan 02:59, Nov 18, 2003 (UTC)
- Why numbered archives? I understand the desire for "AKFD", but I'd prefer AKFD-Redirect, AKFD-Merge, etc. Martin 18:37, 18 Nov 2003 (UTC)
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- Because there are a lot of articles to get moved. If you want to take a shot at categorizing it all, be my guest. I'm tempted to seriously push for them to be simply deleted. Daniel Quinlan 07:38, Nov 19, 2003 (UTC)
- I'm just saying, I'd rather move talk:AKFD/Redirect to Talk:anti-gay slogan/Archive-AKFD-Redirect rather than Talk:anti-gay slogan/Archive-AKFD-1. I don't expect anyone to spend time categorising, but where they're already categorised, might as well not keep that. IMO.
- If you don't do this, I probably will, but I want to hang off to make sure this article is stable at this new location. This will be the third episode of attempted merging, so I don't want to prematurely assume that it'll be successful. Martin 18:44, 19 Nov 2003 (UTC)
- There is more to gay- bashing than one man; and anti- gay slogans are not merely used by "a handful" of people, nor only in the USA. Andy Mabbett 11:33, 19 Nov 2003 (UTC)
- If this one is actually used by more than the people mentioned, we haven't found many instances of it. It's an unimportant slogan that would be virtually unknown were it not for the attempts of Fred Phelps (and now Wikipedia's continuing efforts) to publicize it. -- Someone else 11:35, 19 Nov 2003 (UTC)
- Phelps must use a lot of Usenet sock pupets, then. [1]. And, funnily enough, not every occurence of hate- speech is doucmented, let alone occurs, on-line. Andy Mabbett 11:39, 19 Nov 2003 (UTC)
- Yes, I suspect he does, and he certainly succeeds in getting people talking about his words. A usenet post about Phelps or about Bach is hardly a new use. Actual figures would be nice, but I know of no polls. Do you? I think it's evident that most recognize the phrase as ignorant and mean-spirited, don't like to be seen that way, and so its use is limited. -- Someone else 11:48, 19 Nov 2003 (UTC)
- [2] is not about Phelps; and offers evidence that the slogan has been seen on a bumper sticker. Andy Mabbett 12:51, 19 Nov 2003 (UTC)
- Yes, I suspect he does, and he certainly succeeds in getting people talking about his words. A usenet post about Phelps or about Bach is hardly a new use. Actual figures would be nice, but I know of no polls. Do you? I think it's evident that most recognize the phrase as ignorant and mean-spirited, don't like to be seen that way, and so its use is limited. -- Someone else 11:48, 19 Nov 2003 (UTC)
- Phelps must use a lot of Usenet sock pupets, then. [1]. And, funnily enough, not every occurence of hate- speech is doucmented, let alone occurs, on-line. Andy Mabbett 11:39, 19 Nov 2003 (UTC)
- If this one is actually used by more than the people mentioned, we haven't found many instances of it. It's an unimportant slogan that would be virtually unknown were it not for the attempts of Fred Phelps (and now Wikipedia's continuing efforts) to publicize it. -- Someone else 11:35, 19 Nov 2003 (UTC)
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- I can personally verify that it is (or was) a common saying. I personally wrote it as grafitti more than once, and have likewise seen it written by others more than once. I have read a couple of articles on the Sebastian Bach incident, but to be honest I don't think its terribly relevant. I didn't learn of it from him or his circumstances, not do I for a moment assume that he invented it. To be perfectly honest, I am positive that he bought the T-shirt from a vender, probably at an "alternative" clothing store. Oh, and can anybody explain to me in what way "AIDS kills fags dead" is an ignorant phrase? I can't disagree more, as it certainly is not rooted in lack of information or education JackLynch 07:51, 30 Nov 2003 (UTC)
- To answer your last point: when taken at face value, of course, it is quite correct. But two implications that could easily be drawn from it are a) that all gays get AIDs and b) that it's only gays that get AIDs. Both of which are, naturally, ignorant statements. Foolish Mortal 19:21, 6 October 2005 (UTC)
- I can personally verify that it is (or was) a common saying. I personally wrote it as grafitti more than once, and have likewise seen it written by others more than once. I have read a couple of articles on the Sebastian Bach incident, but to be honest I don't think its terribly relevant. I didn't learn of it from him or his circumstances, not do I for a moment assume that he invented it. To be perfectly honest, I am positive that he bought the T-shirt from a vender, probably at an "alternative" clothing store. Oh, and can anybody explain to me in what way "AIDS kills fags dead" is an ignorant phrase? I can't disagree more, as it certainly is not rooted in lack of information or education JackLynch 07:51, 30 Nov 2003 (UTC)
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[edit] Child molestation
From text:
- Statistical evidence shows that homosexuals are less likely than the general population to commit offences of child molestation.
The claim that "evidence shows" really needs to be backed up with at least a web link to a study. --Uncle Ed 19:30, 2 Dec 2003 (UTC)
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- I don't think anybody is gonna find any. Sexual orientation is practically impossible to measure (or at least seems to be, since nobody does a very good job of it) and child molestation rates are even harder. Trying to cross reference the two... would you like to take part in such a scholorly enterprise? I'll help you write your grant request ;) JackLynch 19:33, 2 Dec 2003 (UTC)
This reference says just the opposite: male homosexuals are MORE LIKELY to commit child molestation offences. --Uncle Ed 19:35, 2 Dec 2003 (UTC)
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- I am IMPRESSED! Perhaps the idea that homosexuals are less likely than the general population to commit offences of child molestation should be placed on a page titled pro-gay slogan with an explanation that it is a myth invented by homosexuals, and those who support them :) JackLynch 19:39, 2 Dec 2003 (UTC)
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- The reference of Uncle Ed is the Family Research Council, a conservative christian think tank. The FRC is known for its flawed methods of research: they gather their data from newspapers and use them to conclude for example that 60% of the child molestations are done by homosexuals. [Here] is a study I quickly grabbed from the internet using PubMed. It clearly contradicts Uncle Ed's study. The study I looked up was published in Paediatrics (impact factor 2,71, ranking third in the area of Paediatrics in 2000), the study from FRC are mainly published in Psychological Reports (impact factor 0.277). (The impact factor is the average frequency that an average article is cited in another article in a period of time, say one year.) [Here] is an interesting article about Paul Cameron, the scientist that published the studies that show that homosexuals are more likely to abuse children. - Thorin 0:44, 1 Dec 2004 [CET]
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[edit] I dispute this passage
"Many slogans, including the above, have been used by religious opponents of homosexuality. These have also included "God Hates Fags," "Fear God Not Fags", and "Matthew Shepard Rots In Hell"."
I looked it up, and I can't find any citation of anybody other than mr. phelps using these, and that only on the wikipedia. is this original research, or what? Jack 08:23, 29 Jan 2004 (UTC)
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- Come now, do you honestly think these slogans aren't used? If you want one succinct and recent example, there's this BBC article regarding the controversy brewing in the Anglican church:
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- "Demonstrators gathered outside the venue, some carrying placards with slogans such as God Hates Fags."
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- Nowhere does the article say this was Phelps' brigade, so it's fairly safe to assume that (gasp!) other people also use these slogans. And if you question the use of the slogan by Phelps himself, I question whether you've done any research at all. Hadal 08:43, 29 Jan 2004 (UTC)
Oh, of course some of them are used. I was actually looking hardest at "Matthew Shepard Rots In Hell", since it seems a bit... non-standard. I will remove it if there are no objections with citations. Jack 08:46, 29 Jan 2004 (UTC)
- Alright, I don't know why you're doing this, but hopefully this will appease you:
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- They held signs that read "Fags Die, God Laughs" and "Matthew Shepard Burns in Hell."
- So, to be pedantically correct, the slogan should read "Burns" and not "Rots." If such a trivial discrepancy burdens you so, go ahead and amend it. Amend, not remove. Why not add that new one to the list while you're at it too, eh? (And if you think the slogan as is has never been uttered, I don't know what else to tell you.)
- Anyway, this has been a thoroughly depressing exercise. I won't be returning to it. Hadal 09:32, 29 Jan 2004 (UTC)
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- Thank you for your kind assistance, you've helped improve article quality Jack 10:02, 29 Jan 2004 (UTC)
[edit] Richards Gere's painful pastime?
I hope WP has a good lawyer for when Richard Gere sees this article. He has sued before. Adam 09:45, 29 Jan 2004 (UTC)
- Well, I thought I made it overly biased that he didn't do it, to address just such a concern, when I put it in there. Jack 09:59, 29 Jan 2004 (UTC)
The mere mention of it is defamatory, as any lawyer will tell you. Anyway the article says it is "almost certainly" an urban legend. WP would not have a leg to stand on if he sued. Adam 10:03, 29 Jan 2004 (UTC)
- Thats worrisome... stating the possibility of a documented rumor being accurate is illegal? If your right, the wiki should move to vanuatu, or some place which refuses to extradite or enforce international laws ;) Jack 10:25, 29 Jan 2004 (UTC)
It's not illegal, it's defamatory - don't you know the difference? In any case it's irrelevant to the topic of the article whether anyone puts gerbils up their ass or not. What anti-gay slogan has this got to do with? Adam 10:29, 29 Jan 2004 (UTC)
- hahahaha... it could be seen as a slogan of some kind, but your prob right, its just a generally rude topic. I suppose you did the right thing deleting it, IMO it could go either way, but I'm ok w doing it your way. Jack 10:42, 29 Jan 2004 (UTC)
Do you know if there is any actual documentation of ANYONE doing this? Is there a name for it? It seems a bit far fetched that anybody, even mr. gere, gay or whatever, would do THAT.... Jack 10:44, 29 Jan 2004 (UTC)
- No but there is documentation of the rumor at straightdope
- 63.205.41.128 04:41, 31 Jan 2004 (UTC)
In about 1994 a gay journalist rang every emergency department in the eastern US and asked them if they had ever had a case of a man with a gerbil or other animal in his ass. None of them had. I can probably find the reference somewhere. Adam 11:02, 29 Jan 2004 (UTC)
- right, so thats the anti-gay slogan angle, that this is something horrid invented to pin on gay folks. I've had gay friends and aquaintences over the years, and while none struck me as the type to mistreat a gerbil so, if I somehow became convinced that was a standard homosexual practice they likely engaged in, my friendliness towards them (and homosexuals in general) would likely decline rather dramatically ;) Jack 11:17, 29 Jan 2004 (UTC)
yes but the article isn't Nasty things said about gay men, it is Anti-gay slogan, so you have to be able cite where and when a slogan about gerbil-sex has been used against gay men. Adam 11:31, 29 Jan 2004 (UTC)
- I take it lesbians are not rumored to stuff forest creatures into their orifices in search of the theoretical pleasures of such horrific sado-mascochistic beastiality? This might be a good entry on the urban legend page, but I'm not gonna put it there after what you said about lawsuits... Jack 11:46, 29 Jan 2004 (UTC)
[edit] Merger discussion
Please see Wikipedia talk:LGBT notice board for a discussion about merging and renaming some LGBT articles, including this one. -- Beland 03:52, 9 May 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Obviously Biased
The neutrality of this article is disputed. I am offended by the implication that opposition to homosexual behaviour neccesitates hatred, fear, or contempt directed at homosexuals. Additionally, I have noted the consistent use of the term "same-sex love," certainly an impediment to objectivity and to truth. Finally, the description of Sodom and Gomorrah's destruction as "mythical" is a crass fallacy, which shall undoubtedly cause some degree of offence among Christians, Jews, and, conceivably, Muslims.- Thomas Aquinas
- For the record, I'm offended by the implication in your post that homosexuality can be reduced to behavoir. But I am interested in where you see the bias in this article. Could you pull up some passages that you think especially imply that opposition to "homosexual behavior" necessitates hatred, fear, or contempt? As far as your second concern, I believe that consistently referring to homosexuality as if it were pure behavior, with no elements of love, etc. is an impediment to objectivity and truth. Any ideas on how we can reconcile these POVs? Finally, mythical doesn't necessarily mean false, though I can understand that this is how it is often used. It can also refer to a story, true or false, that helps a community to form a collective identity, and the story of Sodom and Gomorrah certainly qualifies as myth in that sense. -Seth Mahoney 01:20, Jun 13, 2005 (UTC)
I admit to an inability to produce any direct, explicit statement that equates opposition to the homosexual perversion to hatred of homosexuals; it was thus that I referred to this phenomenon as an "implication." However, the declaration that homosexuality is unnatural was included as an anti-gay solgan, as was promulgating the obvious interpretation of the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah. Considering that the subject of the article is prejudice directed against gays and lesbians rather than their condition, I conclude that the author believes these positions are not exempt from the animosity expressed by Fred Phelps.
- Saying that homosexuality is unnatural is used as an anti-gay slogan. I've heard it in that connotation more times than I can count. I personally not only find it offensive, but factually inaccurate, so long as the word 'natural' is used with its generally understood meaning. I understand that it has other meanings, including "against God's wishes", "against the dictates of society", and so on, but there are other, clearer words that can be used if that is the intended meaning, and regardless, even those two meanings are also often used as anti-gay slogans.
- On a side note, if it makes you in any way more comfortable, I have heard that there is talk of renaming this page, though I haven't participated in the discussion yet.
- With respect to your final statement, I thank you for mentioning this and it does, indeed, ameliorate the bias I have found here.
However, I find it once more neccesary to debate other points you have stated. Firstly, I do not doubt that certain men, indeed, even Christians, have abused the statement "homosexuality is unnatural" as a sign of contempt for homosexuals (once more, I mention Fred Phelps, a man I believe we can concede spreads error and evil). My complaint is that the article, in its present condition, isolates the statement from context and equates it with general animosity. This is an injustice; if I may be granted a personal appeal, I do not harbour any dislike, hatred, fear, or contempt of homosexuals generally or specifically, but I hate homosexual acts. This is the sole connotation intrinsic to the statement in question, though I apologise on behalf of those who have abused it. Finally, I request a definition of "natural" as you use it in your declaring that homosexuality is natural in the most common usage, for I believe that we suffer from a difference in terminology.-Thomas Aquinas
- I agree that the phrase "homosexuality is unnatural" is used by people who claim not hate homosexuals per se (though I somewhat disagree that this position is possible to maintain in practice), and I would be perfectly happy to see some clarification on that point on this page, though I would request that any editors hoping to do so follow certain guidelines:
- 1. Avoid weasel words - no "some say, others reply" kinda stuff. Better yet, use explicit references and wiki links to the people who make the arguments.
- 2. It must contain some working definition of the word 'natural'. See below for reasons why.
- As far as my view on what the word natural means, I think that it is generally an empty term - its like a bucket just waiting for some meaning to be plopped in. So, generally, when encountered, 'natural' means something like 'good', 'preferred', 'privileged', "in accord with our societal rules and taboos", and so on - whatever the speaker wants us to like and doesn't want to explicitely tell us to like. Any meaning then can only be derived from context. The problem is that it has some connection to the "natural" world - the world of animals and plants supposedly devoid of technology, and as such carries with it some of the Romantic preference for the natural over the man made/artificial. So, starting in the 18th-19th centuries it had begun to be used to replace religious arguments over the rightness of certain things (among them same-sex sex and love), but it actually has none of the force of the old arguments because there is no "natural" world to prefer or whatever (and, as far as the arguments against homosexuality go, same-sex sexual behavior occurs in the "natural" world). The reason is that just as these arguments based in "nature" appeared, a belief in strict determinism appeared alongside them, and alongside that Darwinism. So this "artificial" world that we human beings have constructed is just another environment for life to adapt to, and at the same time, it could not have been otherwise according to the laws of nature. So, generally, I don't accept the word 'natural' at face value.
Secondly, merely because homosexual desires are sexual does not imply that they are characterised by erotic love. I do not find it neccesary to promulgate the argument of a Catholic philsoopher-theologian in favour of my position (unless I am specifically asked). Nonetheless, I shall reiterate the principles which has guided my Wikipedia activity: neutrality is the inferior of truth in the hierarchy of intellectual virtues, and objectivity does not incorporate it. Rather, objectivity is concerned with that which is actual, and neturality, with that which would not offend. Considering that this encyclopedia is intended for the common good, it is a duty of the editors to preserve all intellectual integrity, rather than a bipartisan presentation which obscures the truth.
- You're right, sexual does not equal romantic love, but just because a certain group of people disapproves of homosexuality doesn't mean that homosexual desires are not characterized by or never include romantic love. In the name of both truth and NPOV, I think the best way to go regarding this (and I'm not saying we should use the phrase "same-sex love" - there are other phrases that lie between characterizing homosexuality as exclusively behavior and as exclusively love-oriented) is to actually ask people who experience same-sex desire whether or not they experience love toward their partners. I can answer in the affirmative.
- As far as invoking the arguments of Catholic philosopher-theologians, there are several other pages where that would be appropriate in the article, including the page for that philosopher, maybe homosexuality, and so on. Here, not so much. Finally, even philosophers, and even philosopher-theologians can be wrong.
- It is indeed true that merely because one is opposed to homosexuality does not imply that homosexuality is devoid of erotic love. Yet it is apparent that, while I intend to you no offence, such love occurs between men and women alone, i.e., it occurs heterosexually. As you have not requested my arguments, I shall not give them, though if you so request, I shall be glad to do so. Finally, I do not find it appropriate to ask homosexuals whether they are in love with their partners, as it is possible for the mind of man to be deceived, or to confuse fraternal love with marital (erotic) love. Were it impossible or unlikely to err here, could we not ask a pedophile if he loves his victims, and judge his act based on the response?
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- Apparent to who? It is apparent to me that such love occurs between all sorts of people, and all this talk of dividing love between romantic and otherwise is self-delusion. But yeah, sure, share your arguments, or, for brevity if you'd prefer, link to them.
- It is, of course, possible for people to be self-deceived, just as it is possible for people to be deceived by others. But who has epistemological privilege here? What position are you in to argue that you have better access to a person's emotional states than they?
- I am guessing based on your phrasing that your arguments aren't going to work with me (especially the "marital (erotic) love part - as if all eros is love in the sense that we mean today, as if eros is always connected to marriage).
- Finally, I never said that love validates a relationship. I have seen plenty of relationships that I would characterize as loving that I also think it would be better for all involved if they were ended. Yes, we could as a pedophile if he or she loves their victims, and yes, we could take that as an honest response, but that does not, in the end, lead to any sort of necessary judgment of the acts involved.
Moreover, I am quite aware that philosophers and philosopher-theologians are capable of error. I very much thrive on detecting such error, and, considering what I have read on your personal page, I assume that you are my "brother" in the sciences of discernment, compelling me to suggest that you share my desire to detect and refute error. Yet if an argument is found by faith and reason to be impeccable, it would be dishonesty to deny its conclusions; to reiterate, if you wish to view the arguments I intend to present, then please ask, for I shall consider it an honour to present them to you.-Thomas Aquinas
- I quite agree that we have to accept the conclusions of arguments that are sound, but I highly doubt that you'll be starting from premises I accept as true (which is not to dismiss your arguments before you state them, but to make it clear where I'm coming from). -Seth Mahoney 19:14, Jun 22, 2005 (UTC)
As a final point, I concede that the term "mythical" has numerous connotations and definitions which are not especially negative, demeaning, etc. Though the negative and demeaning usage is common, and I consequently requested a clarification, e.g., the story be described as "biblical" rather than "mythical."- Thomas Aquinas
- I'd be fine with that change. -Seth Mahoney 19:16, Jun 13, 2005 (UTC)
Maybe we should avoid asking heterosexual couples if they love each other. After all, they might be mistaken. Foolish Mortal 19:27, 6 October 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Homophobic Article in disguise?
I came across this article through random page, and (call be a liberal) it appears offensive. I would first of all like to question the need for an article which lists all of the different ways homosexuals have been, are being, and will be attacked for their orientation, and I would secondly like to propose that it simply an anti-homosexual article posing as an intellectual article on anti-gay slogans.
Sorry if I have read it wrong, but it appears to me that this article could offend a great many people. --Sclaydonuk 7 July 2005 17:59 (UTC)
- First of all, Wikipedia is not about not offending people, just presenting information in an NPOV manner. If that information happens to be offensive, well, too bad.
- That said, I think your concern is valid, if misplaced. I don't think that this article is anti-gay (I'm fairly certain its authors didn't intend it to be either), but I'd be interested in any particular wordings or areas (other than just the whole article) that stand out to you as particularly offensive. Maybe we can work together to improve them.
- Finally, I think pages like this, though unpleasant, are useful, at least as useful as the article nigger. Documenting the ways gay people have been slandered is an incredibly pertinent activity given the recent political situation in the United States. -Seth Mahoney July 7, 2005 18:10 (UTC)
- I think we need to make an article for pro-lgbtq slogans. I'm too tired to think of many right now, but some of the ones I like include "Gays Bash Back" and...and...and, well, like I said, I can't think of many right now ;) I am going to suggest this at the top of the talk page so more people see it. (August 10, 2005)
[edit] This article takes a pro-gay stand
The narrative continuously takes the position of debunking these slogans. A particularly good example is Anti-gay_slogan#Conflation_with_child_abuse, which at no time addresses contrary informations, such as presented @ Talk:Anti-gay_slogan#Child_molestation. This article needs editing by neutral editors, or at least by a balance of POV's. I have disputed the neutrality, but would like to see repairs made promptly, rather than the header remain. ¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸ 14:11, 12 July 2005 (UTC)
- There is no such evidence presented in the section mentioned; and years and decades of research have failed to show such a connection. If that is your only concern, you won't mind if I remove the NPOV notice, since it is obviously baseless. If you have other concerns, mention them. If you are just on your usual crusade against "these horrors", take it elsewhere. -- AlexR 01:12, 13 July 2005 (UTC)
Thats odd, it seems like we don't agree. I have placed a note of RfC, lets hear what some other editors think. For those who are interested, the link is [3]. ¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸ 01:19, 13 July 2005 (UTC)
- I saw the RFC, but I don't share your concerns. That the article allegedly takes a "pro-gay stand" is largely unavoidable since the topic is the gay community's response to outside attack. Surely you're not suggesting that the gay community as a whole should adopt your personal stance, which some have alleged is anti-gay? For what it's worth, my opinion is that the article's tone is acceptable and that the NPOV template should come down, though I'll wait for additional consensus. FeloniousMonk 01:53, 13 July 2005 (UTC)
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- I ran to open the link provided by Sam, only to end up at the "Family Research Council." Sam, be serious. These people are not neutral advocates, as I need not point out. Can't you provide a link to some academic institution or a professional journal? Most of your arguments in the past were of a much higher quality. However, I see no problem pointing out that anti-gay groups continue to accuse gays of being over-represented in child abuse case, and providing this link in the article. Haiduc 02:16, 13 July 2005 (UTC)
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- I see no problem with this article. Rhobite 02:43, July 13, 2005 (UTC)
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- I also see no problem with the current article. The definition of anything which fails to condemn gay folks as thus pro-gay is ridiculous. Hyacinth 06:43, 13 July 2005 (UTC)
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- I agree: the evidence cited in the section above is from Paul Cameron, a discredited psychiatrist who has been successfully charged with perjury directly related to giving false "scientific" evidence in a court of law. The non-peer reviewed journal these studies are published in certainly does not meet the criteria of reputable source. Axon 09:02, 13 July 2005 (UTC)
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- Please, spare us your homophobia. The Family Research Council (I notice you cutely hid the name of that link) is hardly a neutral or credible source. Exploding Boy 19:46, July 13, 2005 (UTC)
Ok, the concensus is against the dispute header, I accept that. But the link, or a better one ([4] is another) should be included. "Neutral and credible" should be up to the reader to judge, not those who oppose a particular organisation. ¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸ 23:48, 13 July 2005 (UTC)
- homosexual writer and AIDS activist Larry Kramer has a very different take on childhood experiences of homosexual men with older persons:
- "In those instances where children do have sex with their homosexual elders, be they teachers or anyone else, I submit that often, very often, the child desires the activity, and perhaps even solicits it, either because of a natural curiosity that will or will not develop along these lines, or because he or she is homosexual and innately knows it. This is far from "recruitment." Obviously, there are instances in which the child is unwilling, and is a victim of sexual abuse, homo- or heterosexual. But, as with straight children anxious for the experience with someone of the opposite sex, these are kids who seek solicit, and consent willingly to sex with someone of the same sex. And unlike girls or women forced into rape and traumatized, most gay men have warm memories of their earliest and early sexual encounters; when we share these stories with each other, they are invariably positive ones."(Kramer, p.234)
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- Yeah, right, that's a much better link. Fathers for life.org is hardly a neutral, credible or scholarly source; all one need to do is read their "Gay Issues" section [5] to see that. Stop foisting your pov off as problems with articles. FeloniousMonk 00:24, 14 July 2005 (UTC)
- I notice your not bothering to discuss the merits of the studies they site. This isn't a usenet, it is an encyclopedia. This article is about Anti-gay slogans. Providing references based on the subject is hardly good cause for your crappy one-liners. ¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸ 00:26, 14 July 2005 (UTC)
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- That's simple: their studies have no merit. They're inherently biased, as are you. Why on earth do you persist in editing articles about for which you have a clear distaste? Don't bother suggesting that you're on a crusade to elimiate POV; all you're doing is introducing it. Exploding Boy 00:44, July 14, 2005 (UTC)
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- EBs got it. Biased studies are only useful as background on biased studies. FeloniousMonk
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- I agree: it's quite clear what is and isn't a reputable source as defined by WP:CITE, WP:NOR and WP:V. I don't think FRC, FFL and certainanly Paul Cameron's studies and those who cite him can really be considered to be authoritative or reputable by even the most generous of editors. I think that is the general consensus here. Axon 10:06, 14 July 2005 (UTC)
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[edit] Clarification
It would appear that some editors here feel the Family research council and Fathers for life are too disreputable of sources for usage on this page. I disagree. I further feel that these:
- Abel, G., Becker, J., Cunningham-Rather, J., Mittelman, M, Rouleau, J. (1988) Multiple paraphilic diagnosis among sex offenders. Bulletin of the American Academy of Psychiatric Law. 16:153-168.)
- Bell, A., Weinberg, M. (1978) Homosexualities: A Study in Diversity Among Men and Women. Simon & Schuster: New York.
- Doll, L., Joy, D., Batholow, B., Harrison, J., Bolan, G., Douglas, J., Saltzman, L., Moss, P., Delgado, W. (1992) Self-Reported Childhood and Adolescent Sexual Abuse among Adult Homosexual and Bisexual men. Child Abuse & Neglect. 18:825-864.
- Finkelhor, D., Araji,S., Baron, L., Browne, A., Peters, S., Wyatt, G. (1993) A Sourcebook on Child Sexual Abuse. Sage:Newbury Park.
- Johnson, R., Shrier, D. (1985) Sexual Victimization of Boys: Experience at an Adolescent Medicine Clinic. Journal of Adolescent Health Care. 6:372 -376.
- Kramer, L (1981) Reports from the Holocaust. NY: St. Martin's Press
- Lemp, G., Hirozawa, A., Givertz, D., Nieri, G., Anderson, L., Linegren, M., Janssen, R., Katx, M. (1994) Seroprevalence of HIV and Risk Behaviors Among Young Homosexual and Bisexual Men. Journal of the American Medical Association. 272, 6: 449:454.
- McWhirter, D., Mattison, A. (19 ) The Male Couple: How Relationships Develop. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
- Osmond, D., Page, K., Wiley, J., Garrett, K.., Sheppard, H., Moss, A., Schrager, L., Winkelsteing, W. (1994) HIV infection in homosexual and bisexual men 18 to 19 years of age: The San Francisco Young Men's Health Study. American Journal of Public Health. 84, 12: 1933-1937.
- Remafedi, G.(1994) Predictors of Unprotected Intercourse Among Gay and Bisexual Youth: Knowledge, Belief, and Behavior. Pediatrics. 94:163-165.
- Rekers, G. (1995) Handbook of Child and Adolescent Sexual Problems. NY: Lexington Books
are also acceptable references.
¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸ 15:31, 14 July 2005 (UTC)
- You've just taken the non-Psychological Reports references from both sources and listed them here. Taken by themselves, these references do not necesarily add up to your thesis and there is no evidence that all the above citations are themselves from reputable sources, i.e. peer-reviewed journals. Some actually seem to contradict it (e.g. Bell: "no support for the notion that homosexual males are likely to have been "seduced" by older men."), some are just personal accounts and annecdotal evidence (e.g. Kramer), some are completely unrelated (Lemp, Osmond). The Rekers citation is certainly not reputable at all being a "handbook" and not a jounral and is itself based on Cameron's studies having been written by a known anti-gay campaigner and founder of the FRC[6].
- Furthermore, using them together to "recreate" the original reports FRC and FFL you crib would be original research (WP:NOR), as well as being beyond the scope of this article. Axon 15:58, 14 July 2005 (UTC)
- Axon's right, of course. And if that's your support, you should just give it a rest; continued insistance on this taken with your use of
stiltedmisinterpreted and misrepresented studies from biased sources only confirms the concerns voiced by others that you are pushing an anti-gay agenda. FeloniousMonk 16:11, 14 July 2005 (UTC)
I certainly am not drawing my own conclusions, rather I am pointing out that the conclusions reached by fathersforlife are backed up by a great deal of evidence. No one has yet explained why excluding the POV of organisations who advocate or utilize "anti-gay slogans" is in accordance w NPOV. That is because it isn't. Even if their research were substandard (as it is alleged the research of the Family research Council is) it is still notable on this page. The research cited by fathersforlife is not however sub-standard, and is "authoratative and reputable" enough to appear on any applicable page. I won't bother responding to ad hominems and crude rhetoric of course, and would ask everyone to focus on the issues in a rigourous and impartial manner. ¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸ 20:11, 14 July 2005 (UTC)
- Maybe not, but both of your sources misinterpreted and misrepresented the studies, several of which I have just read through. The conclusions drawn by fathersforlife are not supported by the studies I read. FeloniousMonk 20:17, 14 July 2005 (UTC)
Perhaps you can produce some verification of this claim? ¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸ 20:18, 14 July 2005 (UTC)
- That's so, um, Sam Spade of you. You're the one making a claim here, not I, it's up to you to make your case. Which you haven't yet. Do your own homework. I suggest starting with ERIC, as did I.
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- Primary writings = objective, scholarly, credible, peer reviewed.
- Fathersforlife = agenda-driven, unprofessional, biased.
- At least take the time to read or at a minimum skim the primary writings before making a big stink next time. FeloniousMonk 20:51, 14 July 2005 (UTC)
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- Anything written on homosexuality in the 70s or 80s is suspect and likely to be biased and unreliable; any scientific writing that's more than a few years old is open to debate; writings on AIDS that are 10 years old are hopelessly out of date. Our aim here isn't to give a summary of thought--any and all thought, no matter how biased and incorrect--on the subject. Exploding Boy 21:43, July 14, 2005 (UTC)
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- I'm not sure what is going on here but, despite the fact that most people on this page seem to agreet that Sam Spade's citations are flawed, he has ignored this and unilaterally modified the article despite widespread objection to his sources. He certainly has not responded to legitimate concerns raised and seems to have spawned an edit war through his actions. Should we raise an RfC on this matter? Axon 08:57, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Stance of Wikipedia on this issue
As I've said repeatedly, Wikipedia should not take a stance on any of the following issues:
- whether homosexality is "good" or "bad"
- whether some (or all) opposition to homosexuality is:
- "anti-gay"
- unethical (or even, with a deliciously ironic twist "immoral" in itself)
- more against homosexuals themselves than the practice
Let's just report what the two main sides say. And if there are some interesting third or 4th sides, mention those too.
I think it's fairly clear that there is a huge groundswell of opinion asserting that criticism of homosexuality itself, or of individuals (for "being homosexual" or for "having sex with the same gender"), is BAD. Some even label it all as homophobia.
Now you all may wish to simply discount my input here, and I won't make a fuss if you do. My opinion (not that it should matter, but perhaps it does) is that homosexuality is morally wrong, and that homosexuals have a choice about (1) whether to have sex at all, and (2) the gender of those they choose to have sex with. That is, the behavior is under conscious control. Whether same-sex attraction is inherent or learned or whatever, is hard to say, but I don't think Wikipedia should assert that all opposition to homosexuality is unprincipled.
This is one of the most difficult issues to approach neutrally. Abortion and genocide are actually "neater" issues, if I can use that word without throwing up all over my keyboard. Let's try to work it out together. Uncle Ed 20:33, July 14, 2005 (UTC)
- Hey, your opinion always matters in my opinion, Ed. I agree with your points. I suggest that defining what constitutes "bigotry" and "homophobia" early on in the article would eliminate much confusion. FeloniousMonk 20:57, 14 July 2005 (UTC)
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- I join Uncle Ed and FeloniousMonk. Larvatus 06:53, 24 June 2006 (UTC)larvatus
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- Although I obviously have different views on homosexuality itself, I generally agree with Ed about what belongs in Wikipedia articles. (Generally rather than completely because I think there are cases where 1 and 3 above are clearly one way or the other - Fred Phelps and Jerry Falwell come to mind as examples of people who clearly are anti-gay, not just against certain acts, and who are against the persons, not the practices.) Maybe it would be helpful to go through articles and list points where each of us thinks the article goes to far? -Smahoney 18:56, 24 June 2006 (UTC)
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[edit] Re: recent reverts
Sam is once again trying to add things that are clearly biased. I've removed them. The Family Research Council and Fathers for whatever are not encyclopaedic sources. They are inherently biased and unreliable. They do not belong in any article, especially when they are being presented as evidence in support of spurious claims. Exploding Boy 22:11, July 14, 2005 (UTC)
- They obviously do belong in this article, being on topic, verifiable sources of information. Your failure to even be aware of the names of the organisations you are placing such blanket disdain upon clarifies the quality of your argument. ¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸ 22:18, 14 July 2005 (UTC)
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- No they aren't: see my remarks above. The sources you cite do not add up to your conclusion, are not all verifiable and those citing Paul Cameron have been widely discredited and are based on studies notorious for being flawed (e.g. FRC and FFL). The Kramer quote is clearly not evidence of anything other than the opinion of a single person and I'm not sure what it is doing in an article or what it actually demonstrates. You have yet to provide any real evidence to back them up or deal with the concerns raised about them. Axon 08:40, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
Nonsense. I'd personally like some clarification on why you choose to edit articles related to homosexuality, a topic you clearly know very little about. Exploding Boy 22:19, July 14, 2005 (UTC)
- Sounds like a cross between an ad hominem and a red herring. The subject at hand is the value of these links in this article. ¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸ 22:36, 14 July 2005 (UTC)
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- Since Sam's RFC failed to support this claptrap being inserted into the article he's resorting to brute force now. As has been pointed out to you many, many times before Sam, cited references used to justify contentious material need to be significant and scholarly. Fathersforlife and The Family Research Council are neither. One last time I'll connect the dots for you:
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- Primary writings = objective, scholarly, credible, peer reviewed.
- Fathersforlife & The Family Research Council = agenda-driven, unprofessional, biased.
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- Sam tried this stunt at the Buju Banton article a few months ago, insisting that "homophobia" was a "gay" term and that there was no proof that Mr. Banton had a history of abusive behavior. He failed on both points, and in the end resulted in the history of Banton's abuse of homosexuals being expanded. I'm seeing a pattern here. FeloniousMonk 23:11, 14 July 2005 (UTC)
- Since Sam's RFC failed to support this claptrap being inserted into the article he's resorting to brute force now. As has been pointed out to you many, many times before Sam, cited references used to justify contentious material need to be significant and scholarly. Fathersforlife and The Family Research Council are neither. One last time I'll connect the dots for you:
Hello? Can we talk about the article for a few minutes, please? Thank you!
The thing I can't understand is the relevance of FFL and FRC to an article about anti-gay slogans. Is someone saying that those organizations (which sound kind of "Christian" to me) have an "anti-gay" agenda? More specifically, have they issued any phrases or slogans which somebody (anybody!) has labelled "anti-gay"?
If not, why are we even talking about this - it would be irrelevant.
If so, all we need to do is:
- cite the particular utterances or phrases; and
- say who has labelled these "anti-gay"; and,
- optionally, but very valuably, explain what reasons the labellers have given for calling these things anti-gay
Or is there something going on here, which I'm missing? Uncle Ed 01:22, July 15, 2005 (UTC)
- yes. Have you seen my edit? I am citing these sources, much as you did above, as a verification of why some see a correlation between homosexuality and sexual child abuse. ¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸ 01:37, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
Yes, they're well-known for having an anti-gay agenda. Exploding Boy 03:48, July 15, 2005 (UTC)
What the hell else is this article about? Go edit queer studies if critcism is too much for you. ¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸ 04:19, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
- You made your point. No need to hammer it home. Please review Wikipedia:avoid personal remarks, Jack. (Er, I mean, Sam. :-) Uncle Ed 04:33, July 15, 2005 (UTC)
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- Thank you ed, I had never seen that article before. ¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸ 14:59, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
I still would like to know why you insist on editing articles related to homosexuality. You have demonstrated a lack of knowledge of the subject, and have strong anti-gay feelings. Why not leave the editing to those who know what they're doing and don't get upset about it? Exploding Boy 05:09, July 15, 2005 (UTC)
Yeah, and scientists should stay off the creationist articles, men should stay off feminism articles, whites should stay off african articles, and contributors who can't take the heat should stay off InTheKichen articles. 4.250.33.21 07:27, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
- Touché. Can we find some middle ground here? The fact that a slur is occasionally confirmed to be true does not change its nature as a slur. Jews can be greedy, blacks can be lazy, etc. But those are still slurs. What if we add Sam's links and include material showing that they are examples of exactly the slurs we are discussing here (which seems easily provable by people here who know more about their authors than I do)? And the Kramer quote could find a comfortable home in the Modern developments section of Pederasty. Haiduc 11:23, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
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- A very good point, Haiduc. The trouble is that alot of people (perhaps the overwhemlming majority) think that people shouldn't be homosexual. Therefore criticism is more than just a slur, it is a critique of the entire way of being. Such things understandably disturb those they are directed towards, but... thats kind of the point. I will appreciate any efforts you make in producing a compromise that improves the article. Having a more informative article should be our goal here after all, not personality politics. Thank you for your efforts, ¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸ 14:59, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
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- I have carried out that part of my suggestion which I was able to, placing the Kramer quote in Pederasty. I still think the two links should be included and exposed for what they are, but I am not familiar enough with the science to refute them properly. Sam, I am happy that we are both seeking compromise (a realistic goal) but if your intent was to substantiate a connection between same-sex love and the violation of the young I don't think these links will do the job, on the contrary. As for the "shoulds" of sexuality, I would have thought that all your work here would have persuaded you of the relativity of sexual morality. Cheers, Haiduc 03:07, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
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- A fine justification for not just tolerating, but encouraging bigotry. Bravo. Ed and Haiduc's comments make the most sense here. FeloniousMonk 17:14, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
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- Hmmm.... a slur is not criticism when it is incorrect and not backed up with evidence which is the real issue here, one that is constantly side-stepped in favor of rhetoric and logical fallacies such as arguments from popularity. Once upon a time a "most" people (such as these things can be judged, of course) thought Jewish people where naturally greedy and untrustworthy. Should we treat such views with similar credence? Axon 19:19, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
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Good grief. Talk about weasel words. You have absolutely no proof or justification for your claims. The issue here isn't that you want to mention those two groups, it's that you want to use them as references. Unless they have come up with some anti-gay slogans, then they don't belong in this article. And the problem with Sam's edits to sexuality-related articles, anonymous editor, is not about his beliefs per se, but rather about a combination of a lack of knowledge and the inability to edit neutrally. Exploding Boy 19:18, July 15, 2005 (UTC)
- That sounds like a personal remark. ¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸ 20:56, 15 July 2005 (UTC)
From the personal remarks page: The purpose of talk pages is to discuss how to improve articles. If you have opinions about the contributions others have made, feel free to discuss those contributions on any relevant talk page. I'm talking about your contributions, Sam. You clearly have a lack of knowledge on homosexuality, and have demonstrated a repeated inability to edit such articles neutrally. I've pointed this out to you time and time again. Exploding Boy 23:06, July 15, 2005 (UTC)
- Sam, you are right - but not completely. lack of knowledge and the inability to edit neutrally was, indeed, a personal remark. But it hardly constitutes an "attack" - I think he's trying to say something about the way you're editing this article / discussing it.
- My observation of your editing / commenting patterns over many months is that you can be awfully stubborn about insisting on a particular idea. Remember when you got all ticked off at me for calling your SS identity a "sock puppet" of your Jack identity? The term seemed to bother you so much that you would never let me explain what I meant by it - which, for the record, was merely that you had adopted a new user name.
- And, yes, I suppose you could take that personally, but I don't have any hostile intent here. I'm trying to clear the air. If it works, good. If I've just stirred up more resentment or something, then I shall have failed once again. Which is something i really hate: failing, that is. And I also hate getting people upset. I'd rather soothe them or make them happy or proud or excited or motivated or relieved.
- Now about the article: this may be a candidate for a Wikipedia:sidebar. (And if that link is red, then I'll have to go and write it.) It has worked many times before, when co-authors got hung up on a particular section of a lengthy article. You simply extract the disputed passage (whether tiny or huge) into a separate article - leaving behind only a link. Then you and others work on that new "sidebar" article.
- This worked great at Augusto Pinochet - which was hung up on POVs about the American CIA's support for the coup of 1973. It might work here, too. Uncle Ed 11:22, July 16, 2005 (UTC)
Well, firstly, there are alot of things that can be said about the people discussing things here, and I am willing to discuss each and every one of us to one extent or another, but this really isn't the place.
Secondly, my concerns about this article actually don't revolve around the correlation w child abuse alone, so even if we spun that off, there would still be issues w the article in general. The narrative reads as an attempt to debunk these concepts, rather than one of expressing the views of all sides in a balanced manner. The treatment of research not enabling this lack of neutrality is an excellent example of this.
Sadly there is a meta-issue here. POV special interest groups have an ability to dominate contentious pages, if only because neutral or emotionally detached editors are either disinterested, or actively driven off by disruptive and offensive rhetorical tactics. Again, that is likely an issue best discussed elsewhere. ¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸ 16:18, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
- What's sadder is that you simulataneously acknowledge your point of view and refuse to acknowledge your inability to remain neutral when it comes to articles relating to homosexuality. This has been demonstrated time and time again, yet you persist in repeating the same problematic behaviours. There can be no explanation for this other than an attempt to push your own point of view. I would be very interested in discussing this further. Exploding Boy 17:45, July 16, 2005 (UTC)
- Blaming the system for the fact that your arguments are getting so little traction here? Stop wasting your time and ours. How many "neutral or emotionally detached editors" have been driven off pages by your "disruptive and offensive rhetorical tactics"? The list is long; as many will attest. Ultimately, your complaint here is just so many sour grapes over the fact that you've failed to make the case for your claims. In other words your "POV special interest" failed to "dominate" a "contentious page." Your rhetoric betrayed you there, Sam.
- Sam, you talk a great game about neutrality, learnedness and civility, but it's clear to anyone familiar with your contribution history that you come up far short of your claims and posturing. From my experience with you, your most impressive accomplishment is that in constantly portraying yourself as a victim, you've managed to hoodwink a few editors into actually believing you. FeloniousMonk 18:17, 16 July 2005 (UTC)
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- Sam, you've clearly worn out your welcome on this topic. Either break off the side matter into a separate article, or give the whole subject a rest. Uncle Ed 04:16, July 17, 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Plato?
The article contains the following statement about Plato, a writer well known for his positive opinion of homosexuality:
- "Declaration that same-sex love is unnatural
- This particular charge dates back to Plato, who claimed that male love was "against nature" (para-physein)."
Are you sure Plato says this? It sounds more like passages in St Paul's writings than Plato's. I can't find an 'unnatural' argument in Plato, but maybe I missed it. Plato says that "barbarians" are opposed to homosexuality, so even if he said somewhere that it is contrary to "nature" that is unlikely to be a "charge", in the sense of an accusation, but more a claim that it helps to transcend materiaity – that it is more "philosophical" than heterosexuality.
Overall, I trhink this article suffers from over-simplified equations of ancient and modern arguments and from the assumption that these views are always part of attacks on homosexual behaviour, which have remained the same throughout history. Paul B 16:43, 24 July, 2005 (UTC)
- I agree with your general assessment of this article - it is, generally, oversimplistic, and could definately benefit from detailed examinations of the statements expressed within it. I have also (though I don't have references offhand) read arguments suggesting that Plato changed his view on homosexuality over time, and may have been influenced in his later days by Aristotle, eventually coming to accept, or at least approach, a more negative view wherein heterosexuality was privileged. -Seth Mahoney 22:30, July 27, 2005 (UTC)
You mean like sparta? horseboy 14:39, 13 August 2005 (UTC)
- Could you be slightly less gnomic? Who are you reponding to, and what point? Paul B 14:44, 13 Aug, 2005 (UTC)
[edit] NPOV/Accuracy concern
This article makes strong statements. Very strong statements, and it doesn't seem to have the refrences to back it up. A little to much like an essay/rant for my tastes. Which is not to say I disagree with the general idea, I think this could use a great deal of vetting, starting from the title on down.--Tznkai 17:22, 1 August 2005 (UTC)
- I think you're right. I think a good way to go about things might be to list the statements made along with any specific problems currently in the article, decide whether or not to include them at all, decide the best ways to phrase the ones that should be included, and then do a complete rewrite. I'd be more than happy to participate if there are any other takers. -Seth Mahoney 01:06, August 2, 2005 (UTC)
- Good to see that you are willing to help this article as well, Tznkai. Why don't you specify exactly what you are in disagreement with so that we may approach this matter in a constructive manner. Haiduc 02:38, 2 August 2005 (UTC)
- Hmm. Well... Yes, I agree, it is a trifle strong - I don't think there's anything inherently incorrect about it, but I agree it isn't really up to much; there doesn't seem to be much in the way of proper referencing nor of any sort of objective narrative in the article. It has more of the appearance of an exposé of "gay bashing" statements than an encyclopaedic article on the subject; that said, there aren't any factual errors as such, and all of what it does cover is valid to some extent albeit unreferenced. I feel the crux of the matter is that it is difficult to consider what serious viewpoint could also be included that anti-gay slogans are acceptable, since after all I hardly feel there could be any kind of serious defense of making such statements, and that is presumably why it has ended up with its pro-gay POV slant. Incidentally, it wanders over from "anti-gay slogans" to "anti-gay statements" a number of times in the course of the article. I honestly don't quite know how to fix it, though; perhaps I'll give it some serious thought eventually. (Full disclosure, in the interests of openness as per Wikipedia:Autobiography - I'm gay.) --NicholasTurnbull | (talk) (e-mail) (cabal) 00:04, 2 November 2005 (UTC)
- I agree. This article is not an encyclopedia entry but in fact an apology. In my opinion Anti-Gay-Slogan is no lemma at all and should be deleted. This is not the kind of stuff one expects in a dictionary. --Benedikt
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- This article documents historical condemnations of sodomy and same sex relations. There is nothing inherently apologetic about the topic, if there are inappropriate formulations they can be addressed individually and specifically. I see no valid argument for tossing out the whole thing, on the contrary. Haiduc 11:38, 17 February 2006 (UTC)
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- Haiduc, every paragraph goes like this: The anti-gayists say this but this is rejected because of these facts.
- This is not the kind of stuff one would expect in an encyclopedia but in an pro-gay apologies book. This article doesn't portray facts but it lists arguments of the gay rights movements.
- Maybe Wikipedia has changed that much and this is ok now. But if this is the case I will start writing articles like "Pro-gay-slogans and their counter-arguments", "20 reasons why the evangelical belief is untrue", "the five main errors of communism", etc. immediately. --Benedikt 08:09, 18 February 2006 (UTC)
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- I think I see what you mean, a lot of the writing sounds like a pro se argument. The solution seems to be to document the facts from a remove, so an editing job is called for. I do not see an argument for deletion, nor do I see why articles on critiques of, say, communism and capitalism could not be written as long as the writer does not take a position. Am I missing something? Haiduc 14:02, 18 February 2006 (UTC)
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[edit] picture
'''Why was the picture edited out?'''
- Because it's not at all clear to me what it's supposed to be and therefore how it adds to the article. I don't see the point of your picture of a guy doing a "wheelie" on the Indian American article either, but I don't have any involvement in that one so if the usal editors want it, that's up to them. Please explain. Paul B 21:54, 20 February 2006 (UTC)
I'm sorry,im new here. I put up a picture of an anti gay slogan like the aids one. I think it goes with the topic. And the indian one was a picture i thought exemplified an indianamerican. He is clearly indian yet appears to be wearing american clothes riding a specialized bike probably in some decidious part of the US. It shows the blending of cultures well, don't you think?
- Well this is not the page to discuss the Indian American wheelie image. Of course I recognise that "NO FLAMING" phrase has a significance within modern gay culture, because of the relation between the web-culture meaning and the gay meaning of Flaming. But I've never seen this sign, so have you made it up or is it pre-existant? Paul B 23:52, 22 February 2006 (UTC)
Hey, the picture is an actual slogan. I have seen that used on many signs and at rallies. I created the actual image, if thats what you are wondering, but it is based on ones i have seen.
- What rallies? It needs more explanation. As a slogan it seems more like a joke than anything.Paul B 10:55, 23 February 2006 (UTC)
[edit] why is this...
so biased? it is written in a very anti - antigay perspective. thought it was meant to be unbiased? so why is it biased against antigay things?
- How is the article biased against antigay things? Hyacinth 11:59, 5 March 2006 (UTC)
[edit] NPOV
Yeah, this one was pretty hard for me to complain about with my natural hate for rednecks and homophobia, but this article fails NPOV, and bulding an encyclopedia is our number one goal, not spreading inclusive morals. The page, instead of presenting the slogans, commenting on why they're there and what they mean, instead ends every section explaining why the gay viewpoint is the correct one. Correct it is in most cases, but we can not say that. There is also a substantial lack of sources here. I'm adding a NPOV and cleanup template to this page to attract some more editors to help with this. -Mask 18:48, 29 April 2006 (UTC)
- I removed the cleanup notice, as the NPOV notice is enough. However, I don't see the NPOV issue. The slogan asserts a position and then the contrary position is asserted. Hyacinth 21:23, 29 April 2006 (UTC)
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- It mostly dismisses them out of hand is the issue, or talks about how so and so has disproved them. Remember, unless you're in a field like mathematics, proof is simply opinion, and the article endorses one opinion more then the other. Not nessarily a bad thing, but an unencyclopedic thing. -Mask 01:24, 2 May 2006 (UTC)
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- While the article should not be dismissive or political, there is no need to give undue weight to particularly bad arguments. For example, in the child molestation section, there are plenty of studies on the alleged link between male homosexuality and pedophilia (many available online, without internet access to academic institutions). A better approach would be to discuss the allegations, include a discussion about Paul Cameron, peer-reviewed articles, etc. With appropriate links. However, removing the article or giving the anti-gay perspective on each issue equal space is not a NPOV, it is false weight. We do not consult members of Stormfront to provide balance to the article on the biological significance of race, or invite members of the Nazi Party to balance out the article on Anti-Semitism.Gibbsale 04:52, 9 June 2006 (UTC)
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[edit] President Reagan?
What about Ronald Reagan? As far as I know, he predated the "AIDS kills fags dead" slogan during the early 1980s by declaring publicly, "AIDS is God's gift to homosexuals". --TlatoSMD 06:44, 23. Jun 2006 (CEST)
- I can find no evidence that he ever said this,in public or otherwise. Paul B 10:29, 23 June 2006 (UTC)
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- Okay, I've googled the issue. Looks like as for early to mid-80s it's Jerry Falwell, Pat Buchanan, the New Right closely around Reagan in general (http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2004/06/08/EDG777163F1.DTL), and on the other hand a 2003 TV movie called The Reagans who are to blame for coinage (http://newsaic.com/ftvreagansindex.html). --TlatoSMD 00:27, 24. Jun 2006 (CEST)
[edit] Unnatural / natural
"However, those opposed to homosexual behavior point to behaviors exhibited by many animals that most would consider unnatural in humans, such as cannibalism. Many who use the term "unnatural" are referring to the natural law, rather than any sort of normativity. Therefore, they state that whether or not something is classified as a psychological disorder by a certain organization does not affect its moral standing."
I added this to the "Homosexuality is unnatural" subsection of the page. This represents the view of a great number of those opposed to homosexual behavior (e.g. Catholics, who see it as contradictory to their conception of the natural law) and is hardly a "fringe" ideology. I also added a reference to the natural law to prevent confusion.
- Please sign your contributions to talk pages by adding -~~~~ at the end.
- Who is making these arguments? If they can be attributed to a person or group, then they should be cited to some source. If they can't, then they're borderine original research. Otherwise, thanks for the contribution. -Smahoney 19:31, 27 June 2006 (UTC)
Sorry about that. An example can be found here: [12] (PDF) on page 89. I seriously doubt this publication is alone. --Jakes18 22:57, 27 June 2006 (UTC)
- The cite offered is hardly definitive; The American Society for the Defense of Tradition, Family and Property (TFP)[13] is just one ideological group making an ideological argument, it's not an academic study or something similar that can support such sweeping claims. If that cite is what your staking your recent edit warring on, then the passage is more accurately rewritten to read "However, some who are ideologically opposed to homosexual behavior point to..." And "Many who use the term "unnatural" are referring to the natural law..." uses weasel words. Many who? The American Society for the Defense of Tradition, Family and Property? If that all you have then that's what it needs to state. FeloniousMonk 23:21, 27 June 2006 (UTC)
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- Hell, I was wondering if Jakes could find a more biased, less legitimate site for a cite. That site/cite/sightless drivel is like going on the RNC website to learn that Democrats are evil. ROFL. •Jim62sch• 23:27, 27 June 2006 (UTC)
Yeah, I'd suggest looking to scholarly resources. Or, failing that, if you want to talk specifically about Catholics, say "Some Catholics believe..." and then cite a catholic resource making that argument. If in doubt about what citations will work for what sorts of claims, check out Wikipedia:Reliable sources. -Smahoney 23:33, 27 June 2006 (UTC)
- I was stating the opposition's opinion, or at least that of part of the opposition. Nothing was stated as absolute truth, thence not violating the POV. This isn't a gay wiki, friends - I'm sure there are others out there for you to post on. I'll restore what I wrote, but add in "social conservatives" if that will placate you. --Jakes18 00:42, 28 June 2006 (UTC)
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- Don't be snotty. The issue isn't with what you wrote so much as with the fact that you wrote something about an undefined group of people which isn't true of all those people. If you just said something along the lines of, "According to so-and-so, such-and-such" and then cited that statement to the specific person or group you attributed it to, you would be fine. If you don't, it is original research and doesn't belong here. Basically, if you would be willing to do the tiny bit of extra work to properly research and attribute your contribution, no one would have a problem with it. -Smahoney 06:08, 28 June 2006 (UTC)
[edit] NPOV tag
I don't fully trust myself to work on this, as I get caught up in controversies to the point that I become blind to much else, but I'd be fine with the tag coming off if the article were written to be less dismissive. Thats the only issue I see with it, as I pointed out a month ago and it hasn't changed since. -Mask 23:35, 27 June 2006 (UTC)
- You're more likely to get results if you quote specific sections and then state your reasons for disagreeing with them on this talk page than if you just say "the article is too dismissive". -Smahoney 23:39, 27 June 2006 (UTC)
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- Smahoney is right. In light of your unwillingness to actually participate in improving the article by discussion specifically what you believe is wrong with it, you have no expectation to have your template remain. FeloniousMonk 23:47, 27 June 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Sentence moved from article
I'm completely unsure what the point of this sentence is. Has this happened to Gerald Hannon? If so, explain, and cite. If not, it doesn't make any sense to include it.
- Writers who deconstruct the notion of a linkage between homosexuality and pedophilia, such as Gerald Hannon, may even themselves find their work misrepresented as endorsing pedophilia and child abuse.
-Smahoney 18:57, 29 June 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Another sentence moved from article
- Many of those who debate the issue and use the term "unnatural" may be referring to a conception of natural law, rather than any sort of normativity. [citation needed] Therefore, they may believe that whether or not something is classified as a psychological disorder by a given organization does not affect its moral standing.
Here are the problems with this sentence:
- 1. Who are these "many"? As always, cite the claim to a specific person or group.
- 2. I'm not at all sure that "natural law" and "normativity" represent entirely different concepts - that is, natural law looks to me like a specific sort of normative. Also, if this specific claim is being made in relation to the claim in the sentence preceding it, it needs to be referenced, too (or they can share the same reference).
-Smahoney 19:03, 29 June 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Missing references
- Does anyone have a more current link to this interview [14]? The link seems to be dead. -Smahoney 19:07, 29 June 2006 (UTC)
- This one, also, doesn't pull anything up. http://www.portlandmercury.com/2000-09-14/city.html -Smahoney 19:13, 29 June 2006 (UTC)
From Wikipedia:Citing sources:
Reference-section links ... are still worth keeping as part of the referencing apparatus of the article; often, a live substitute link can be found. Here are some pointers. In most cases, these approaches will preserve an acceptable citation.
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Hope that helps. CovenantD 19:26, 29 June 2006 (UTC)
- Thanks! They've been updated. -Smahoney 19:54, 29 June 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Removed from article
The sentence
- However, Ezekiel 16:49 disputes this notion.
was removed from the section titled "Blame for Biblical plagues and natural disasters" by 12.165.116.126. I completely agree with this deletion as it stands, unless it can be sourced to some biblical scholar. So if whoever adds it has a citation for that addition, go ahead and add it back, with that citation. -Smahoney 20:53, 29 June 2006 (UTC)
[edit] NPOV request
I have begun to excise value-laden epithets. Please abstain from reinstating expressions that either favor or disparage homosexual relations. Larvatus 09:38, 3 July 2006 (UTC)larvatus
[edit] Censorship vs. discussion?
Certain people keep deleting a voice in this discussion, which happens to be mine. Well, it is neither civil nor accepted to do so, especially in a way user Larvatus does, playing a strict censor and deleting my posts from history files. The point is, we are not supposed to silence other viewpoints here. You may personally not like this kind of views - but this is no excuse to exclude others from discussion on the article. To cut it short, I will just restate the main point from the deleted posts: the slogan on homosexuality being unatural is simply right, as in the animal world homosexual behaviours are extremely rare and found only in some sort of atypical situations (e.g. weak elephants unable to find a partner of opposite sex, dogs in animal shelters). This is a fact, not propaganda, so please simply let this post stay. --Breeze59 17:15, 13 August 2006 (UTC)
- Zoologist Bruce Bagemihl, in his Natural Exuberance presents examples of hundreds of species which exhibit affection and sexuality between members of the same sex. His work refutes arguments such as yours. Haiduc 21:40, 13 August 2006 (UTC)
- The simple fact is that you don't get a voice - none of us do. See Wikipedia:Original research. -Smahoney 21:54, 13 August 2006 (UTC)
- Wearing clothes and cooking food are unnatural, but that's not an argument against them is it? It's rather more difficult to say whether homosexuality is unnatural, since, as Haiduc notes homosexual activities can be observed in some other species. In some - Bonobos for example - it's very common. But natural or not, it's illogical to equate "natural" with "good" - or do you go out naked and defecate in public? Paul B 23:40, 13 August 2006 (UTC)
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- Thanks for interest in the subject, I’ll respond to all three comments in one post. Haiduc, the work you mentioned does not refute the above argument – I said, as you could read, that “in the animal world homosexual behaviours are extremely rare and found only in some sort of atypical situations”. I admitted it does happen, but is rare, and there is always an underlying reason causing this kind of abnormal behaviour (as we know, in humans these usually stem from lack of proper relationships with one of the parents, different dysfunctions of the environment or the first sexual experience). As you see, the work you mentioned, credible or not, does not contradict my view, but is parallel to it, or even complementary, unless you prove that homosexuality in animals is a daily practice involving a large percentage of individuals. (By the way Haiduc, I typically do not answer paedophiles, people who propagate pedophilia/pederasty or present it in good light, but made an exception this time, just because you seem to have misunderstood what I said. Anyway, take my good advice and seek help – now, in this condition time is acting against you.)
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- To user Mahoney – please, be so kind and see, that I included no original research here, I simply supported a certain view, dismissed by the atricle as a “slogan” with general knowledge you can get from animal books or TV channels.
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- Have you ever read Wikipedia:Original research? What about Wikipedia:Cite your sources, Wikipedia:Common knowledge, and Wikipedia:Reliable sources? Your response, which uses 'original research' in a way that looks like you don't really know what it means, suggests not. -Smahoney 19:21, 14 August 2006 (UTC)
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- Come on, do you really want me to cite Discovery Channel? Does this argument sound like a "personal theory" they talk about in the pages you gave links to? I don't think so. With arguments like this you could discredit half of Wikipedia :)--Breeze59 19:48, 14 August 2006 (UTC)
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- Have you still not read those pages? From WP:NOR:
- "An edit counts as original research ... if it ... introduces an argument, without citing a reputable source for that argument, that purports to refute or support another idea, theory, argument, or position" or "It introduces an analysis or synthesis of established facts, ideas, opinions, or arguments in a way that builds a particular case favored by the editor, without attributing that analysis or synthesis to a reputable source" -Smahoney 19:53, 14 August 2006 (UTC)
- Have you still not read those pages? From WP:NOR:
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- Good, so have it - a book which was not written in your language, but the translated title is "Still less animals in the wild" (cannot recall the author now, I'll add her when I find the book) plus some Discovery Channel programme (if you expect me to give the date and time, just skip it). Hope this satisfies you;) --Breeze59 20:27, 14 August 2006 (UTC)
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- Clearly, you haven't read Wikipedia:Cite your sources. Giving them (and in vague form at that) to me doesn't suffice. If you want to add content to an article, you must explicitely cite where it came from. Further, I highly doubt that the "some Discovery Channel programme" explicitely said, "homosexuality is unnatural". Therefore, pulling in that as a source would count as introducing "an analysis or synthesis of established facts, ideas, opinions, or arguments in a way that builds a particular case favored by the editor, without attributing that analysis or synthesis to a reputable source". Finally, I'm not going to bother to respond if you continue to refuse to read the relevant policies, or if you continue to dismiss them as irrelevant ("if you expect me to give the date and time, just skip it") when they don't favor your additions. -Smahoney 20:33, 14 August 2006 (UTC)
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- Paul B. – your argument is an interesting one. Of course humans learned to do many things they did not do, say, 200’000 years ago, which, some may argue, are “unnatural”. The point is that humans, have a large adaptation potential which allows us, for example, to eat cooked food. Of course raw friuts and vegetables are still more healthy than cooked ones, but the adaptation is a fact – we can it cooked stuff and be more or less OK. The problem with homosexualty, and specifically with anal sex, is that nature simply did not provide for that. The anus was developed for totally different purposes, and those who ignore this fact are in danger of serious health problems. Therefore “natural” should be defined not as “good”, but as “doing no harm” or “allowing faultless functioning in a certain area”.
- Also, please don’t mix here naturality with moral/social norms (your idea of defecating in public). These notions are absolutely separate and redundant while discussing this specific aspect of homosexuality. --Breeze59 19:15, 14 August 2006 (UTC)
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- Now you are confusing your arguments. Nature "provided for" whatever we can use it for. That includes anal sex. Whether it is healthy or not is a wholly different question. Anal sex is not homosexuality. Historically it has been widely practiced by heterosexuals. Lesbians obviously do not typically engage in it. And male homosexuals often do not either. You are creating a red herring. The fact that the anus was not "designed" for it not more relevant than the fact that the hand was not "designed" for masturbating, nor the mouth "designed" for oral sex. We can adapt them for those purposes - which are now generally considered to be quite normal in western culture. Not only that we see similar activities in our closest relatives, Bonobos and Chimps, which also masturbate (to the delight of zoo visitors). Yes, many other animals do not show sexuality of this kind. Many species have rigid mating behaviours. They "switch on" sexual behaviour during mating seasons, but show no interest at other times. Humans are like other primates. Sexuality is never switched off, but becomes a part of social interactions and can expand to a variety of stimulation-activities. By the way, it's you who are "mixing naturality with moral/social norms." Paul B 00:28, 15 August 2006 (UTC)
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- Dear Breeze, regarding animals, Bagemihl refers to a "broad panoply of behaviors, sexualities and genders" which totally explode any rigid notions of the "normality" of heterosexuality or even some dichotomy of homo- and heterosexuality. Your notion of alternative animal sexuality as an aberration may be appealing but is not tenable.
- Regarding identifying with a particular nationality, sexuality, religion, or any other sort of parochialism, perhaps by spending time in this community you will come to consider the alternative: that of adopting a neutral point of view not only towards the subject you happen to be discussing but also as an identity . . devoid of identity. Regards, Haiduc 01:44, 15 August 2006 (UTC)
- Breeze... I don't think you 'get' wikipedia. I think you saw a newspaper article that disparaged the process of how wikipedia is written so you think you can come on to this article and insert your opinion by quoting "some discovery channel program I saw one time." I just want youto know that that's not the way it works around here. If you have a source, like Hitler or the APA who say "homosexuality is unnatural" then we put that claim in the article as attributeed to hitler or the APA or whoever said it. What we don't do, and what Britannica doesn't do, is say write an article that says "some scientist somewhere said something to the effect of 'homosexual is unnatural' but I can't tell you what context." Clearly if there is scientific or even pseudoscientific evidence to support the proposition that homosexuality is unnatural, then we will find a way to neutrally insert this claim alongside other claims. But what does not fly is somone coming on here without any sources whatsoever to discuss his opinion of the unnaturalness of anal sex. This isn't a disucssion board, it is an encyclopedia. I you have a reference or source for your claims, put it on the table now. If you don't, this conversation is over. See Also: wikipedia: POV warrior MPS 15:18, 19 August 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Declaration that same-sex desire is unnatural
Hi. I noted in the section "Declaration that same-sex desire is unnatural" that the sentence "Though the psychiatric establishment did medicalize same-sex desire, that position has been revised and homosexuality was later removed as a medical disorder from the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM)" was marked as needing a citation. Here's a citation for it from the APA website: http://www.apa.org/topics/orientation.html#mentalillness I'd put it in myself, but I'm not absolutely sure how to do this.
I do think think, however, that it is problematical to headline a section with the word "unnatural" and to discuss a phenomenon (homosexuality) in terms of natural/unnatural without any references to the difficulties of these constructions. The RC view of "Natural Law" has nothing whatsoever to do with the incidence of cannibalism amongst other species.
One further note, as regards Plato's "Laws" -- there is a misapprehension, shown in many talk-page commentaries, that this tract was not an idiosyncratic philosophical treatise, but was in some way a "law of the Greeks". It might be worthwhile pointing out this fallacy.
And, lastly, honestly, has anyone looked at Queer Studies recently? It's not the article I'd wish to go to if I hoped to find out about the "Declaration that same-sex desire is unnatural" MacMurrough 22:39, 16 August 2006 (UTC)
- You make many sensible points, which I have tried to address, though a meaningful discussion of the uses of the term "natural" is far from easy. Paul B 11:51, 19 August 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Change name anti-gay slogans --> anti-gay ideology
I was reading the definition of slogan and I am not sure we have named this article right. Perhaps we should consider Anti-gay ideology since ideology is the set of ideas and a slogan is a short pithy phrase. "Rhetoric" would also work better for me. I am trying to be NPOV here. The question to ask is who calls them slogans? I mean besides wikipedia? That's just a wierd way of talking MPS 15:28, 19 August 2006 (UTC)
- I've long thought that the title is rather odd. I think the article originated as a discussion of the "AIDS kills fags dead" slogan, and then expanded into a list of stereotyped or "cliched" arguments against homosexuality, along with discussions, rebuttals and defences of the arguments. I agree that your title is better since the "slogans" are really a series of arguments or attitudes that work together to create an ideology. Paul B 15:52, 19 August 2006 (UTC)
Perhaps if the themes were labelled more like this, it might work: Category -- example. So ...
Religion -- "It's against the Scriptures."
Nature -- "It just ain't natural."
Catastrophe -- "They cause thunderstorms, don't they?"
Health -- "They spread disease."
Gender -- "They're too girly / too masculine."
Children -- "Save our kiddies."
Non-procreation -- "It's such a waste."
That way the slogan would have some direct reference, and would make the following exploration of the theme easier to get into. (I like the word slogan -- if only because it's one of the few words in English derived from the Irish language.) MacMurrough 18:51, 19 August 2006 (UTC)
- Another option would be to merge this article with societal attitudes towards homosexuality. -Smahoney 19:01, 19 August 2006 (UTC)
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- I think you're probably right. But societal attitudes towards homosexuality already is a long page. Maybe we need to work out how many anti-gay themes there are (to the list I gave above, I would add Choice and Disgust). Use these as headings in the societal attitudes page, and include some information that most slogans derive from more than one theme (eg Catastrophe in large part relies on Religion / Non-procreation and Genderism rely on Nature, which itself (in part) derives from Religion). Then hive off to a discussion of each particular theme. A rough template might be this:
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- theme -- examples of slogans -- history/derivations -- arguments in favour of slogan -- arguments against -- latest research.
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- A problem would be that the theme Religion should really hive off to Homosexuality and religion. There would have to be some agreement on all such pages that a discussion of anti-gay slogans was appropriate. So the Theme "Choice" would lead to a page Homosexuality and choice which would cover the arguments of choice in homosexual orientation/preference and from there lead on to Ex-Gay and whatever the name of that therapy is -- forgive me, we don't have it where I live, so I forget. MacMurrough 20:46, 19 August 2006 (UTC)
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- We can certianly merge to multiple articles. What I had in mind when I suggested merging to societal attitudes towards homosexuality was that that would lead to splitting out much of the US-centric content (since much of what is here has to do exclusively with the US and UK) into its own article, and would leave societal attitudes towards homosexuality much more evenly global in scope. -Smahoney 20:53, 19 August 2006 (UTC)
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- The societal attitudes article is already over-length, so it would be difficult to merge to it. Paul B 21:00, 19 August 2006 (UTC)
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- I'm certainly not opposed to other solutions, but as I suggested above, the merge would:
- 1. Make sense. These "slogans" are really societal attitudes.
- 2. Probably lead to splitting out the US section on societal attitudes towards homosexuality, which would:
- a. Make that article more evenly global in scope (as it is now, its fairly US-centric, or at least US-heavy).
- b. Lead to more development on the new "US attitudes" article.
- -Smahoney 21:44, 19 August 2006 (UTC)
- I'm certainly not opposed to other solutions, but as I suggested above, the merge would:
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Re: MacMurrough's comments above, I think there already is an article that covers the "homosexuality and choice" debate. The title of that "therapy", by the way, is reparative therapy. -Smahoney 21:46, 19 August 2006 (UTC)
- Yes, the article is Choice and sexual orientation. I don't want to disagree with people unnecessarily here, but actually that article does not at all cover Choice in the sense of "choosing". There's little there about, if choice exists, the philosphical notions of that choice: why is a choice made, to what end? And the dynamics of any choice: when is such choice made, upon what circumstance; is choice repeatable: if so, at what rate, upon which circumstances, at which frequency? The further article reparative therapy solely deals with the question, Does it work? It says absolutely nothing about the dynamics of choice, or more correctly of "choosing". If we're going to be condemned on the basis that we have chosen to be condemned, it should certainly be in our interest to investigate what is meant by choice. Or, to put it in Wikipedia terms, to have an article Homosexuality and choice which will investigate these dilemmas. MacMurrough 22:43, 19 August 2006 (UTC)
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- I agree completely. Judith Butler might be a good place to look for a starting place on choice, along with rational choice theory. As for reparative therapy, last time I was there it also didn't address the fact that these people are saying that they're all about enabling people to choose a sexuality which enables them to live a more fulfilling life, but don't offer similar "conversion therapies" to straight people... -Smahoney 03:03, 20 August 2006 (UTC)
Since this discussion seems to have pretered out, I've taken the liberty of changing the name to "Slogans of anti-gay ideology" as a compromise name and provisional solution. Paul B 09:46, 24 August 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Edits by 66.19.235.19
Most of the edits by this individual seem to be sheer anti-gay propaganda, but the statistic added needs to be addressed. It is stated that "Most recent studies from the CDC (Center for Disease Control) show that about 75% of people in the United States with AIDS are gay, only 7% are even thought to be heterosexual". This appears to derive from the 2003 statistics of AIDS sufferers, which state that 75% of white males with the condition in the US are most likely to have contracted it via homosexual sex. Statistics for other ethnic groups and for women are different. I am therefore removing this statistic. Accurate statistics should be included, and it is certainly true that in the US the proportion of male sufferers who have engaged in gay sex greatly exceeds the proportion of gay men in the population, a fact which it is fair to add. Here is a summary of the 2003 statistics. [15] Also, this has nowt to do with biblical plagues, so should be in the AIDS section. Paul B 00:48, 5 September 2006 (UTC)
Removed a similar section which was :
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- Recent studies from the Center for Disease Control show that among males in the United States a high proportion are likely to have contracted the condition through homosexual sex.[1] Worldwide, the epidemic has hit both homosexuals and heterosexuals drastically, although the disease of thought to have originated in gays and later spread to heterosexuals, as the disease is far more common is gays. The CDC has found that only 2.4% of the AIDS victims in the world have gotten it only from heterosexual contact.
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According to the source he quotes, 56% of men getting AIDS did get it on a man to man relationship. How can there be only 2.4 % of heterosexuals getting it? Either you get it with a man or with a woman. Do I get something wrong or is it bad propaganda? -- lucasbfr talk 02:17, 5 September 2006 (UTC)
- Anyway, I won't edit the article again, I don't want to do my first 3RR offense here :x -- lucasbfr talk 02:35, 5 September 2006 (UTC)
- You get it from intravenous drug use and, in rare cases, transfer of blood through cuts, fights, medical error, etc. Running sores and other similar means of transmission are much more common in nonwestern countries. Also note that the pie chart here [16] indicates that new adolescent contraction rates suggest 31% of such cases are now caused by heterosexual contact. Paul B 10:29, 5 September 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Here's a slogan
It was Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve. Whirling Sands 06:45, 29 October 2006 (UTC)
- Already there. Paul B 10:30, 29 October 2006 (UTC)