The question should be......
Why dont all PEOPLE support gay rights?
Why dont all PEOPLE support gay rights?
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The question should be......
Why dont all PEOPLE support gay rights?
Then we wouldn't have anything fun to read as we eat our popcorn.
The question should be......
Why dont all PEOPLE support gay rights?
Um....Cupcake ~ Stop being a Ass Kisser on this thread! You've made your race known to us 200 times already! The OP insulted YOUR Race in his premise, yet you keep making posts to support him.
Then we wouldn't have anything fun to read as we eat our popcorn.
i am not talking about "all minorities," i'm talking about blacks. no other minority group has promoted "equal rights" like blacks have, which is why they are being discussed. in addition, both the Asian and Latino populations had a much lower support level for prop 8. so not only did blacks push more then any other minority group for civil rights, but they conversely also had the highest percentage of support for prop 8 of all minority groups. not sure how this is even a debatable topic when you consider those 2 variables.
TEA BREAK!!!
*pours out*
 ](*,)](/images/smilies/bang.gif)
Well, why doesn't the overwhelming majority of the black community support equal rights for gay people?
There have to be some practical answers here, so we can fix it.
"stoop to my level"?
Ha! based on your level of Ass Kissing in this thread, I'd say you're just a Grass Hopper standing among Giants!
As a Black Man, you should be ashamed of yourself!
"stoop to my level"?
Ha! based on your level of Ass Kissing in this thread, I'd say you're just a Grass Hopper standing among Giants!
As a Black Man, you should be ashamed of yourself!
And how do you know the overwhelming majority of the black community doesn't support gay rights? California isn't the only state where black people call home. I have yet to see satisfactory polls on how African Americans in every state felt about gay rights. And if their opinions were so drastically higher and more divisive than their white counterparts.
B/c the last time I checked Matt Sheperd wasn't gay bashed to death by a bunch of bible-toting 50 Cent impersonators.![]()
Don't be ashamed.Your posts in this baiting thread were amongst those that I appreciated for their honesty and tact.

I've had this discussion as well b/c it seems intuitive that all minorities would rally together. Even the most dreadful apathy should be overcome by the knowledge that banning together is just good strategy.
Note there are plenty of straight African American's who do support the fight for gay civil rights. I suppose you're analysis is that since non-whites have faced both legal and societal discrim. in the past, and on some level continue to face prejudices today, that they should be sympathetic to your plight and help w/ the cause. Well, I suppose some black people feel that your struggle isn't their struggle. When someone looks at them, that person knows they are not white and the same isn't true about sexuality. African Americans were slaves and you were not. African Americans couldn't vote and that right has never been denied to you. Studies show that racial profiling is still very real and the same isn't true for the LGBT. Their struggles are completely different from your struggles and their fight is completely different from your fight. Although this is debatable, sexuality is also somewhat fluid, and ethnicity is not. Also, some feel as though the LGBT community never really rallied beside them, so why should they bother getting involved for you.
But really, how many of us have reached out to an African American and invited them to a LGBT event or activist rally? I believe most voters are unaware as to how their decisions effect another person's legal rights. To them, marriage is a ceremony in a church. They are not factoring in all the legal benefits and protections that go along w/ it. Educating the African American community might help.
Broadcast Date: Nov. 7, 1967
A Supreme Court ruling comes down, and a Northwest Territories mechanic named George Klippert is on his way to jail. His crime is that he is a homosexual. In this CBC Radio clip, Bud Orange, Klippert's MP, says he hopes the government is forced to make a move as a result of the ruling. Justice Minister Pierre Trudeau responds that proposed changes to the criminal code will prevent more cases like Klippert's.
Klippert has been to court twice already: first when he was convicted of gross indecency and sentenced to three years in prison, and second when he was deemed a dangerous sexual offender. He's appealed the case to the Supreme Court, which upholds the ruling in a 3-2 decision and sends Klippert to jail indefinitely — the standard sentence for dangerous sexual offenders.
There have to be some practical answers here, so we can fix it.
