Stirlingsays
Member
- Country
England
Can a woman have p****?
Only if she asks very nicely.
England
Can a woman have p****?
England
England
Hitler was famously a big fan of gay Jewish men.
England
Ernst Röhm was gay and headed the SA, the Nazi paramilitary wing.
He wasn't Jewish but you can't have everything.
Eventually he had him shot.
Again, you can't have everything.
England
Great - that doesn't change the fact that Hitler and the Nazi regime were strongly opposed to homosexuality, and gay men in particular.
Early Nazism had some exceptions, like Röhm, but as you acknowledge, this was violently ended and the repression intensified over time.
Hitler also wasn't vegan.
England
However, being opposed to homosexuality in practical terms is just supporting the continuation of the human race.
But that doesn't mean you have to be against individuals or their private lives.
England
Gay people existing doesn't threaten the continuation of the human race - straight people aren't going to stop having kids because homosexuality is accepted.
It's also very hard to say you’re “opposed to homosexuality in practical terms” but not against individuals - those two things aren’t separate.
England
Who mentioned existing? That's your language. Propagating and expanding (as has happened) does reduce birth rates (especially importantly amongst females who are more prone to bisexuality) and that does factor in.
The reason homosexuality was always opposed was hardly down to a dislike of males with fashion sense.
Well there is a difference, one is about how a topic is treated in media and education and the other involves direct intervention into people's lives.
England
There are much simpler, and far more impactful levers we can pull to address declining birth rates - the existence of bisexual women is barely a consideration to any real discussion of that topic.
The reason homosexuality has historically been opposed also had very little to do with birth rates.
How a topic is treated in media and education inevitably impacts people’s lives, which is my point - you can’t so easily separate the two.
USA
You are indifferent ? To a quack surgeon and their scalpel doing some frightening stuff ? I feel sorry for you.Genuinely, why would I?
England
Go on, I'm interested to know your thoughts.
Go on, I'm interested to know your thoughts.
It does but indirectly, which I what I implied anyway.
Also, the change in favour of homosexuality also affected those who disapproved for the reasons stated plus others. So why the consideration only going one way? But again, I'm interested in hearing your argument.
England
England
Well birth rates are predominantly an economic problem, although there are obviously cultural factors - the most consistent correlations across countries are the cost of living, higher female education levels and urbanisation. There is huge decline in heterosexual couples having children - that can’t be explained by anything to do with homosexuality.
The core resistance to homosexuality historically is surely a religious/moral one - religious texts and doctrine shaped laws and social norms for centuries.
I may be wrong, but tracking of fertility rates seems a fairly new thing, and I don’t think it was much, if any, of a consideration in most of the historic resistance to homophobia.
I accept that social change around homosexuality hasn’t only affected one side of the argument, but I don’t think those impacts are equal - you’re weighing off criminalisation, violence and worse against people feeling socially uncomfortable.
England