Saturday 4 August 2012

Gay sex is their problem, not yours!


If you hate having sex with the same gender, hate it. Don’t ever allow one with such a trait come near to you. But if your neighbor loves to have sex with the same gender, like-minded partner, what is your problem? After all they are not doing it public.
I am of the opinion that sexual preferences are individual and it does not need to be a topic of international debate. Live and let live is what I say.
Whenever I see hullabaloo over lesbian, gay, bi-sexual and transgender relations and see them coming out in the street to fight for their rights, I ask this question myself. Do I have any issue with someone having a peculiar sexual inclination? The answer is instant. No, not at all.
I am brooding over this topic just because I happened to read a report on the ‘novel’ protest by gay rights activists and their supporters observing a national "Kiss In" at Chick-fil-A restaurants in Atlanta on Friday. They were protesting the fast-food chain owners' opposition to same-sex unions, abclocal.go.com reported.
The report says that participants are encouraged to come to the fast-food chains and kiss a fellow demonstrator of the same sex. One organizer, Carly McGehee of Dallas, was quoted as saying that she “hopes the event helps gay youths "who feel isolated and are victims of bullying."
"Without question, Dan Cathy has every right to voice his opinions and beliefs," Herndon Graddick, president of the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation, said in a statement.
"But he should meet and get to know the people that he's speaking out against - the people who are harmed by his company's multi-million dollar donations to anti-gay hate groups working to hurt everyday LGBT Americans and break apart loving families," Graddick reportedly said.
The company said in a statement the turnout Wednesday made for "an unprecedented day," although it says it doesn't release exact sales numbers.
"The Chick-fil-A culture and 66-year-old service tradition in our restaurants is to treat every person with honor, dignity and respect - regardless of their belief, race, creed, sexual orientation or gender," the report quoted the statement.

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