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Actually I think Melâs father has a legitimate gripe. I donât think Roz has any more right to, really, brag about being gay than someone else has to proclaim to the world he/she is straight. Really, why should Roz expect those not personally involved to care? And wouldnât most people think those who made it a point to assert their sexual orientation â no matter what that may be â is acting somewhat strangely? Thatâs the problem with activist of any cause: they seem to not be able to accept acceptance.
I know for a while itâs going to be tempting to shout it from the rooftops, but to borrow a phrase from the Security Folks (AKA Professional Paranoids, or the keepers of the Confidential, Secret, Top-Secret, etc. files), just like the extra-marital affairs and other assorted sordid âdirty laundryâ we all saw from the corner of our eyes in the Crotch, I must avert âI still donât have A Need To Knowâ.You GO, girl, but have the sense to not shove peopleâs noses in it, OK? Any more than you would the other.If the nose is Blue, even more so!
Didnât matter what service, if you worked for NSA, you knew who was gay and it didnât matter all the way up the ranks as far as I could see as long as you did your job.
When was the last time you had a gay person âforce their lifestyleâ on you? As someone who is still serving, and straight mind you, Iâve felt sorry for gay people who werenât allowed to discuss their sexuality with ANYONE. DADT was always a policy that looked the other way if you and your buddies were talking about the girl you had brought back to the barracks. But, if you were gay you werenât allowed to discuss your lifestyle. Once identified as gay, you were subject to UCMJ and booted. Talk about forcing your lifestyle on someone! And considering that Mitt would like to repeal the gays in the military policy, I think itâs great that Garry is keeping this subject in the public mind. Itâs kind of selfish but, I donât want to have to sit through another powerpoint briefing when/if they change the policy again! My fellow Soldiers and I have other missions to worry about.
I retired from the Navy in 1992, and during my career, being a homosexual was a court martial offense. One of the guys in our division in the 1980s was almost definitely gay. He was one of our best sailors. I didnât know for sure about his sexuality, and I certainly didnât want to know, because, if I knew, I would have been obligated to turn him in. Now that being gay in the military is no longer a crime, I donât blame the gays for celebrating.
yes, these effing so called Christians deciding for all of us how to live and what to believe and forcing Christian laws on everybody, non Christians and all that.
imagine having to put up with Christians who force Christian Government in our lives. Called the Republican/Right. St. Ronnie and his âtype.â
Shoving their religion in our Government, society and non Christians. i guess they think itâs alright to shove their morality on others. watching the blowback when someone else tries to do the same, the Christians yell persecution.
those who throw stones, and live in glass houses.
how i wish religion was really against the law. morals of these Christian are what got this country in the deep doo doo it is, ah but that is just what Christians do. force their beliefs on everyone else.
Not enough love from these Christians, and too much judgment and hate.
Seems to me DADT never worked very well. Even those who were willing to stay quiet had to look out for people who would out them. And as some people have already pointed out, under DADT being gay meant having to filter all normal conversation.
While most gays that I have met over the years have learned some discretion, there are some that seem to like the drama of being âin yo faceâ, and enjoy making straights squirm.I understand that there are those who were born that way or were conditioned by upbringing or society, but seeing it all over and having it pushed on me is way past the line.I have seen gay porn displayed in sidewalk side windows â I guess it was to say that straights were not welcome there
@gmartinâNo amount of arguing is going to change anybodyâs mind on it.â
Not true. Ten years ago, the majority of Americans were prejudiced against gays. Today, clearly you are in a minority. Fifty years ago, the majority were racist, also not the case today. Itâs exposure to the people we hate, showing that they are mostly, just like us, that eventually breaks down the racial, ethnic and gender orientation barriers that cause prejudice and hatred. You may choose not to be influenced by this exposure, but many are. Some people are open-minded, some of you are not.
I think Roz is going through newbie enthusiasm. When someone is initially accepted into a group, thereâs a tendency to try to impress people to justify their acceptance. Itâs quaint to those already in the group, and annoying to those outside the group.
Being gay isnât shameful, but itâs nothing to be particularly proud of either. It just means your sexual preference is a bit neurotic or wacky. Why go around broadcasting that to everyone?
I somehow deleted my earlier posting â it posted twice, I deleted one and both are now gone.To briefly recap, Thanks for your perspicacity, wit and eloquence. I wished I had said it.In defense of gmartin997 ( did I really say that?) he is a product of his generation. As I mentioned yesterday, at the beginning of this arc, that GT was highlighting the generation gap in perceiving gays and lesbians. Many older citizens are locked into a mindset based on their upbringing and social situation. From his posts Iâd surmise gmartin997 is in his early 70âs, religious and Republican and this is what influences his thinking.Iâm not that much younger but was fortunate enough to have benefited from a far more liberal way of thinking and a more liberated lifestyle. I try to be tolerant of everyone but confess I donât play well with religious fanatics, bigots or racists.
From âWKRP in Cincinattiâ:âLes, if you ARE gay, thereâs nothing shameful with that. You should be PROUD that youâre gay, just as IâmâŠproud that Iâm not.â
My uncle was homosexual. He served as a naval corpsmen (medic) at one of the nastiest battles in the Pacific, Guadalcanal. I doubt seriously that any sailor, marine or soldier he treated gave a ratâs fanny about who he wanted to sleep with just so long as he could patch them up and get them home alive. The rest of that stuff did not matter!
We count on Doonesbury to bring up controversial topics. It is kind of what separates Doonesbury from most other comic strips. He has been doing controversial stuff since the very beginning, decades ago. I was glad he didnât shy away from Watergate and I am still happy to hear about the current topics today.
Always fascinates me that the people who say âIâm not shoving my heterosexuality in their facesâ are often those who wear wedding rings. have pictures of other-sex spouses in work areas, tell jokes where the point depends on heterosexual sex, make comments where the point depends on heterosexual sex, etc., etc.,
âNo amount of arguing is going to change anybodyâs mind on it.â Who is arguing? The guy who is spoiling for a fight is Melâs (probably, but who knows) straight father.
GT isnât fighting, eitherâheâs simply creating characters who are ordinary people. If he didnât tell you up front that his gay characters are gay, would you know, otherwise?
Noâbecause being gay is ORDINARY, folks. Your gay friend brother sister husband wife mother dad is not really different from your straight friend brother sister husband wife mother dadâexcept, of course, that most of their lives they have tried to keep a big secret about a major part of their beings.
We straights (especially bthe older ones) sometime must ask ourselves: what would I be like if I had to keep my sexual or gender preference a secret my whole life?
How easy would it have been?
Who could I talk to, as a teenager, about my crushes?
How could I dress up and go out and have fun doing it, as a teenager, if my parent or my minister/priest or the guy down the block might kill me for doing so?
Most teenagers think they personally are somehow weird and they die a thousand deaths trying not to be. WHAT must it be likeâin a place where gays are ostracised and excludedâbeing a gay teenager? No wonder these kids kill themselvesâwhen youâre a teenager, you think there is no way out.
Those straights who were born without empathy and who never try to imagine being different from themselves are the ones who are holding up the move of human progress here. Mitt and his pals are standing in the way of history. Whether they like it or not, every single day there are fewer people out there willing to be beat up, willing to be excluded, willing to take this abuse. We straights who are gay allies simply have to hold on to our empathy and maintain the energy and power to stand with our gay friends and family as they push backi.
Gee, RR, with your post coming out of right field, and not having anything to do with the topic at hand, you and Roz appear to have a few things in common.
Years ago, the biggest âthreatâ our spies faced was being âoutedâ and blackmailed. It was OUR puritanical B.S. in the U.S. that made that a problem, the rest of the world DIDNâT CARE! Decades later, we were still losing translators and highly valued people in the military because of religious persecution, yes, it WAS âthe religiousâ exerting THEIR power to deny rights, and threaten NATIONAL SECURITY!
That a soldier, sailor, tinker, or spy, can be open, and state their âpositionâ and NOT have it endanger them, or the nation, is long past time to arrive. It is time for those on âthe religious rightâ, who are neither, to back off on many issues, and let this SECULAR NATION, survive, and progress.
Donât know what the real percentage is, but itâs probably more than 5%, because the entertainment world weâre all addicted to has made gayness a fashionable lifestyle choice. But the Log Cabin Republicans, Dick Cheyneyâs daughter, or Megan McCain donât have a problem with that. Weird isnât it?
Alabama Al â youâre merely experiencing what all gay people had to for decades: having someone else display his/her sexuality in your face. Have you ever kissed or held hands with a person of the opposite sex in public? Well, it works the same way for gays, too. Get over it. Roz is merely being proud, not trying to upset anyone. If youâre upset, then youâre the one with a problem.
DADT was a step up from the previous policy. Before then, the Brass had the right to ASK if one was gay. If you said yes, you were discharged. If you said no, and they found out that you lied, you were in the stockade and then Dishonorable Discharge.
If I win Lotto, I am probably going to talk about it for a while. If my team wins the play-offs, I am probably going to talk about it for a while. Roz feels a bit the same way. After a while the novelty will wear off and sheâll stop talking about it.
Waa-waa, Melâs dad. My own father could be just as old-school and conservative on a lot of issues, but he also had surprisingly liberal ideas about sexuality; in regards to homosexuals, his attitude could have been summed up as âlive and let live.â
Linguist over 12 years ago
Donât ask, donât what? You go girl.
pouncingtiger over 12 years ago
Sheâs gay and proud of it.
pouncingtiger over 12 years ago
Roz is ready for âa gay olâ time.â (from The Flintstones theme)
Buzza Wuzza over 12 years ago
Nothing stops Roz.
BE THIS GUY over 12 years ago
Everybody must know!
Blood-Poisoning Vermin over 12 years ago
Say it loud, say it proud â since for so long you couldnât.
MikeBx over 12 years ago
Mitt says hr would re-enstate Donât Ask, Donât Tell. Iwonder how that would work (besides poorly).
Dtroutma over 12 years ago
Over 40 years ago, didnât ask, didnât need to, didnât care.
Alabama Al over 12 years ago
Actually I think Melâs father has a legitimate gripe. I donât think Roz has any more right to, really, brag about being gay than someone else has to proclaim to the world he/she is straight. Really, why should Roz expect those not personally involved to care? And wouldnât most people think those who made it a point to assert their sexual orientation â no matter what that may be â is acting somewhat strangely? Thatâs the problem with activist of any cause: they seem to not be able to accept acceptance.
pbarnrob over 12 years ago
I know for a while itâs going to be tempting to shout it from the rooftops, but to borrow a phrase from the Security Folks (AKA Professional Paranoids, or the keepers of the Confidential, Secret, Top-Secret, etc. files), just like the extra-marital affairs and other assorted sordid âdirty laundryâ we all saw from the corner of our eyes in the Crotch, I must avert âI still donât have A Need To Knowâ.You GO, girl, but have the sense to not shove peopleâs noses in it, OK? Any more than you would the other.If the nose is Blue, even more so!
asa4ever over 12 years ago
Didnât matter what service, if you worked for NSA, you knew who was gay and it didnât matter all the way up the ranks as far as I could see as long as you did your job.
asa4ever over 12 years ago
I was talking about enlisted because of our higher than normal IQâs :) Officers, well letâs not get into that.
Oceanic over 12 years ago
@gmartin997
" no more so than the homosexuals who force their lifestyles on those who donât approve " ? who is forcing their what, now?
No, not the other fellow, in this matter Iâm afraid, it is you.
RetiredArmySFC Premium Member over 12 years ago
When was the last time you had a gay person âforce their lifestyleâ on you? As someone who is still serving, and straight mind you, Iâve felt sorry for gay people who werenât allowed to discuss their sexuality with ANYONE. DADT was always a policy that looked the other way if you and your buddies were talking about the girl you had brought back to the barracks. But, if you were gay you werenât allowed to discuss your lifestyle. Once identified as gay, you were subject to UCMJ and booted. Talk about forcing your lifestyle on someone! And considering that Mitt would like to repeal the gays in the military policy, I think itâs great that Garry is keeping this subject in the public mind. Itâs kind of selfish but, I donât want to have to sit through another powerpoint briefing when/if they change the policy again! My fellow Soldiers and I have other missions to worry about.
peabodyboy over 12 years ago
I retired from the Navy in 1992, and during my career, being a homosexual was a court martial offense. One of the guys in our division in the 1980s was almost definitely gay. He was one of our best sailors. I didnât know for sure about his sexuality, and I certainly didnât want to know, because, if I knew, I would have been obligated to turn him in. Now that being gay in the military is no longer a crime, I donât blame the gays for celebrating.
Beleck3 over 12 years ago
yes, these effing so called Christians deciding for all of us how to live and what to believe and forcing Christian laws on everybody, non Christians and all that.
imagine having to put up with Christians who force Christian Government in our lives. Called the Republican/Right. St. Ronnie and his âtype.â
Shoving their religion in our Government, society and non Christians. i guess they think itâs alright to shove their morality on others. watching the blowback when someone else tries to do the same, the Christians yell persecution.
those who throw stones, and live in glass houses.
how i wish religion was really against the law. morals of these Christian are what got this country in the deep doo doo it is, ah but that is just what Christians do. force their beliefs on everyone else.
Not enough love from these Christians, and too much judgment and hate.
convin9003 over 12 years ago
Seems to me DADT never worked very well. Even those who were willing to stay quiet had to look out for people who would out them. And as some people have already pointed out, under DADT being gay meant having to filter all normal conversation.
route66paul over 12 years ago
While most gays that I have met over the years have learned some discretion, there are some that seem to like the drama of being âin yo faceâ, and enjoy making straights squirm.I understand that there are those who were born that way or were conditioned by upbringing or society, but seeing it all over and having it pushed on me is way past the line.I have seen gay porn displayed in sidewalk side windows â I guess it was to say that straights were not welcome there
Chrisnp over 12 years ago
Roz is in almost eight years and still a specialist? HmmmmâŠThere might be a more pressing threat to her career than her sexuality!
salgud over 12 years ago
@gmartinâNo amount of arguing is going to change anybodyâs mind on it.â
Not true. Ten years ago, the majority of Americans were prejudiced against gays. Today, clearly you are in a minority. Fifty years ago, the majority were racist, also not the case today. Itâs exposure to the people we hate, showing that they are mostly, just like us, that eventually breaks down the racial, ethnic and gender orientation barriers that cause prejudice and hatred. You may choose not to be influenced by this exposure, but many are. Some people are open-minded, some of you are not.
Coyoty Premium Member over 12 years ago
I think Roz is going through newbie enthusiasm. When someone is initially accepted into a group, thereâs a tendency to try to impress people to justify their acceptance. Itâs quaint to those already in the group, and annoying to those outside the group.
ramonesfan over 12 years ago
Being gay isnât shameful, but itâs nothing to be particularly proud of either. It just means your sexual preference is a bit neurotic or wacky. Why go around broadcasting that to everyone?
Linguist over 12 years ago
I somehow deleted my earlier posting â it posted twice, I deleted one and both are now gone.To briefly recap, Thanks for your perspicacity, wit and eloquence. I wished I had said it.In defense of gmartin997 ( did I really say that?) he is a product of his generation. As I mentioned yesterday, at the beginning of this arc, that GT was highlighting the generation gap in perceiving gays and lesbians. Many older citizens are locked into a mindset based on their upbringing and social situation. From his posts Iâd surmise gmartin997 is in his early 70âs, religious and Republican and this is what influences his thinking.Iâm not that much younger but was fortunate enough to have benefited from a far more liberal way of thinking and a more liberated lifestyle. I try to be tolerant of everyone but confess I donât play well with religious fanatics, bigots or racists.
fritzoid Premium Member over 12 years ago
From âWKRP in Cincinattiâ:âLes, if you ARE gay, thereâs nothing shameful with that. You should be PROUD that youâre gay, just as IâmâŠproud that Iâm not.â
TexTech over 12 years ago
My uncle was homosexual. He served as a naval corpsmen (medic) at one of the nastiest battles in the Pacific, Guadalcanal. I doubt seriously that any sailor, marine or soldier he treated gave a ratâs fanny about who he wanted to sleep with just so long as he could patch them up and get them home alive. The rest of that stuff did not matter!
montessoriteacher over 12 years ago
We count on Doonesbury to bring up controversial topics. It is kind of what separates Doonesbury from most other comic strips. He has been doing controversial stuff since the very beginning, decades ago. I was glad he didnât shy away from Watergate and I am still happy to hear about the current topics today.
DavidGBA over 12 years ago
Wait, what about her dozens of dates with guys?
underwriter over 12 years ago
Always fascinates me that the people who say âIâm not shoving my heterosexuality in their facesâ are often those who wear wedding rings. have pictures of other-sex spouses in work areas, tell jokes where the point depends on heterosexual sex, make comments where the point depends on heterosexual sex, etc., etc.,
diggitt over 12 years ago
âNo amount of arguing is going to change anybodyâs mind on it.â Who is arguing? The guy who is spoiling for a fight is Melâs (probably, but who knows) straight father.
GT isnât fighting, eitherâheâs simply creating characters who are ordinary people. If he didnât tell you up front that his gay characters are gay, would you know, otherwise?
Noâbecause being gay is ORDINARY, folks. Your gay friend brother sister husband wife mother dad is not really different from your straight friend brother sister husband wife mother dadâexcept, of course, that most of their lives they have tried to keep a big secret about a major part of their beings.
We straights (especially bthe older ones) sometime must ask ourselves: what would I be like if I had to keep my sexual or gender preference a secret my whole life?
How easy would it have been?
Who could I talk to, as a teenager, about my crushes?
How could I dress up and go out and have fun doing it, as a teenager, if my parent or my minister/priest or the guy down the block might kill me for doing so?
Most teenagers think they personally are somehow weird and they die a thousand deaths trying not to be. WHAT must it be likeâin a place where gays are ostracised and excludedâbeing a gay teenager? No wonder these kids kill themselvesâwhen youâre a teenager, you think there is no way out.
Those straights who were born without empathy and who never try to imagine being different from themselves are the ones who are holding up the move of human progress here. Mitt and his pals are standing in the way of history. Whether they like it or not, every single day there are fewer people out there willing to be beat up, willing to be excluded, willing to take this abuse. We straights who are gay allies simply have to hold on to our empathy and maintain the energy and power to stand with our gay friends and family as they push backi.
Alabama Al over 12 years ago
Gee, RR, with your post coming out of right field, and not having anything to do with the topic at hand, you and Roz appear to have a few things in common.
Dtroutma over 12 years ago
Years ago, the biggest âthreatâ our spies faced was being âoutedâ and blackmailed. It was OUR puritanical B.S. in the U.S. that made that a problem, the rest of the world DIDNâT CARE! Decades later, we were still losing translators and highly valued people in the military because of religious persecution, yes, it WAS âthe religiousâ exerting THEIR power to deny rights, and threaten NATIONAL SECURITY!
That a soldier, sailor, tinker, or spy, can be open, and state their âpositionâ and NOT have it endanger them, or the nation, is long past time to arrive. It is time for those on âthe religious rightâ, who are neither, to back off on many issues, and let this SECULAR NATION, survive, and progress.
kaffekup over 12 years ago
Your toilet called, it misses you.
ramonesfan over 12 years ago
Donât know what the real percentage is, but itâs probably more than 5%, because the entertainment world weâre all addicted to has made gayness a fashionable lifestyle choice. But the Log Cabin Republicans, Dick Cheyneyâs daughter, or Megan McCain donât have a problem with that. Weird isnât it?
Linguist over 12 years ago
What has that got to do with todayâs strip/ You obviously have a one track mind and no train of thought.
tommymike over 12 years ago
Alabama Al â youâre merely experiencing what all gay people had to for decades: having someone else display his/her sexuality in your face. Have you ever kissed or held hands with a person of the opposite sex in public? Well, it works the same way for gays, too. Get over it. Roz is merely being proud, not trying to upset anyone. If youâre upset, then youâre the one with a problem.
Nebulous Premium Member over 12 years ago
DADT was a step up from the previous policy. Before then, the Brass had the right to ASK if one was gay. If you said yes, you were discharged. If you said no, and they found out that you lied, you were in the stockade and then Dishonorable Discharge.
Hufn over 12 years ago
Spoken like a true bigotâŠ..
To the rest who are being more wordy in response to him, youâre wasting your breath. Donât see any changing happening there⊠LmaoâŠ
basshwy over 12 years ago
So what you are saying isâŠtheir behaviour is in many ways the same as fundamentalist Muslims?
basshwy over 12 years ago
If I win Lotto, I am probably going to talk about it for a while. If my team wins the play-offs, I am probably going to talk about it for a while. Roz feels a bit the same way. After a while the novelty will wear off and sheâll stop talking about it.
basshwy over 12 years ago
âŠand your problem, even if that were remotely the case is?
Sometimes it is better to close your mouth and only be thought a fool, you fool!!
pjknb over 12 years ago
Just plain nasty and not needed here Frank!
tcambeul over 12 years ago
When I joined the military, homosexuality was forbidden; Then it became optional; I retired before it became mandatoryâŠâŠ
lindz.coop Premium Member over 12 years ago
You forgot hypocritical.
FrostbiteFalls over 2 years ago
Waa-waa, Melâs dad. My own father could be just as old-school and conservative on a lot of issues, but he also had surprisingly liberal ideas about sexuality; in regards to homosexuals, his attitude could have been summed up as âlive and let live.â