the campfire rule is to leave people and places in as good or better than you found them.
but most people are not okay to live and let live.
they want to control how others live and this is not an idea that is compatible with secular equality where people are responsible and entitled to their own life.
there is a limit to government and it stops before the bedroom.
it impacts individuals a lot to be told that because of belonging to a demographic, they have no rights or consideration as persons.
it is one thing for a person to decide to give up their personal soverignty to a deity or for their country
and it is quite another for that same person to decide to offer up other people.
as a member of the few would would be sacrificed for the comfort of the many
no
you may not reduce me to a statistic for your comfort.
being religious does not entitle anyone to special consideration or treatment – unless it’s mental health and education. which, is really a good thing, eh!
Dykeworld: Alison Bechdel wins MacArthur Foundation ‘genius’ grant
In her comic strip, “Dykes to Watch Out For,” which ran from 1983 to 2008, she offered a basic metric used to illustrate just how male-dominated the film industry actually is. The test, which Bechdel coined in 1985 in a … Continue reading
Servants to the Cause
Servants to the Cause was a short lived series that Dykes to Watch Out For creator Alison Bechdel did in the Advocate, fortunately, Gay Comics collected them all. Having been involved in a queer community paper, I rather enjoyed … Continue reading
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