LYCOS RETRIEVER
Gays
built 142 days ago
Having Gays in the Military is one facet of the homosexual agenda[1]. The gays believe that with a toned and well-oiled fighting force, they will be able to secure the borders of the East Coast and West Coast from the rest of the nation. When this has been done, the gays can then have all the gay marriages and gay adoptions they could ever wish for in their wildest, MGM-produced, technicolored Judy Garland dreams.
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Gays in the military: give the law a name – Liberal activists are waging a public relations campaign to repeal the 1993 law banning homosexuals from the military. The campaign refers to the law as “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” although there is nothing in the law resembling the policy known by that name (published July, 2007)
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Gays say the key to living in Iran without government interference, even as couples, is keeping a low profile. Some have been arrested for looking "too feminine" but are generally fined and released. Tehran has several famous areas, like Karim-Khan Street, or Mellat, Laleh and Daneshjoo parks, where gays meet and where gay prostitutes seek customers. "It does not take them even 10 minutes to get picked up," said Amir, 24, a graphic designer who is gay. "There are men from every class," he said.
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Gays views its employees as an investment as well. A thorough training system is in place that ensures that the staff has knowledge of the products in the stores and can help customers pick out the perfect selection for any event from an outdoor barbecue to a wedding reception. This means that customers can ask advice on any of the 125 fine wines Gays keeps in stock, among the other products such as liquor and beer. Once the customer has made a selection, Gays' employees are happy to carry the purchase to the customer's car. It is a marriage of modern knowledge and old--fashioned service that seems to translate to success.
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"After centuries of oppression as an 'invisible' segment of society, gays, emboldened by the 1969 Stonewall uprising, took to the streets in the early '70s with an 'in-your-face' attitude. Confronting the worst prejudices of a world that didn't accept them, they fought back against these prejudices with exaggeration and parody, reclaiming their enemies' worst stereotypes about them and turning them into symbols of gay pride," Thorne said. "Thirty years later, gays have won far greater acceptance in the world at large, but they keep doing this stuff anyway."
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Afghanistan under the Taliban regime drew international attention for killing gays by toppling walls onto them. Pakistani law mandates two years in prison for homosexual activity, but the traditional Islamic penalties of lashing and stoning are still widely popular. When authorities in the United Arab Emirates arrested twenty-six men whom they accused of participating in a mass gay wedding – with twelve dressed as grooms and twelve as brides, plus a disc jockey and a man who was to perform the wedding ceremony – in November 2005, they announced plans to subject the men not only to lashings and jail time, but ... to hormone treatments.
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