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Seeker1961
Guest
How come the only time I hear about gay people and abusive childhoods is from people who are against gay people having the same civil rights as the “normal” people? I’ll hazard a guess that I know a few more gay people than most conservative Catholics who are against gay marriage-having lived in the community as an adult since the 1980’s. Of the gay friends I have had and now have in my life-ONE had what anyone could consider abuse in their background. I know another that was sent to a fundamentalist anti-gay camp that probably made her into more of a gay activist than if she’d been left alone. I also have a straight friend who had a horrifically abusive childhood and made a commitment to God and everyone that he would be the father he never had…and he is. He has a lovely wife and five amazing children.Smoking, like homosexual activity, is a behavior. We can and do ‘discriminate’ against smoking. We can and should discriminate among behaviors.
The question about ‘deciding’ to be heterosexual is pretty trite and old. Over and over and over again, I hear directly from homosexuals that they had abusive backgrounds and childhood traumas. Clearly, there is something going on here other than a select number of people ‘being born that way.’ This is one of the reasons I actually find it *cruel *to encourage this attitude that we’re born this way. But we’re far too politically correct to talk about how prevalent that abusive background is among those with SSA.![]()
Sure, there are gay people with lousy backgounds, and there are straight people with lousy backgrounds. Those backgrounds had influence as to the choices they make in life-but they didn’t make then gay or straight.
It’s cruel to tell people that their attraction is their fault,and if they just prayed enough or prayed the right way they’d be just like everyone else. Don’t you think they’ve tried that?