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Homosexuality Is The Solution For World Peace


Avalon
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Posted

A hundred years ago there was a Great War where young men from different nations were killing each other. But now take Belami as example young men from those same nations today are having sex with one another.

 

Back in the 1960s there was a slogan "Make Love Not War". The problem was it meant heterosexual love. It should have been gay love!

Posted

I'm not sure I can agree with that. After all Bel Ami are just movies. And don't 'they' always say that most of the guys go home to their girlfriends after a hard day on the set?

 

Gman

Posted

The caveat is, once you defeat the physical war, a whole new gay battle awaits lol.

 

It's like when I walked in a bar for 5 minutes..and a guy starts hitting on me. Then his crabby boyfriend comes around and starts cursing at him and saying he doesn't give a fuck about me (without even knowing me).

 

Gay is peace when you're sitting home watching it on video. It's nothing but in real life. They will turn on you faster than a rabid St. Bernard named Cudjoe. That's why I just focus on business and mingle with just a few guys here and there.

Posted

Ignatius J, Reilly, the protagonist of John Kennedy Toole's A Confederacy of Dunces stated the below after a visit to a gay party in the book. Not saying it's PC in any way or a working plan...

 

 

The one whom we finally make Chief of Staff will only want to attend to his fashionable wardrobe, a wardrobe will, alternately, permit him to be either Chief of Staff or debutante, as the desire strikes him. In seeing the success of their fellows here, perverts around the world will band together to capture the military in their respective countries. …

 

Ballets and Broadway musicals and entertainments of that sort will flourish everywhere and will probably make the common people of the world happier than the grim, hostile, fascistic leader of their former leaders. Almost everyone else has had an opportunity to run the world. I cannot see why these people should not be given a chance. …

 

Their movement into power will be, in a sense, only a part of the global movement for opportunity, justice, and equality for all. (For example, can you name one good, practicing transvestite in the Senate? No! These people have been without representation long enough. Their plight is a national, a global disgrace.)

 

Ignatius J, Reilly, and his creator, John Kennedy Toole are heroes of mine.

 

Read the amazing book.

Posted
Ignatius J, Reilly, the protagonist of John Kennedy Toole's A Confederacy of Dunces stated the below after a visit to a gay party in the book. Not saying it's PC in any way or a working plan...

 

 

The one whom we finally make Chief of Staff will only want to attend to his fashionable wardrobe, a wardrobe will, alternately, permit him to be either Chief of Staff or debutante, as the desire strikes him. In seeing the success of their fellows here, perverts around the world will band together to capture the military in their respective countries. …

 

Ballets and Broadway musicals and entertainments of that sort will flourish everywhere and will probably make the common people of the world happier than the grim, hostile, fascistic leader of their former leaders. Almost everyone else has had an opportunity to run the world. I cannot see why these people should not be given a chance. …

 

Their movement into power will be, in a sense, only a part of the global movement for opportunity, justice, and equality for all. (For example, can you name one good, practicing transvestite in the Senate? No! These people have been without representation long enough. Their plight is a national, a global disgrace.)

 

Ignatius J, Reilly, and his creator, John Kennedy Toole are heroes of mine.

 

Read the amazing book.

 

I know the book won a Pulitzer, or rather won John Kennedy Toole a posthumous Pulitzer, but I've tried reading the book several times over the years and just can't get into it.

 

Gman

Posted
I know the book won a Pulitzer, or rather won John Kennedy Toole a posthumous Pulitzer, but I've tried reading the book several times over the years and just can't get into it.

 

Gman

 

Sorry about that. I've friends and acquaintances who say the same thing.

 

I've enjoyed it many times.

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