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Are you pro Day of Silence and Day of Truth? |
I am for both of them |
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28% |
[ 14 ] |
I am for DoS but not DoT |
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8% |
[ 4 ] |
I am for DoT but not DoS |
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6% |
[ 3 ] |
I am against both of them |
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14% |
[ 7 ] |
Unsure/Other/Don't Care/Poll Whore option. |
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42% |
[ 21 ] |
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Total Votes : 49 |
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Posted: Thu Apr 13, 2006 7:33 am
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Posted: Thu Apr 13, 2006 8:06 am
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Posted: Thu Apr 13, 2006 10:50 am
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Posted: Thu Apr 13, 2006 11:48 am
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Posted: Thu Apr 13, 2006 2:11 pm
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I'm not sure of my opinions for either days. I have a few friends who are bi sexual, but not any who are particularly gay. I am in highschool, and we do have a day of silence, but I don't participate in it. I am a Christian, so basicly, the god I worship says being gay is wrong, but I have not taken any action against my bi friends. I guess my problem lies within my mother. When I was three, she left my father, my brother and me, and ran off to marry a women. So, I have alot of mixed feelings. I still see my mom for about 2 weeks in the summer, but I see her as more than an adult friend than a mom. I don't know what I think right now, and I suppose I should go see a psycologist to help me sort out my feelings. I don't really like thinking about it though. cry
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Posted: Thu Apr 13, 2006 6:31 pm
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Posted: Wed Apr 19, 2006 2:02 pm
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Starre257 dboyzero The Day of Silence is passive and seems to me would largely unnoticed. I'm one for more active confrontations, whether or not it's violent. Just being quiet witha bunch of other people as you go about your day isn't going to attract as much attention. Now, having a silent sit-in in front of a school administrator's office or inside an administrative building, that might get some attention. Trust me, it doesn't go unnoticed. I don't know about other schools, but mine is a very loud place. If only one or two people participated, I'd understand that, but about half the school is participating. Maybe in other places it's not so big, but still, it does have a big impact.
It DOES have an impact.
Not too long ago more than half the kids in our school were p[rotesting abortion with the pro-life movement thing. There were AT LEAST 2500 students wearing Red "Pro-life" bands, with red duct tape over their mouths, refusing to talk. The entire school was alot quiter.
Back on topic....
Honestly, I know alot of gay/lesbian/bi people, and they really couldn't care less what people think of them. If the president doesn't want to let them get married, they don't really care, it's not going to keep them from living with eachother. I think the entire this is a stupid idea, because most of those people don't give a damn.
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Posted: Wed Apr 19, 2006 8:42 pm
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Posted: Thu Apr 20, 2006 12:21 pm
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Posted: Thu Apr 20, 2006 1:05 pm
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Posted: Wed Apr 26, 2006 10:43 am
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Posted: Wed Apr 26, 2006 11:11 am
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Posted: Sun Apr 30, 2006 3:12 pm
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Posted: Mon May 01, 2006 6:09 am
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Posted: Tue May 02, 2006 7:46 pm
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I'd never heard of either day until it came up on Gaia, and I go to university. On the other hand, I live in Canada, where the 'Day of Silence' would fall in the middle of final exams, so I can understand why nobody here has made a fuss about it. (It's also possible that both days are simply an American phenomenon)
I'm against both days in principle, but I have a lot more support for the Day of Silence than the Day of Truth. Still, I have to admit to mixed feelings.
I belong to a tiny minority (or so it seems) of devout Christians who are also pro-gay rights. I have a lot of sympathy for gays and lesbians, who do suffer a great deal in our society. That's going to be a given when they represent such a small portion of the population - they'll be surrounded by societal cues that suggest they 'ought' to be normal, and where they can rarely if ever feel like they themselves are the norm. That's not even including the legions of intolerant people who feel compelled to spew hatred and ignorance in their faces on an almost daily basis. While the condition of gays and lesbians in the west has improved steadily since 1969, they still aren't as accepted as other minorities of a similar size - say, Jews or left-handed people. It's important that we, as a society, remember that; what may be obvious to you or me may not be obvious to a new generation of kids. Events like the Day of Silence help them understand the pain and fear many gays go through. On the other hand, at least in Canada, there are also Gay Pride parades and other events that could substitute for the Day of Silence, and I'm not really in favor of all the host of new days of recognition for every single disease, minority group and nationality imaginable. If a community wants to celebrate an important event, more power to them! I don't mind if my tax dollars go to subsidize their cultural events, either. I do resent having my calendar filled up with festival after festival, however; already there's at least two or three events for every day if you look for 5 minutes on the internet.
Like I said earlier, however, I also have some sympathy for the Day of Truth, which I also have not heard of before. sweatdrop As a practicing Christian, I sometimes get the feeling that yes, our society is becoming decadent and immoral. I'm optimistic about human nature, and I glory in the fact that our education and standard of living, our health care and technology, basically our lives in so many ways are far better than 99% of our ancestors had any hope of achieving. Today I sat and ate ice cream while I played "Shadow Hearts: From the New World" on my Playstation 2. Not only are these both luxuries, so is the free time I had (and the temperature-controlled environment, the couch, the...oh, you get the idea). I'm not saying we should go back to the way things were hundreds of years ago - I am grateful for the life I lead, and I'd be miserable living without my internet and air conditioning. XD But there are other trends in society that are less thrilling. The rise of homelessness, the culture of anonymity in our cities and on the internet; the petty selfishness of the average person. Playing online RPGs has made me realize that the majority of kids today are perfectly selfish creatures, all too willing to break the rules of decent behavior as soon as they have an advantage - even if it's in a computer game. No, I don't think that all my ancestors were kind, noble people! But I do see trends towards all kinds of evils - and in many cases, someone who tries to fight them, or even tries to point them out, is marginalized as a religious nut or a liberal (which is worse in the United States is hard to say; in Canada, being a liberal is fine, but being religious is a big no-no). I don't always agree with what religious people say; I'm fine with the clothes girls wear and I enjoy a glass of wine or a beer now and then; I have few issues with premarital sex and I support gay marriage. But I do worry that more and more our society is lacking any moral grounding; we have become a nation seeking after moral relativity, where no belief is actually 'wrong', just different. And when everything is relative, nothing is right, either. That would be a real shame, since I do think there are real rights and wrongs in the world. I'm sure 99% of any survey would agree that murder is wrong - but what about shoplifting? Or downloading movies off the internet? It's a slippery slope. Some things can be justified. But these days, it seems to be justification by the individual without any appeal to a common moral code.
If I had to take a side in any of this, it would be (typically for me) a very old American proverb: "I may not like what you have to say, but I'll defend to the death your right to say it." Let them both have their days; I won't participate in either, but I do have some sympathy with both.
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