32 Comments on “Sochi: The Need To Move The 2014 Winter Olympics Out of Russia”

  1. You can see Obamas strings manipulating him!! Yes Sulu how much abuse did
    you get from Captain Kirk! Why is the right wing biggots suddenly on the
    side of the poo pushers!!!

  2. We have no problems with LGBT in Russia) dont tell this shit))) look in
    your country – USA have more problems with it!))

  3. hello to everyone…i would like to ask you to help us promoting this
    animation film…it is mocking homophobia laws in Russia and speaks about
    boycott of Olympic games in SOCHI… it has been created by free artists of
    Russia and we have spent our time and funds without any sided requests, but
    we simply have no budget for promotion…So if you think that this film
    standing for right things – PLEASE SUPPORT – SHARE!! Thank you in
    beforehand… PEACE AND LOVE TO YOU ALL!!!
    http://youtu.be/G9tdqq1lXoo

  4. This dude can wish all he wants. The majority of the world still doesn’t
    give a shit about gays and Russia is about to prove it. We don’t have to
    like you. And judging by the way you gays act now about this thing I like
    you even less. Fucking selfish fudge packers! FUCK YOU.

  5. Fucking Obama couldn’t even turn up to the London 2012 Summer Olympics and
    we british were fighting 2 wars with those americans a disgrace!!!!

  6. Glad to see these Winter Olympics are a triumph. Excellent news! What a
    massive defeat for the “gay” lobby and its mindless intimidation and Hate!

  7. uhhh…. instead of boycotting the olympics, people, fans, and athletes
    instead make a statement… like expressing LGBT belief while participating
    in the olympics…Russia really cant do anything if all of the people and i
    mean ALL of them “shower some rainbows”… of course unless Putin wants his
    country to be showered by fire….(ban in participating in the olympics is
    considered a MINOR problem russia would face if they do something)

    FREE PUSSY RIOT!!!

  8. Check out my Olympic torch footage and more on my channel The Olympic Torch
    Highlights Week 2

  9. Geez, so what happened to boycotting Olympics in China? Lgbt is the biggest
    problem theses days?
    Smells like russophobic

  10. Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people’s rights in Russia
    face legal and social challenges as well as discrimination not experienced
    by non-LGBT people. Although same-sex sexual activity between consenting
    adults in private was decriminalized in 1993,[1] there are currently no
    laws prohibiting discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation or
    gender identity and expression, and households headed by same-sex couples
    are ineligible for the legal protections available to opposite-sex couples.
    The age of consent has been the same for same-sex relations as for
    heterosexual relations since 2003, and homosexuality was declassified as a
    mental illness in 1999. Transsexuals have been able to change their legal
    gender since 1997.
    In 2013, Russia received criticism from around the world for enacting a law
    that bans the distribution of “propaganda of non-traditional sexual
    relations” to minors, which effectively makes it illegal to suggest that
    gay relationships are equal to heterosexual relationships or to distribute
    material on gay rights.[4] Leaders of foreign governments have condemned
    the law, as have 27 Nobel prize winners from the fields of science and the
    arts.[5]
    Since the passage of the anti-gay propaganda law, the media has reported
    the arrest of a gay rights activist[6] as well as a surging incidence of
    hate crimes motivated by homophobia,[7][8] including hate crimes
    perpetrated by neo-Nazi groups against gay minors.[9][10] A law prohibiting
    gay pride parades in Moscow for one-hundred years has also recently been
    enacted.[11] International rights groups have described the current
    situation as the worst human rights climate in the post-Soviet era, while
    Russian human rights activist Lyudmila Alexeyeva has called passage of the
    law against gay propaganda “a step toward the Middle Ages.”[4] Due to the
    timing of the law coming within a year of the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi
    there has been ongoing Olympic protests of Russian anti-gay laws.
    Russia has been described as being socially conservative on issues of LGBT
    rights,[12] with recent polls indicating that a large majority of Russian
    citizens oppose the legal recognition of same-sex marriage and support the
    controversial laws enacted regarding Russia’s LGBT citizens.[13][14] Larger
    cities such as Moscow and Saint Petersburg have been described as being
    more tolerant and accepting, and have been known to have thriving LGBT
    communities.The age of consent currently stands at 16 since 2003,
    regardless of sexual orientation.
    Transsexual and transgender people can change their legal gender after
    corresponding medical procedures since 1997.[note 1]
    Homosexuality was officially removed from the Russian list of mental
    illnesses in 1999 (after endorsement of ICD-10).
    As far as adoptions of children: Single persons living within Russia,
    regardless of their sexual orientation, can adopt children. Russian
    children can be adopted by a single homosexual who lives in a foreign
    country provided that country does not recognize same-sex marriage.[15] A
    couple can adopt children together, as a couple, only if they are a married
    heterosexual couple.
    Homophobia in Russia: Public opinion in Russia tends to be among the most
    hostile toward homosexuality in the world—outside predominantly Muslim
    countries and some parts of Africa and Asia—and the level of intolerance
    has been rising.[16] A 2013 survey found that 74% of Russians said
    homosexuality should not be accepted by society (up from 60% in 2002),
    compared to 16% who said that homosexuality should be accepted by
    society.[17] In a 2007 survey, 68% of Russians said homosexuality is always
    wrong (54%) or almost always wrong (14%).[18] In a 2005 poll, 44% of
    Russians were in favor of making homosexual acts between consenting adults
    a criminal act;[19] at the same time, 43% of Russians supported a legal ban
    on discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.[19] In 2013, 16% of
    Russians surveyed said that gay people should be isolated from society, 22%
    said they should be forced to undergo treatment, and 5% said homosexuals
    should be “liquidated”.[20]
    Same-Sex Marriage: Neither same-sex marriages nor civil unions of same-sex
    couples are allowed in Russia. In July 2013, Patriarch Kirill, the leader
    of the Russian Orthodox Church, of which approximately 80% of Russians are
    members, said that the idea of same-sex marriage was “a very dangerous sign
    of the Apocalypse”.[21] At a 2011 press conference, the head of the Moscow
    Registry Office, Irina Muravyova, declared: “Attempts by same-sex couples
    to marry both in Moscow and elsewhere in Russia are doomed to fail. We live
    in a civil society, we are guided by the federal law, [and] by the
    Constitution that clearly says: marriage in Russia is between a man and a
    woman. Such a marriage [same-sex] cannot be contracted in Russia.”[22] The
    vast majority of the Russian public are also against same-sex
    marriage.[19][23]
    Military Service: According to reporting in Pravda, in the past some young
    Russians would claim they were gay as a pretense to be avoid military
    service duty.[24] The Major-General of the Medical Service attempted to
    change that in 2003 when he announced that under a new statute,
    homosexuality would not be a justification for exclusion from military
    service: “The issue of a person’s homosexuality is not medical. There is no
    such diagnosis as homosexuality in medicine. There is no such illness in
    the classification of [the] World Health Organization. The new statute
    about military and medical expertise follows international law practice.
    Therefore the reasons for evaluating the ability to serve for homosexuals
    are the same: physicial and psychic health”.[24] However, he added that
    people of non-standard sexual orientation should not reveal their sexual
    orientation while serving in the army because “other soldiers are not going
    to like that, they can be beaten”.[24] President Vladimir Putin said in a
    U.S. television interview in 2010 that openly gay men were not excluded
    from military service in Russia.[25] In 2013, it was reported that the
    Defense Ministry had issued a guideline on assessment of new recruits’
    mental health that recommends recruits be asked about their sexual history
    and be examined for certain types of tattoos, especially genital or
    buttocks tattoos, that would allegedly indicate a homosexual
    orientation.[25][26]
    Visibility of LGBT Organizations & Services: There is a visible LGBT
    community network, mostly in major cities like Moscow and Saint Petersburg,
    including nightclubs and political organizations.[citation needed]
    Employment discrimination[edit]

    Anton Krasovsky, a television news anchor at government-run KontrTV, was
    immediately fired from his job in January 2013 when he announced during a
    live broadcast that he is gay and disgusted by the national anti-gay
    “propaganda” legislation that had been proposed although had not yet
    passed.[21]
    In September 2013, a Khabarovsk teacher and gay rights activist, Alexandr
    Yermoshkin, was fired from his two jobs as school teacher and university
    researcher.[27] A week earlier, he had been attacked by members of a local
    neo-nazi group “Shtolz Khabarovsk”.[28] A homophobic activist group called
    “Movement against the propaganda of sexual perversions” had campaigned for
    his dismissal.[29]
    Hate crimes[edit]

    On 9 May 2013, after Victory Day parades in Volgograd, the body of a
    23-year-old man was found tortured and murdered by three males who stated
    anti-homosexual motivations, even though family and friends state the
    victim had no behavior inclination.[30]
    On 29 May 2013, the body of openly gay 38-year-old deputy director of
    Kamchatka airport Oleg Serdyuk (rus: Олег Сердюк) was found in his burned
    out car, having been beaten and stabbed the previous day. Three suspects
    (who were local residents) were detained.[31]
    Transgender issues[edit]

    In Tsarist Russia, young women would sometimes pose as men or act like
    tomboys. This was often tolerated among the educated middle classes, with
    the assumption that such behavior was asexual and would stop when the girl
    married.[32] However, cross-dressing was widely seen as immoral behavior,
    punishable by the Church and later the government.[32]
    In Soviet Russia, gender confirmation surgeries were first tried during the
    1920s but became prohibited until the 1960s. Later they were performed by
    Prof. Irina Golubeva, an endocrinologist, authorized by psychiatrist Prof.
    Aron Belkin, who was the strongest Soviet advocate for transgender people
    until his death in 2003.[32]
    Bans on “homosexual propaganda to minors”[edit]

    The neutrality of this section is disputed. Relevant discussion may be
    found on the talk page. Please do not remove this message until the dispute
    is resolved. (February 2014)

    Activists painted the pedestrian pavement in front of the Russian Embassy
    in Finland with rainbow colors to protest Russian’s anti-LGBT
    sentimentality and legislation. Similar activism has been done in Sweden.
    Federal laws passed on 29 June 2013[33] ban the promotion of homosexuality
    to minors. According to some commentators the new law makes it illegal to
    hold any sort of public demonstration in favour of gay rights,[34] speak in
    defence of gay rights and distribute material related to gay rights,[35] or
    to state that gay relationships are equal to heterosexual
    relationships.[36][37]
    Local laws[edit]
    Between 2006 and 2013, ten regions enacted a ban on “propaganda of
    homosexualism” among minors. The laws of nine of them prescribe punishments
    of administrative sanctions and/or fines. The laws in some of the regions
    also forbid so-called “propaganda of bisexualism and transgenderism” to
    minors. As of May 2013 the regions that had enacted these various laws, and
    the years in which they had passed the laws, included: Ryazan Oblast
    (2006), Arkhangelsk Oblast (2011), Saint Petersburg (2012), Kostroma Oblast
    (2012), Magadan Oblast (2012), Novosibirsk Oblast (2012), Krasnodar Krai
    (2012), Samara Oblast (2012), Bashkortostan (2012),[note 3] and Kaliningrad
    Oblast (February 2013).[38]
    In June 2012, the Moscow City Court upheld a new law banning gay pride
    parades in the city for the next hundred years.[39][40]
    National laws[edit]
    In June 2013 the national parliament (the State Duma) unanimously adopted,
    and President Vladimir Putin signed,[41] a nationwide law banning
    distribution of “propaganda of non-traditional sexual relations” among
    minors.[33][4][42][43][44] The law does not explicitly mention the word
    “homosexuality”, but instead uses the euphemism “non-traditional sexual
    relations”.[4][45] Under the statute it is effectively illegal to hold any
    gay pride events, speak in defense of gay rights, or say that gay
    relationships are equal to heterosexual relationships.[37][4][42][43][44]
    The law subjects Russian citizens found guilty to fines of up to 5,000
    rubles and public officials to fines of up to 50,000 rubles.[46]
    Organizations or businesses will be fined up to 1 million rubles and be
    forced to cease operations for up to 90 days. Foreigners may be arrested
    and detained for up to 15 days then deported, as well as fined up to
    100,000 rubles. Russian citizens who have used the Internet or media to
    promote “non-traditional relations” will be fined up to 100,000 rubles.[4]
    The statute amended a law that is said to protect children from pornography
    and other “harmful information”.[41] One of the authors of the statute,
    Yelena Mizulina, who is the chair of the Duma’s Committee on Family, Women,
    and Children and who has been described by some as a moral
    crusader,[47][48][49] told lawmakers as the bill was being considered,
    “Traditional sexual relations are relations between a man and a woman….
    These relations need special protection”.[37] Mizulina argued that a recent
    poll had shown 88% of the public were in support of the bill.[50]
    Commenting on the bill prior to its passage, President Putin said, during a
    visit to Amsterdam in April 2013, “I want everyone to understand that in
    Russia there are no infringements on sexual minorities’ rights. They’re
    people, just like everyone else, and they enjoy full rights and
    freedoms”.[45] He went on to say that he fully intended to sign the bill
    because the Russian people demanded it.[37] As he put it, “Can you imagine
    an organization promoting pedophilia in Russia? I think people in many
    Russian regions would have started to take up arms…. The same is true for
    sexual minorities: I can hardly imagine same-sex marriages being allowed in
    Chechnya. Can you imagine it? It would have resulted in human
    casualties.”[37] Putin also mentioned that he was concerned about Russia’s
    low birth-rate and that same-sex relationships do not produce children.[41]
    Critics say that the statute is written so broadly that it is in effect a
    complete ban on the gay rights movement and any public expression of
    homosexuality.[21][37][45]
    On 21 July 2013, four Dutch tourists were arrested for allegedly discussing
    gay rights with Russian youths. The four were arrested for allegedly
    spreading “propaganda of nontraditional relationships among the under-aged”
    after talking to teens at a camp in the northern city of Murmansk.[51]
    Domestic reactions[edit]
    Nearly 90 percent of Russians support the anti-gay propaganda law,
    according to a survey conducted in June 2013 by the All-Russian Center for
    the Study of Public Opinion (also known as VTsIOM).[8][21]
    Russian Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko, responding to questions raised in the
    international community about the implications of the new law on the
    upcoming 2014 Winter Olympics Games in Sochi, Russia, said the controversy
    over Russia’s anti-gay propaganda law is an “invented problem” created by
    the Western media[52] and that the law does not discriminate against
    anyone.[53] He said that the law is intended to protect the right of
    children, whose young minds are still developing, from being exposed to
    propaganda about non-traditional sexual relationships, in the same way that
    children should be protected from messages promoting alcoholism and drug
    abuse.[53] “We want them to make their own decisions when they grow
    up”.[53] He also said that the rights of all Olympic athletes, organisers,
    and visitors in Sochi would be respected. On another occasion, Mutko said,
    “An athlete of non-traditional sexual orientation isn’t banned from coming
    to Sochi. But if he goes out into the streets and starts to propagandize,
    then of course he will be held accountable”.[54]
    The screenplay writer, Yuri Arabov, who is working on a new biopic of
    Tchaikovsky due to be released in 2015, has claimed that “it is far from a
    fact that Tchaikovsky was a homosexual”.[55] He further added that he would
    “not sign my name to a film that advertises homosexuality”.[55] The film
    has been given Russian government funding,[56] and Arabov’s claim has been
    reinforced by Russia’s culture minister, Vladimir Medinsky, who when
    questioned on the issue claimed: “Arabov is actually right – there is no
    evidence that Tchaikovsky was a homosexual.”[56] Scholars have pointed out
    that Tchaikovsky’s homosexuality is in fact extensively documented in the
    composer’s personal papers and correspondence.[56][57] There has been
    speculation in the Western press that the removal of all evidence of
    Tchaikovsky’s homosexuality in the film – promoted by its director Kirill
    Serebrennikov as “the true story of the tragic love and death of the
    brilliant Russian composer”[55] – is in response to Russia’s anti-gay
    propaganda law.[56][57][58][note 4]
    On 12 October 2013 a demonstration was organised by 15[59] to 20 LGBT
    rights activists in Russia’s second largest city Saint Petersburg against
    the new law banning “homosexual propaganda” on the day after the National
    Coming Out Day.[60] The demonstration was blocked by far-right groups, such
    as radical Orthodox Christians, Cossack paramilitaries and
    nationalists.[61] After a fight broke out between the groups, the police
    arrested 67 people from the two opposing groups.[61]
    International reactions and boycott[edit]
    International human rights organisations[62][63] and the governments of
    developed democracies around the world have strongly condemned this Russian
    law.[64][65] The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human
    Rights has condemned this Russian statute and another similar one in
    Moldova (which was later repealed)[66] as discriminatory and has made clear
    that the Russian statute in question is a violation of international human
    rights law,[67][68] including the right of gay children to receive proper
    information.[69][70] The European Parliament has condemned Russia for
    homophobic discrimination and censorship[71] and the Council of Europe has
    called on Russia to protect LGBT rights properly.[72] The European Court of
    Human Rights had previously fined Russia for other infringements of LGBT
    rights.[73] In 2012 the UN Human Rights Committee ruled that a similar
    statute in the Russia’s Ryazan Region was discriminatory, infringed on
    freedom of expression, and was inadmissible under international law – a
    Russian court in Ryazan later agreed and struck it down.[74][75] Some
    members of the gay community commenced a boycott of Russian goods,
    particularly Russian vodka.[76] Notable individuals have also responded to
    that ban.
    Many Western celebrities and activists are openly opposed to the law and
    have encouraged a boycott of Russian products—notably Russian vodka[77]—
    and a boycott of the 2014 Winter Olympic Games, which are scheduled to be
    held in Sochi, unless the Games are relocated out of Russia.[78][79][80]
    The boycott against Stoli vodka was called off after the owners publicly
    explained they were not a Russian company after all, were supporters of the
    LGBT community, and were opposed to the anti-gay laws. Tying into the
    international spotlight of the February 2014 Olympic games, months of
    protests against the anti-gay laws took place before the Games, with many
    campaigns targeted at the worldwide Olympic sponsors.
    Political figures[edit]
    United States President Barack Obama said that while he did not favour
    boycotting the Sochi Olympics over the law, “Nobody’s more offended than me
    about some of the anti-gay and lesbian legislation that you’ve been seeing
    in Russia”.[81] Obama subsequently, in September 2013, met with Russian gay
    rights activists during a visit to St. Petersburg to attend a meeting of
    the G-20 nations’ leaders. Obama said that he was proud of the work the
    activists were doing. His aides had said that Obama’s opposition to the
    anti-gay propaganda law was one reason Obama had canceled a meeting
    previously planned to have been held with Russian President Putin during
    the trip.[81]
    The law was also condemned by German Chancellor Angela Merkel and German
    cabinet secretaries,[82] British Prime Minister David Cameron,[83]
    Australian Foreign Minister Bob Carr,[84] as well as Canadian Prime
    Minister Stephen Harper and Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird.[85]
    Celebrities[edit]
    In 2012, pop singer Madonna, during a concert in St. Petersburg, denounced
    a newly enacted local law banning homosexual “propaganda”. She told the
    audience, “I am here to say that the gay community and gay people here and
    all around the world have the same rights – to be treated with dignity,
    with respect, with tolerance, with compassion, with love”.[86] In a
    Facebook posting, she had called the law a “ridiculous atrocity”.[87]
    Conservative groups filed a lawsuit against her seeking the equivalent of
    nearly $11 million, arguing that her performance would hurt Russia’s
    birthrate and, as a result, the nation’s ability to adequately maintain its
    army.[86] One of the claimants said at the trial that although Madonna had
    “brutally violated” the city’s laws, the precedent of the lawsuit would
    ensure that in the future “any artist coming to our city will know now what
    laws exist”.[86] The day the case was heard, a member of the Russian
    parliament said that the singer Lady Gaga, who was due to perform in St.
    Petersburg the following month, should be banned from performing the song
    “Born This Way” during her Born This Way concert tour stop in Russia.[88]
    The case against Madonna was dismissed by the presiding judge.[88][89]
    British actress Tilda Swinton tweeted a picture of herself with a rainbow
    flag with Moscow in background, adding in comment: “In solidarity. From
    Russia with love”.[90]
    Polish singer and Eurovision Song Contest 2010 contestant Marcin Mroziński
    cancelled his concert in Russia due to the worsening situation of the LGBT
    community.[91]
    American singer Lady Gaga condemned the Russian government for its
    increasingly anti-gay policies in August 2013.[92] One of the sponsors of
    the St. Petersburg municipal law against homosexual propaganda requested
    that Lady Gaga and Madonna both be investigated to see whether either had
    violated immigration or tax laws during their 2012 concerts in St.
    Petersburg.[92]
    British actor Stephen Fry published on his website an open letter to the
    International Olympic Committee advocating the boycotting and relocation of
    the 2014 Winter Olympics, scheduled to be held in Sochi.[93]
    Several prominent entertainers, including Stephen Fry,[94] American
    television talk-show host and comedian Jay Leno,[21] American actor and
    playwright Harvey Fierstein,[95] and American author and gay-rights
    activist Dan Savage,[95] drew parallels between the treatment of LGBT
    people in Russia and the treatment of Jews in Nazi Germany in the years
    leading up to The Holocaust. Fierstein, who is Jewish, wrote in a July 2013
    op-ed article in the New York Times:
    “In 1936 the world attended the Olympics in Germany. Few participants said
    a word about Hitler’s campaign against the Jews. Supporters of that
    decision point proudly to the triumph of Jesse Owens, while I point with
    dread to the Holocaust and world war. There is a price for tolerating
    intolerance”.[96]
    American actor Wentworth Miller announced he would boycott the St.
    Petersburg International Film Festival.[97]
    According to Dagbladet, Norwegians Trine Skei Grande and Johan Olav Koss
    were in support of protests during the Olympic Games in Sochi.[98]

  11. Fucking rights lets do I live in Canada bring it back to Vancouver, bring
    all your money to Canada. 

  12. Stfu I hate Obama stupid bastard if he wants to talk about other countries
    fix the U.S first pice of shit!!! I don’t even like Russia but don’t force
    them to like gays that’s messed up. People should care more about the
    Olympic Games and the athletes not the gay propaganda this is bullshit what
    about those innocent Russians working hard to do the stage. Just because
    some Russians are against it doesn’t mean all of them are their must be a
    sane person there. Lol

  13. 6) Mothers intuition and attention play a very important role in early
    child’s development. She naturally feels the need to surround that child
    with love, affection and protection. That motherly instinct makes her spend
    days with her child without getting tired. And all that makes the child
    feel secure and loved. When a child lacks it, we get another threat to the
    society. Most criminals we have today lack motherly love and affection.

  14. It’s not a law that bans being naked in public. It’s a law that bans a
    particular kind of speech, in other words, a censorship law. Because of
    this law people are no longer allowed to claim homosexuals are equal to
    heterosexuals or that there is nothing wrong with homosexuality. They’d
    better do something about those thugs who harm homosexuals instead.

  15. So is homosexuality normal? No. Any lifestyle that can’t give birth to a
    healthy offspring can’t be considered to be normal because it brings human
    specie to it’s extinction. Is being gay natural? Yes. Like any genetic
    abnormality homosexuality occurs in nature, it is natural. Is it a disease?
    No. It has no cure. But it is a genetic abnormality like being born with 3
    eyes. Is it a disease? No. Is it a choice? Actually, for some degraded
    people it is. Not for all gays, of course.

  16. Moreover. All my friends are genetically healthy males. Most of them are
    womanizers. Can a gay be a womanizer? No, right? Because, as you said
    before, “BEING GAY IS NOT A CHOICE”, right? If he’s a true gay, he won’t be
    able to have sex with a woman.So guess what,most of them are intolerant
    when it comes to gays.They don’t want even to hear about them. Why would it
    be?Most hetero males can’t watch 2 men make out. It makes them puke.Gays
    know that,but keep on doing it anyways.And that’s annoying.

  17. Tell me, in what way is a same-sex couple in love is a threat to kids? How
    can love be a threat to enyobody? There are a lot of same-sex couples
    raising children and all studies show no harm is cause to children by being
    raised by a same-sex couple. Human rights are universal, no institution, no
    beliefs can decide who has what rights and who not. By the way, what is
    your fixation with sexual intecourse? You never talk about feelings which
    are a part of sexual orientation.

  18. I’m not saying ALL GAYS are pedophiles. But from what I’ve investigated
    about 60-70% of pedophiles are homosexual and that’s the reason why Russia
    forbids adoption by foreigners and by gays. There were many cases of child
    abuse. Not by gays only. By heteros as well. In Russia pedophiles are
    persecuted and interviewed. Most openly confess, that they’re gays or bi.
    Their victims are boys, not girls.

  19. yea, cause Russia is the country everyone is clambering to move to right
    now…. hahaha.

  20. he is the emperor from Red alert 3, i love him now! Fight for freedom of
    speech!

  21. 2) An infant needs his/her mothers attention constantly. And only mother’s
    intuition can tell her if he needs to be changed, fed, hugged, if he has
    colic or other problems. Mothers have that special connection with a child.
    That is why the child grows healthy.

  22. I wonder why George never mentioned the fact that gays were put in
    concentration camps also…..maybe he needs to see ‘Bent’!

  23. It’s not a threat only: 1) When it’s not exposed to children. 2) When it’s
    not called normal. You want equal rights?You get equal rights.I equally
    don’t give a damn about who sleeps with whom.And if a hetero couple starts
    talking to me about their sexual life and preferences,I’ll stay the heck
    away from them too.Private life is called “private” for a reason.Otherwise
    it leads to moral degradation of the society.

  24. showing your true colors huh I knew you were even more intolerant than I.
    Even I wouldn’t have talked about your parents in any way possible but you
    don’t seem to have much respect I pity you

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