LGBT Parenting

Re: Have you guys seen this?

  • Yup. It made my wife so mad that she wrote an impassioned response that's making it's way around my facebook world...

    Most of these things just roll off my back, but this one even makes me want to throw up. How dare he? 

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  • I just saw this and read it to my wife and our employee who is gay and expecting and HOLLY COW ... serious !!! OMG is all i can think ...OMG -  this makes me thing  crud  now so many will run back in to the closet and live in fear and  for our LGBT group we run we have to be very selective on how we present ourselves for fear that a crazy will infiltrate( not really but you get the just as it was ny first reaction ) 

    I am sorry HOLLY *** !!!!!!!! is just all that keeps coming out !.

    - 2 Moms 2 Twins Baby Birthday Ticker Ticker
    our Blog -http://dosbabies.wordpress.com/
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  • Somehow I don't think that idea is going to catch on. What an idiot.

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  • Absolutely horrific. 

     

    I don't know how people end up with so much hate. 

    IUI #1 - 10 April 2012 unmonitored and unmedicated with RE 
    IUI #2 - 05 May 2012 unmonitored and unmedicated with RE 
    IUI #3 - 05 July 2012 unmonitored and unmedicated with RE 
    IUI #4 - 30 August 2012 medicated and monitoredLetrozole and Ovidrel Trigger 
    IUI #5 - 27 September 2012 Letrozole 
    BFP! 9 October 2012 Betas:- 12DPO 16; 16DPO 96; 18DPO 315

    Baby Alarico born on 28 June 2013!!


  • Broadly, has anyone else been feeling lately that hate and homophobia specifically are showing up more than the normal amount?  I know I have. 
  • I think what is showing up is more extreme - and I think it's the last, pathetic gasp of a dying philosophy. They know they lost this battle and lost it HARD. The polling numbers in favor of gay marriage have gotten dramatically better - and even that is putting aside the fact that we now discuss gay people in our society in terms of marriage, not in terms of whether we should put them in jail for being sodomites. There is really nowhere to turn now for people like this - the Republican party is no longer safe quarter. I don't care how many people ate chicken sandwiches at that chicken-sandwich-in or whatever they called it - we won, and they know it, and all that's left is impotent raging. 

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  • Well put leapgirl.
    IUI #1 - 10 April 2012 unmonitored and unmedicated with RE 
    IUI #2 - 05 May 2012 unmonitored and unmedicated with RE 
    IUI #3 - 05 July 2012 unmonitored and unmedicated with RE 
    IUI #4 - 30 August 2012 medicated and monitoredLetrozole and Ovidrel Trigger 
    IUI #5 - 27 September 2012 Letrozole 
    BFP! 9 October 2012 Betas:- 12DPO 16; 16DPO 96; 18DPO 315

    Baby Alarico born on 28 June 2013!!


  • leapgirl - I love the optimism and hope you are right!  Thanks for a different spin on my frustration.
  • imagemadisonpeas:
    Broadly, has anyone else been feeling lately that hate and homophobia specifically are showing up more than the normal amount?  I know I have. 

     

     via social media for sure...  we are going out today and I will be very interested to see how things go as we are doing a LGBT dinner... We have a sign but I was telling M maybe we should not have it out ( it does not outwardly say we are a gay group) but its is rainbow.. and the group is We Are Family LV.. so .. eeek i am a bit worried.

    - 2 Moms 2 Twins Baby Birthday Ticker Ticker
    our Blog -http://dosbabies.wordpress.com/
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  • You can do it, J.  Imagine all your bumpies standing beside you. And if someone says something crazy you can come back and tell us about it and we will be angry on your behalf.  Best of luck!
  • Leap, I hope you're right.

    The problem with idiotic statements like the one Asshat Deluxe made is that, even if he doesn't really mean it (which he has confirmed he does, by the way, they attract the attention of crazies. Crazies are dangerous. Remember Dr. Tiller? All it takes is one crazy person to take it upon him/herself to do what these people say... I, for one, am scared.

    I guess it doesn't help that I've witnessed an astounding amount of homophobia on the September 2010 board. There are plenty of bumpies who are quick to jump to our defense, but some of the conversations that have happened over there about CFA lead me to believe that I am very sheltered because of where I live. At least here, when people are homophobic they know it's something they should be ashamed of. There are parts of the country where being homophobic is the expectation. One poster over there actually said gays are annoying because we won't stop talking about rights. She actually asked, and I quote, "What other rights are you wanting?" Uuhhhh, let's see... ALL OF THEM.

    It frustrates me that people are ignorant but still feel like they have a right to a valid opinion - and a really loud one at that - about something. Sorry, you don't. Educate yourself, and then you will have earned the right to have an opinion, whatever it is. If you're well informed, I'll respect you even if I don't agree with you, but if you don't know what the he** you're talking about, do yourself - and the world - a favor and SHUT IT.

    Seriously, instead of saying the CFA debate is annoying, just ask why it's so important to us. Just say, "Hey, T, I don't really understand why this is a big deal from your perspective. Can you tell me what you think about it?" And then we can have a conversation.

    This has turned into a vent. I could go on and on, too... *sigh*

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  • Yes, crazies are dangerous. But they are less dangerous than 90% of the country thinking we should go to jail for lady-lovin', so on the whole, I remain very optimistic about our future. The overall trend of gay acceptance and gay rights in the last 50 years is nothing short of astounding. It's true, I am frustrated that I got married and then moved to a jurisdiction where I had to register for a domestic partnership, and then that jurisdiction started recognizing gay marriage so I was married again, and then I moved again and my marriage automatically converted to a domestic partnership, and now this November we're voting on whether to let me be married again. But I GOT MARRIED. To a very cute lady. And then we had babies and our doctors were super-positive about it and the hospital staff treated us great and then I adopted those babies with no problem. I have seen the revolution with my own eyes with Jen's (Southern, evangelical) family and my older coworkers. You may call me Pollyanna if you wish. I do not mind, and I have been accused in the past of naivete or just straight up ignoring the bad stuff. I'm just happy with where we are going. 

    I've lived all over the place - I was raised in Wichita, lived in Boston and DC for long periods, live in the Pac NW now, did short stints in Texas, South Dakota, Colorado, Wisconsin. There were homophobic people and accepting people in all of those places. I never had any trouble in high school. In fact the most I ever heard against gay people was when I lived in Boston during the gay marriage debate in 2003-2004. That was hard, and shocking in some ways. But change scares people and makes them stupid, and this is a time of rapid change.

    I think geography does have something to do with it, but the internet also has a lot to do with it. Those people would never say half of that stuff to your face - let alone donate to an anti-gay group or commit a crime to "prove" their point. I would never say that you shouldn't worry about keeping yourself or your family safe or take precautions - that's something we all have to do. I just hate to think of anyone letting stupid chicken zealots get the best of them :) 

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  • hlkehlke member

    I think we have made HUGE progress, and I also think we have a ways to go.  Looking to the civil rights movement, I think the gay rights movement is having our "Bloody Sunday" moment.  It's the moment where people realize that this whole rights movement might actually be going somewhere, and get scared and try to stop it.  The gay rights movement is somewhat blessed that this has mostly taken on the form of saying stupid things on the Internet and eating chicken sandwiches, as opposed to public beatings and lynching.

    It is also the moment that in the civil rights movement turned the tide and brought out more vocal support.  And we are seeing this now too.  Straight people no longer feel that they can be neutral on this issue, or just not care.  While Dan Cathy was defending his right to give money to hate groups, Target sold Pride t-shirts in June and my local American Apparel has a pro-equality sign in the window.  Many of my straight friends, who used to be completely in the dark about the issues faced by LGBT people, now know about the issues and are willing to speak out.

    So yes, we will win our rights.  We will get marriage equality in all states, and DOMA will be overturned or repealed.  And we will get the protections plenty of people forget we don't have - protection from employment and housing discrimination in all states. But there will still be hate and homophobia.  There will still be people who think of us as second class citizens, and people who think our families shouldn't have a right to exist, just like there is still racism.  But it will eventually be less okay to be vocally homophobic, or to teach your kids homophobia.  Religious defenses of homophobic hatred will eventually be seen as preposterous as those used to oppose interracial marriage or defend slavery.

    But right now, it is hard, and living in Alabama is certainly different from living in Massachusetts, just as it was in the Civil Rights era.  C and I are still nervous when we leave the city, and especially when we go to rural areas.  When living in Michigan and Illinois, most people stare at me blankly when I say I have a wife, as if to say "I didn't know you could do that."  And I often get questions about the legal status of my union, or if I am "really married", since people don't really know what it means to be married in Massachusetts, civil unioned in Illinois, and not recognized at all in Michigan.  We have openly discussed staying in states with legal protections for us, and it is one of our priorities.  So I'm between leap's rosy view of the future, and tdmklm's despair.  In the meantime, I just want to live my life without having to hear about everyone's opinion on it.

    Same sex couple TTC with donor sperm.  I am 35 and carrying.  Endometriosis and DOR.
    AMH 0.5, AFC 5-8, FSH 7ish

    IVF #1 - antagonist.  Empty follicle syndrome.  1 retrieved, 0 fertilized.
    IVF #2 - antagonist.  Ovulated early.  3 retrieved, 2 fertilized, 0 blasts
  • imagehlke:

    So I'm between leap's rosy view of the future, and tdmklm's despair.

    Just to be clear, I'm not despairing (yet) - I'm just pretty angry and a little scared. Smile 

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  • hlkehlke member
    imagetdmklm:
    imagehlke:

    So I'm between leap's rosy view of the future, and tdmklm's despair.

    Just to be clear, I'm not despairing (yet) - I'm just pretty angry and a little scared. Smile 

    Heh...yeah...I understand.  But I was making a rhetorical point! Smile

    I would describe my predominant emotion on this issue as "crabby". 

    Same sex couple TTC with donor sperm.  I am 35 and carrying.  Endometriosis and DOR.
    AMH 0.5, AFC 5-8, FSH 7ish

    IVF #1 - antagonist.  Empty follicle syndrome.  1 retrieved, 0 fertilized.
    IVF #2 - antagonist.  Ovulated early.  3 retrieved, 2 fertilized, 0 blasts
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