Comments by "Neil Forbes" (@neilforbes416) on "MEMBERS ONLY: Milo Yiannopoulos Now Straight, Idaho Ends the Powerball, u0026 Much More!" video.
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Milo Yiannopoulos is NOT gay. He is HOMOSEXUAL! The opposite of "Gay" is NOT Straight! The opposite of Gay is Morose! "Gay" = cheerful, happy, elated. "Morose" = miserable, sad, dejected. "Straight" has ONLY two meanings, the first is geometric, without curves, angles or bends. The other meaning is ethical, honest, sincere, genuine, trustworthy. The Homosexual community has taken the words "Gay", Straight" and "Lesbian" and thoroughly corrupted their meanings. Milo Yiannopoulos's claim, read correctly is that he was homosexual* but is now heterosexual.
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@somebodysomething3451 No, it would NOT be a "personal problem" for a person to be describing him/herself as "feeling gay", or at least it should not be a problem. In the event of someone having a pleasant experience, like for instance getting a promotion at his/her job, winning a huge amount of money in a lottery, meeting up with a long-lost friend, one would describe these experiences as making him or her feel gay, but the opposite situations would make him/her feel morose. The Homosexual community took the word "Gay" and made it an acronym for "Good As You", thus robbing the word of its proper meaning. Before they hijacked the word "Gay" they used the word "camp" ( he's as camp as a row of tents ) but thankfully to good sense the use of "camp" was dropped. But the word "gay" needs to be let return to its proper meaning as well.
There's nothing wrong with the original word, "homosexual". It's not a put-down, it's not an insult, it's just the technical word for someone romantically and/or sexually attracted to someone else of the same gender. I'm not that way inclined myself. I'm just sick to death of the misuse of the language.
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@somebodysomething3451 It happens! It could be a social status thing(class distinction is still prevalent in Britain), it could do with wealth, where you were educated, who your parents were, it ties in with social status. But since the word "Gay" was hijacked in the early 1970s by the homosexual community, it has rendered the word unusable in ordinary circumstances. I can remember when the word "Gay" was used as a brand-name for a range of soft-drink(aerated waters) in lemonade, lime, orange, raspberry or other flavours here in Australia. We had an icecream on a stick, covered in chocolate and crushed peanuts, marketed as "Gaytime". In the "Flintstones" cartoon theme they sang "We'll have a gay old time!" But now the word is virtually "out of bounds" and that's sad.
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