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The UK and homophobia |
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12th June 2022, 09:25 AM
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#21
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BuzzJack Gold Member
Pronouns: He/Him
Joined: 21 February 2021 Posts: 3,741 User: 124,514 |
Well there's another lucky escape with another far right attack on a Pride event in the USA stopped just in time. Yes anti gay violence is nothing new but is increasing recently and co-ordinated assaults on Pride itself seems to be a very new thing by an empowered far right.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/world/member...77601f3d49ff6c4 Not saying don't go to Pride and give in to them but it is a worrying new development. |
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12th June 2022, 01:49 PM
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#22
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there's nothing straight about plump Elvis
Pronouns: they/any
Joined: 21 January 2016 Posts: 13,482 User: 22,895 |
These people will only listen to one thing.
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12th June 2022, 04:19 PM
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#23
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BuzzJack Legend
Joined: 18 July 2012
Posts: 23,601 User: 17,376 |
Well there's another lucky escape with another far right attack on a Pride event in the USA stopped just in time. Yes anti gay violence is nothing new but is increasing recently and co-ordinated assaults on Pride itself seems to be a very new thing by an empowered far right. https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/world/member...77601f3d49ff6c4 Not saying don't go to Pride and give in to them but it is a worrying new development. This one was much more disturbing as it involved guns and could well have been (yet another) massacre in the USA. So huge thanks to the eagle-eyed member of the public who spotted them. Hopefully they will be locked up for a very long time. Until democratic governments devote enough cash towards infiltrating these right-wing fascists, and do more to charge them under existing laws, there will continue to be attempts to overthrow democracy and attack any part of it that they view as representing all that is bad about liberals and democracy. And that means people need to keep an eye open. In the case of America, any society sick enough to allow murders of children to continue without reacting as all sane countries react, is always going to have mass murders as a regular occurrence. Guns and violence are ingrained into American culture and psyche. It's like going to tesco and buying an assault weapon. You can buy guns younger than you can drink alcohol. And I've lived with murder headlines in the USA ever since President Kennedy was assassinated. 60 years and nothing done. Statistically, and this is how insane it is, you seem safer in a Pride march in the USA than you are going to school in terms of likelihood of being murdered. |
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12th June 2022, 06:46 PM
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#24
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BuzzJack Gold Member
Pronouns: He/Him
Joined: 21 February 2021 Posts: 3,741 User: 124,514 |
Yes USA is a very sick society with their gun ownership I have to say. Going back to the UK, one positive thing is that I don't know of any major active far right gangs being talked about like Combat 18 or the English Defence League were in recent decades. Unless anyone knows any different? Of course there are lone wolf and religious terrorists though.
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13th June 2022, 04:08 PM
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#25
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#38BBE0 otherwise known as 'sky blue'
Joined: 27 October 2008
Posts: 16,272 User: 7,561 |
I don't know if you've ever read Another Day in the Death of America by Gary Younge, but it's a pretty sobering read on the state of gun violence in America rn. It's a toxic mix, especially when combined with the chronic lack of vital access to mental health services in some states.. we had Dunblane here in 1996 that seemed to be the tipping point, changing wider attitudes sufficiently to demand fundamental changes to make our society much safer.
Yesterday was actually 6 years to the day since the horrific Orlando nightclub shooting at Pulse- a reminder that such events whilst thankfully uncommon are still happening.. but as you say, the worst thing that can be done in the face of that is to give in but I do wonder just what it will take to make the same social acceptance/demand of change like we had here in the UK? |
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19th June 2022, 01:53 PM
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#26
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BuzzJack Platinum Member
Joined: 21 November 2009
Posts: 8,877 User: 10,030 |
I don't know if you've ever read Another Day in the Death of America by Gary Younge, but it's a pretty sobering read on the state of gun violence in America rn. It's a toxic mix, especially when combined with the chronic lack of vital access to mental health services in some states.. we had Dunblane here in 1996 that seemed to be the tipping point, changing wider attitudes sufficiently to demand fundamental changes to make our society much safer. Yesterday was actually 6 years to the day since the horrific Orlando nightclub shooting at Pulse- a reminder that such events whilst thankfully uncommon are still happening.. but as you say, the worst thing that can be done in the face of that is to give in but I do wonder just what it will take to make the same social acceptance/demand of change like we had here in the UK? I think it's a lot more difficult in the US though due to the 2nd amendment and the NRA. The only way I can see major change happening is if the democrats get a large majority in the senate. But that may not happen this century... Unless there is major reform for the senate to represent the population more accurately. The fact that each state gets 2 senate representatives regardless of population is ridiculous. California has a population of almost 40 million and has the same representation in the senate as Wyoming with a population of less than 600,000. |
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19th June 2022, 04:40 PM
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#27
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Buffy/Charmed
Joined: 18 April 2013
Posts: 45,246 User: 18,639 |
I think it's a lot more difficult in the US though due to the 2nd amendment and the NRA. The only way I can see major change happening is if the democrats get a large majority in the senate. But that may not happen this century... Unless there is major reform for the senate to represent the population more accurately. The fact that each state gets 2 senate representatives regardless of population is ridiculous. California has a population of almost 40 million and has the same representation in the senate as Wyoming with a population of less than 600,000. Think of it like the UN. The US and the UK both have 1 vote each, but the US has 6x the population. China, with a pooulation of 1.5 billion, has the ssme voting power in the UN as Ireland, a country of 6 million. The US, when formed, did NOT remove state sovereignty, which is why there are two senators per state; they represent the sovereignity of each state, where little Maine is equal in sovereignity to huge Texas. I doubt this can be changed, seeing as it is the founding principle of the country. |
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