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Don't agree with the law at all and I think its going to cause a lot of unnecessary harm to gays living there, but its their country and their rules at the end of the day.
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you didn't come off as a bigot. a little misguided on some things but not bigoted at all.There is a gay agenda, but I see it a little differently than Rico. The part about equal rights like marriage, tax benefits etc isn't an agenda to me. Its long overdue. The agenda part is the pushing of "gay" or feminine culture by the media. In other words, an emasculation of the regular dude. Calling it gay culture is probably the wrong choice of words, but its the closest thing I can relate it to. I see it mostly in popular culture, sports (waiting for the next gay athlete to come out), clothing etc
I used to despise gays for years, recently changed my view on the whole thing. I don't like the lifestyle per say, but that doesn't mean I don't think they deserve equality under the law. Hopefully I got my message across without coming off as bigoted.
I'm a Muslim if it matters
You're wrong. Nigeria is 50/50 Muslim and Christian.pretty sure most Nigerians are Islamic (I could be wrong)i dont know much about nigerian culture, but im guessing this has something to do with christian/euro influence
but i could be wrong so correct me if i am
Serious question though, how do people even know when someone is gay? Thats the only thing I don't understand, I could just not be thinking deep enough because I don't care that much, but are they just targeting people who "look" gay? i.e.. dudes that don't talk with deep voices and women who don't dress feminine?
I`m like if I`m a gay dude in Nigeria or Russia, lol can't I just say no I`m not gay? How can they verify ?
There is a gay agenda, but I see it a little differently than Rico. The part about equal rights like marriage, tax benefits etc isn't an agenda to me. Its long overdue. The agenda part is the pushing of "gay" or feminine culture by the media. In other words, an emasculation of the regular dude. Calling it gay culture is probably the wrong choice of words, but its the closest thing I can relate it to. I see it mostly in popular culture, sports (waiting for the next gay athlete to come out), clothing etc
I used to despise gays for years, recently changed my view on the whole thing. I don't like the lifestyle per say, but that doesn't mean I don't think they deserve equality under the law. Hopefully I got my message across without coming off as bigoted.
I'm a Muslim if it matters
you didn't come off as a bigot. a little misguided on some things but not bigoted at all.
i disagree on there being an agenda per say in a lot of the things you highlight.
people want to see who the first major pro athlete to come out as gay will be because it'd be a huge story. sports is a hyper masculine machismo dominated universe, and as such not something people consider gay men. so if lebron came out of the closet it'd be a big deal because he'd be the first. it's more about FIRSTS than it being just about gay. remember when they tried to make Yao Ming the biggest thing in basketball because he was the first REALLY GOOD asian nba player.
as for fashion, there's no such thing as gay clothing that's just a misconception. it's stuff you're not familiar with, but no clothing is gay. it can't have sex with other clothing. and if it "looks gay" it's because in your particular cultural world men or people just dont dress like that. i know what you're getting at -- skirts, shawls, anything you may find asap rocky donning -- but in other parts of the world there are men rocking similarly cut outfits, and they'd be the first to string you up from a tree or stone you to death if they saw you kissing another man.
it's not a gay agenda, it's just with acceptance there comes a period of firsts -- people breaking into particular fields and the requisite media frenzy that surrounds that.
if homosexuality had long been accepted as a natural occurrence in life, then no one would bat an eye lash at an nba star kissing his husband in the tunnel after a game.
it's when something is isolated and highlighted as strange and as a unique occurrence that it happening draws the attention you see.
Basically, familiy ties are what are bringing you back to Nigeria.@iYen
I was born in Nigeria and been back several times. I don't really know how I'd answer your question... it'd be just as hard for me to answer what I like about New York or California.
I guess I like the weather. I have family and friends there. The food's good. It's my native culture.
I hate the lack of infrastructure, low police presence outside the major cities, abundant government corruption... Religious zealotry... Immense poverty amongst the majority of the country's population even though Nigeria's the 6th largest crude oil producing nation in the world.
Basically, familiy ties are what are bringing you back to Nigeria.
That's good that you're into where you came from. I'm also from Nigeria, but I'm too americanized to even want to visit Nigeria.
Especially since all these things about the country that I've learned over the years.
It has made me more than grateful that my parents were able to get out of that seemingly hell hole.
Lastly, do you have a postive or negative view of how Nigeria will be in the next 40+ years?
If so, why?
It does have to do with Euro/Christian influence.
American Evangelical churches are funding the legislation in most of these countries. I posted an article specifically about the problem it caused in Uganda. I'm guessing you didn't read through the thread.
But you are right about Islamic culture being just as hard on homosexuality.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/04/w...=1&adxnnlx=1389729656-y8CAEgKjyzfA0cRGH2fUrw&
i heard that's the case with immigrants from several other countries in africa too. i've personally never seen it myself, but i wouldnt doubt it.Except they're racist towards black Americans.
Enlighten those of us who may not know.... what is this agenda you speak of ?
I really didn't want to wade into this discussion but you guys feigning ignorance for whatever reason has lured me in. The gay agenda is simple, they want the same rights as heterosexual couples i.e. marriage, tax, death benefits etc. They want the word gay to not be used as a synonym for something stupid, or unappealing, and they just want to be an accepted demographic like others in the country. An the gay lobby has done a great job of pushing this agenda over the last couple years.
I don't, please explain ?
Turn your tv on...see that Rapper wearing leggings and mini skirts? See that no name basketball player being congratulated for coming out of the closet? You think it's not money to be made off the gay culture? It's being PROMOTED and that's my only problem with the "gay agenda"
There is a gay agenda, but I see it a little differently than Rico. The part about equal rights like marriage, tax benefits etc isn't an agenda to me. Its long overdue. The agenda part is the pushing of "gay" or feminine culture by the media. In other words, an emasculation of the regular dude. Calling it gay culture is probably the wrong choice of words, but its the closest thing I can relate it to. I see it mostly in popular culture, sports (waiting for the next gay athlete to come out), clothing etc
I used to despise gays for years, recently changed my view on the whole thing. I don't like the lifestyle per say, but that doesn't mean I don't think they deserve equality under the law. Hopefully I got my message across without coming off as bigoted.
I'm a Muslim if it matters
How do people feel to learn that a lot of these countries' anti-gay laws are being drawn up and funded by American Christian Evangelical leaders?
It becomes less of a "stop pushing your liberal Western ideals on them" and "Stop trying to influence their culture and let them think for themselves" argument when you realize all of this stuff is being pushed by American conservative ideas, right?
One such example:
[QUOTE url="[URL]http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/international/countriesandterritories/uganda/index.html?inline=nyt-geo[/URL]"]
Lol when there isn't a finger to point at, blame the Muslims
Classic
Nigeria will be more modern and westernized, slightly, but not much will change. 1% of the country's population controls all of its wealth, the other 99% lives in poverty, there's no middle class. There's no real impetus to institute social change because the people with money do whatever they want anyway, like every third world country. the government also wants to maintain the status quo because it lets them keep stealing money and seizing power. one of the reasons boko haram (the al qaeda off shoot terrorizing the country right now) is even active is because the country elected its first non-muslim president and the radical muslim portion of the country went ape ****. truth is, the organization is largely being funded by wealthy nigerian politicians and business men who look to profit from them unsettling things.
like every country nigeria's youth are more socially aware and (only slightly) more educated than the older generations so there's some hope, but things like this make the outlook kinda grim.
again, this law is all about misdirecting attention from real problems, catering to churches and mosques that have a lot of influence, and baiting people into voting for the current government under the guise of them looking out for the country's interests when the people dont even realize nothing's changed.