I THOUGHT IT WASN’T A CHOICE?

Oh, the hypocrisy! I typically don’t concern myself with social issues but this completely contradictory of what the LGBT rights advocates have been harking about for decades. For them, their sexual orientation wasn’t a choice and they were born that way. Now enter lesbian CNN commentator Sally Kohn saying she’d be “disappointed” if her daughter isn’t gay when she grows up.

“According to the Williams Institute review conducted in April 2011, approximately 3.8 % of American adults identify themselves being in the LGBT community; wherein, (1.7%) identify as lesbian or gay, (1.8%) bisexual, and (0.3%) transgender, which corresponds to approximately 9 million adults”

With these statistics how can a gay parent not expect their child to grow up to be straight? Sally Kohn goes on to say “she, like most parents simply wants her child to follow in her footsteps.” With this logic wouldn’t it mean if her daughter grows up to be straight it is an act of rebellion against following in her gay parents footsteps? Would this mean being gay would also be an act of rebellion against their straight parents?

Via Washington Post

Kohn said: 'If my daughter is gay, I don't worry about her having a hard life. But I do worry about people expecting her to have a hard life — helping to perpetuate discrimination that might otherwise fade'

I live in the liberal bubble of Park Slope, Brooklyn, where no yuppie would ever admit to wanting their kid to be anything in particular, other than happy. But more often than not, we define happiness as some variation on our own lives, or at least the lives of our expectations. If we went to college, we want our kids to go to college. If we like sports, we want our kids to like sports. If we vote Democrat, of course we want our kids to vote Democrat.

I’m gay. And I want my kid to be gay, too.

Many of my straight friends, even the most liberal, see this logic as warped. It’s one thing for them to admit that they would prefer their kids to be straight, something they’ll only begrudgingly confess. But wanting my daughter to be a lesbian? I might as well say I want her to grow up to be lactose intolerant.

“Don’t you want her to be happy?” one friend asked. Perhaps he just meant that it’s easier to be straight in a homophobic culture. But this attitude complies with, even reinforces, that culture in the first place. A less-charitable interpretation is that he thinks being straight is superior. When I was a teenager, my father cautioned me against marrying a black person. “I’m just trying to protect you,” he said. But it was impossible to know whether he meant to insulate me from the world’s bias or implicitly rationalize his own.

 The idea that no one would choose to be gay is widely held — even in the gay rights movement. In the early ’90s, partly as a response to the destructive notion that gay people could be changed, activists pressed the idea of sexuality as a fixed, innate state. Scientists even tried to prove that there’s a “gay gene.” These concepts about sexual orientation helped justify the case for legal protections. The idea that folks are “born gay” became not only the theme of a Lady Gaga song, but the implicit rationale for gay rights.

“I wouldn’t even choose for myself to be gay,” a friend once told me. It was a sad admission, because she was.

Once upon a time, of course, “gay” meant “happy.” But eventually, the synonyms grew apart. Gay became an unfortunate, even pitiable status. When the gay liberation activist Franklin Kameny launched a simple effort in 1968 to proclaim that “gay is good,” it was because, at the time, it very much wasn’t. Until 1973, the American Psychological Association considered homosexuality a form of mental illness. And while gay-positive culture has flourished since, our aspirations haven’t kept pace. It’s more widely acceptable to be gay in America today, but that’s not the same as being desirable. In my house, though, it is.

Here you might expect me to say something about how, if my daughter were gay, she would undoubtedly face challenges and hurdles she wouldn’t encounter if she were straight. Maybe. And maybe if I weren’t an upper-middle-class white lesbian living in a liberal city, I’d have such worries. But no matter what, I’d want my child to be herself. If I lived in, say, North Carolina, with an adopted son from Morocco, I’d like to think I would encourage him to be Muslim, if that’s what he chose. I’d do this even though his life would probably be easier if he didn’t. It’s also easier to succeed as a dentist than an artist. But if my daughter wants to be an artist, I’ll encourage her all the way — and work to destroy any barriers along her path, not put them up myself.

Plus, I’ve never for a single second regretted being gay, nor saw it as anything other than an asset and a gift. My parents were ridiculously supportive from Day One, and I had a great community of friends and mentors who made me feel unconditionally accepted. By the time my daughter comes of age, she’ll have even more of a support network, including two moms, for crying out loud.

More than that, though, being gay opened my eyes to the world around me. Learning that not every gay person had it as good as I did helped me realize that a lot of people in general didn’t have it as good as I did. I wouldn’t be a politically engaged human being, let alone an activist, writer and TV personality, if I weren’t gay.

If my daughter is gay, I don’t worry about her having a hard life. But I do worry about people expecting her to have a hard life — helping to perpetuate discrimination that might otherwise fade more quickly. I want my daughter to know that being gay is equally desirable to being straight. The problem is not the idea that homosexuality could be a choice but the idea that heterosexuality should be compulsory. In my house it’s plainly, evidently not. We’ve bought every picture book featuring gay families, even the not-very-good ones, and we have most of the nontraditional-gender-role books as well — about the princess who likes to fight dragons and the boy who likes to wear dresses.

When my daughter plays house with her stuffed koala bears as the mom and dad, we gently remind her that they could be a dad and dad. Sometimes she changes her narrative. Sometimes she doesn’t. It’s her choice.

All I ultimately care about is that she has the choice and that whatever choice she makes is enthusiastically embraced and celebrated.

Time will tell, but so far, it doesn’t look like my 6-year-old daughter is gay. In fact, she’s boy crazy. It seems early to me, but I’m trying to be supportive. Recently, she had a crush on an older boy on her school bus. She was acting as any precocious, socially awkward child would, which is to say not very subtle. I confided in a friend who has an older daughter. “She wants to give this kid a card and presents,” I e-mailed. “The other kid is so embarrassed. It’s painful to watch. What do I do?”

My friend wrote back with a slew of helpful advice, ending with a punch to my gut: “Bet it wouldn’t bother you so much if her crush was on a girl.”

She was right. I’m a slightly overbearing pro-gay gay mom. But I’m going to support my daughter, whatever choices she makes.

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24 Comments
Bea Lever
Bea Lever
February 22, 2015 4:48 pm

Children deserve better than this. Soaps are now showing men in bed kissing in the middle of the day, LGBT dished out in our schools……….sad.

A Tribe member commenter on CuNNt News pushing this tripe on children…….sick.

El Siete
El Siete
February 22, 2015 5:09 pm

I stopped watching TV sometime before they started showing those tender scenes you speak of.
Tell me have they also gotten around to showing a black man and white women in bed? I doubt that, they’ll show every type of perversion before they will show a man and woman of different color in bed.

The church lady laughs at the mental picture of a black ass and a white ass in sexual congress..she finds it funny because, being a Virgo, she’s a bit of a cold fish and doesn’t understand the concept of eros or eroticism; without which there would not be much enjoyment in the perversions found on TV today.

Wip
Wip
February 22, 2015 5:11 pm

whole-lee-fuk

phoenixny
phoenixny
February 22, 2015 5:12 pm

Where is cps when you really need them?

flash
flash
February 22, 2015 5:28 pm

speaking of crazy bitches …sheesh.

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You Won’t BELIEVE Which Senator Won ‘Porker Of The Year’

Citizens Against Government Waste awarded Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren “Porker of the Year,” for her “inane” suggestion that the financially struggling U.S. Postal Service should start acting as a bank.

CAGW, a non-profit dedicated to eliminating government waste, gives the award annually to the lawmaker, government official, or political candidate who has shown the most “blatant disregard” for taxpayers that year. Warren won over six other candidates with 34 percent of the vote in a public online poll.

She won the award because in 2014 she suggested the USPS fix its financial troubles by rebranding itself as a bank. If USPS offered basic bill paying, check cashing and small loans, it could make enough money to provide those services and shape up its finances.

It could “make a critical difference for millions of Americans who don’t have basic banking services because there are almost no banks or bank branches in their neighborhoods,” she wrote in an op-ed published by the Huffington Post.

The USPS has been on the Government Accountability Office’s annual High Risk List since 2009, because it “continues to face great uncertainty and risk related to its financial condition.”

CAGW said Warren’s suggestion showed “blatant disregard” for taxpayers, in a statement Thursday. “For her supremely inane idea to allow the USPS to take on financial services under its current flawed and bloated management structure in order to chase profits, while setting the stage for another enormous taxpayer bailout, Sen. Elizabeth Warren is CAGW’s 2014 Porker of the Year.”

Leading Porker in a Supporting Role went to Consumer Finance Protection Bureau Director Richard Cordray, with 29 percent. Honorable Porker awards went to Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski, Republican Rep. Mike Rogers, Democratic Rep. Anna Eshoo, and former U.S. Chief Information Officer Steven VanRoekel.

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
February 22, 2015 6:15 pm

As a white hetero male, should I be surprised at just how many lesbian tendencies I have? I feel like I’m 3/4 lesbian and having a dick is just a bonus!

dc.sunsets
dc.sunsets
February 22, 2015 6:38 pm

Every social movement based on stupidity eventually reaches the point of self-parody.

Leftist sexual Idiocacy has surely reached that point. This woman typifies it, or even better, the self-deluding tragedies who call themselves transgendered.

I honestly don’t care what self destructive vices people choose as adults, but those adults who attempt to use their influence to warp the choices of children should be lined up against a wall and shot.

If a kid chooses a vice (self harming actions undertaken in the attempt to find happiness) he or she should be gently pushed back inside normal boundaries until having reached some semblance of adult agency, just as we’d do for our kids who started gambling, boozing, etc.

Those pushing to “help” teens act on “transgender” impulses are committing an egregious crime. I hope the parents of their targets act as should any parent whose child is threatened.

Southern Sage
Southern Sage
February 22, 2015 6:39 pm

Good God! What on earth is that Thing leering out of the photograph? it looks like a cross between Lurch and Ronald McDonald in drag. Please do not post any more photos of Sally Kohn. Barfomatic!

Capn Mike
Capn Mike
February 22, 2015 7:35 pm

IndenturedServant:
My girlfriend’s friend (who’s a girl (straight)) once said to her, “If you had a dick, I’d marry you”, which I thought was pretty damn funny!!

JC
JC
February 22, 2015 7:35 pm

“When my daughter plays house with her stuffed koala bears as the mom and dad, we gently remind her that they could be a dad and dad. Sometimes she changes her narrative”

So there is an attempt to change her narrative? It ain’t about your narrative. She chose hers, your trying to change it. If a heterosexual parent did the exact same thing, but the other direction what is it? Some kind of bigotry?

Open your fucking mind beyond your own bias….

Captain America
Captain America
February 22, 2015 7:52 pm

Harry Hopkins was FDR’s right hand Commie. Literally ran the country, as the cripple was pushed up to microphones, and they hid his gimpiness from the world.

It has been uncovered that harry was a Soviet spy. During his tenure, he created and oversaw a Lend-Lease program that shipped over $300B to the USSR, including yellow cake.

I bring this up, because the Soviet art of subterfuge was carried out by an army of leftist kikes, who now run EVERY tributary of power in our nation. Academia. Media. Religion. Medicine. Banking. Politics. Military. All of it. To do so, they have leveraged useful idiots, and co-opted the least intelligent amongst us (blacks and women).

The Marxian objective is always to neuter the most powerful in a nation, and to destroy family and religion. Replace it with love of State, depravity, and ideologies that effectively lower the birth rate of the tougher class to suppress (whites).

Anyway, I remain a bitter clinger, unapologetic anti-Communist, and willing and quite able to die for my cause. We can wring our hands in forums like TBP, which will soon be banned by the “net Neutrality” act, or we can do what our forefathers did.

BillD
BillD
February 22, 2015 8:48 pm

Wow, that’s one ugly dyke. What a tradgedy she has been given a defenseless child’s mind to warp.

Stucky
Stucky
February 22, 2015 9:07 pm

“gay parent” = biggest oxymoron of all time

A man sticking his dick up another man’s ass will not produce a child. Neither will two vaginas rubbing together (although that’s a good way to make fire).

I try real hard not to hate/dislike homos and lesbos …. but, people like that make it really difficult.

Araven
Araven
February 23, 2015 10:29 am

Why don’t you all just grow up? Your comments insulting this woman’s looks and sexual orientation are exceedingly juvenile. She’s not saying that she thinks her daughter has a choice about being gay, just saying that she would prefer if her daughter was more like she is – but she realizes that the daughter probably isn’t. Can any of you say that you wouldn’t prefer if your son/daughter was like you?

Araven
Araven
February 23, 2015 10:57 am

For example, I am a fat ugly libtard and this is my message to my daughter.

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Araven
Araven
February 23, 2015 2:15 pm

Really, is that the best you can do?

Wyoming Mike
Wyoming Mike
February 23, 2015 2:21 pm

Awesome dopplegang. Take it somewhere else araven, smart people here.

flash
flash
February 23, 2015 3:23 pm

She could be an ugly woman or an ugly man but she can never be be both..and It’s likely that choice is what drove the stupid bitch insane.

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Jason
Jason
March 4, 2015 5:49 pm

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