Harridan
Wednesday 22nd February 2012 9:15am
3,170 posts
Quote: chipolata @ February 22 2012, 8:36 AM GMT
Stupid things like Christians being the least persecuted group in all of human history?
Comparatively, Christians are under-persecuted. I didn't go back to the thread to discuss it because I didn't want to further derail it from being about Ricky Gervais. I'm struggling to think of a group who has had it easier. But really my point was that the divide between how much Christians fetishise their persecution and how much they have historically been persecuted is a vast chasm. Persecutions under the Romans they were literally asking for it, (they masqueraded as a political group and intentionally misled people into thinking they were incestuous cannibals so that they could be martyrs) and it was only Nero and Domitian who killed them before it became the religion of the Empire and stayed that way forever. Certainly Christians have suffered in modern times, but no more than other religious or ethnic groups.
Quote: DaButt @ February 22 2012, 1:37 AM GMT
What is up with men who become women but decide that they're going to become lesbians because they like to have sex with women? And vice-versa? I understand that they identify as a different sex but it seems like it would be easier, cheaper and less painful to just use their genitalia as it was originally intended.
I think Zooo and AJGO have the right idea. Gender and sexuality are often lumped in together (not least by the LGBT grouping, which I've always found patronising and unhelpful) but they aren't necessarily related. That's the problem with a gender binary - we're encouraged to see people as A or B and match them with A or B, ignoring the fact that there are 24 other letters you might be. I always struggle with the identifiers 'lesbian' or 'bisexual' because I prefer partners of a certain gender, not a certain genitalia. I don't fancy men, I don't fancy women, I fancy those people over there, and sometimes they are men and somettimes they are women and sometimes they're both and sometimes they're neither.