[QUOTE=Steve MB quoting Talking Points Memo]
Sue Everhart, chairwoman of the Georgia Republican Party, told the Marietta Daily Journal in a story published Saturday that once gay nuptials are legally permitted, there will be nothing to stop a straight person from exploiting the system in order to claim marital benefits…
[/QUOTE]
Yeah, because a man and a woman getting married purely for legal benefits has never happened in the history of mankind. :rolleyes:
Yeah I’m confused, why would someone who wouldn’t otherwise get fake married for the benefits, suddenly get fake gay-married for the benefits? It’s the same mental deficiency opponents to SSM have where they point out the supposed health dangers of homosexual sex, as if there would be less homosexual sex without SSM (I’m not married, but from what I’ve heard if they actually want less gay sex going on shouldn’t they be PRO-SSM? )
The reality is they hate gay people and don’t want them treated as equals and all the rest is a smokescreen.
Rick Santorum has given us the direct cause of “all this stuff about gay marriage”. What is this direct cause you ask? Why, it’s Will & Grace, of course! How could I have been so blind?!? Thank you, Reverend Santorum.
Obviously, Ms. Everhart recently watched the acclaimed documentary I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry. Adam Sandberg and Kevin James have opened her eyes to the horror of straight folks using same-sex marriage to unfairly take government benefits designed for gay couples! After all, if same-sex couples get these “special rights,” straights are gonna want them, too!
I feel dirty just for being in the general vicinity of the same side of a point as Rick Santorum, but I made the argument to someone the other day that, horrible and stereotyped as the show was, Will and Grace did play a part in nudging the Overton window in the right direction. Once people saw gays as harmless, goofy sitcom types, it made it harder to demonize them as evil corrupters of children and crazed sex fiends.
A sometime fan of talk show Stephanie Miller, for a rowdy good time. Anyway, she came out as a lesbian sometime back, and this guy calls up lamenting it, and she says…
“Oh, don’t worry about it, honey, you have just as much a shot now as you ever had…”
She can cut diamonds with that tongue if she’s a mind to…
I agree with you that it definitely was a hard-hitter in the homosexual appreciation category because it was a nationwide show, but what I find hilarious about Santorum this time is that he acts like this is the ONLY show/film dealing with homosexuality. He claims this is “the” reason.:rolleyes:
We had gay Willow on Buffy, one of the most popular cult shows in history, we currently have Pretty Little Liars where one girl is homosexual, Mr. Humphries on Are You Being Served, Modern Family, Quagmire’s dad, etc. Not to mention we have cable channels like Logo which have ben around for almost ten freaking years.
In film, um, Brokeback Mountain, Mr. Santorum? The Crying Game? Torch Song Trilogy? Beginners? Philadelphia?
Even in film and his ol’ background in politics, we have Harvey Milk, where Sean Penn won best actor for portraying him. He was a well loved person and being portrayed by one of the world’s most popular actors would help some homosexual awareness too. Shit like this proves Santorum lives in his own brand of vacuum.
Yeah, what Santorum ignores with that statement is that the culture had to get to a certain point before a goofy sitcom with gay characters in lead roles could even exist, let alone become an extremely popular show. It wasn’t so many decades before Will and Grace that gay people were still judged to be mentally ill. Will and Grace is one of the end products of the fight for gay rights and acceptance, not one of the causes.
Not that many people watched Soap. I think Three’s Company had more of an influence. Sure, Jack was only pretending to be gay so he could live with two hot women, and Mr. Roper made fun of him, but the character was played very sympathetically. Some people think he’s straight, some people think he’s gay, everybody treats him like Jack. Just another person. A more subtle influence, I think.
No, Santorum is right. The same thing happened in the '80s. Before Murphy Brown, nobody had out of wedlock babies and then that TV show happened and, before you could forget your condoms, there were unwed mothers all over the place.
This is why we need Republican leaders. To warn us (always too late) that TV shows are changing America’s moral fabric.