I don’t think he’s calling you a bigot because of his sense of humour. It’s because of your bigotry.Byways1 wrote: ↑Fri Sep 06, 2019 10:42 pmYou don’t know me so don’t call me a bigot just because you have a sense on humour bypass.P&O wrote: ↑Fri Sep 06, 2019 10:39 pmYeah, and they don’t generally find homophobic old dinosaurs who try to excuse their bigotry by calling people “snowflakes” that funny.
Really good job that you can’t be bothered to go to the game tomorrow. A great club like Orient doesn’t need bigots through the turnstiles.
Statement from Nigel Travis
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Re: Statement from Nigel Travis
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Re: Statement from Nigel Travis
Ah the old “can’t take a joke” line.
Because an old straight dinosaur should be free to make homophobic comments and anybody who calls him out on it simply “can’t take a joke”
I literally gave you the chance to denounce homophobia and instead you called me a snowflake.
And I bet you wonder why people call you an old homophobic bigot
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Re: Statement from Nigel Travis
Don’t think I have ever met a gay person either. Tell me more. What are they like? Actually, don’t bother. I will print this off and spend some time reading it over the next few days.P&O wrote: ↑Fri Sep 06, 2019 10:20 pmMy thoughts about “being offended on someone’s behalf”
My boss is gay.
A number of my (excellent) colleagues are gay.
Two good friends from my childhood have since come out as gay.
I partied and hung out with homosexuals and lesbians on a weekly basis at college.
At uni, my friend circle included a number of gays and lesbians
The most loyal, closest and important friend of my missus (and subsequently a good friend of mine) is gay.
So I’ve spent a lot of my life with gays. Talk to them all the time. In serious, sober moments. In whimsical drunk moments. In crises. And in everything in between.
And do you know the thing which gay guys and girls despair at the most?
Funnily enough it’s not the homophobia directed at them. Sadly, they come to expect it. What really gets them down is when their straight friends get dismissed as “snowflakes”. Or as “virtue signalling”.
When their straight friends stick up for them and are immediately shot down as if they are only defending them through some sort of defect. As if only somebody with something wrong with them or something to prove would ever stick up for gays whilst not being gay themselves.
When some dinosaur brushes over homophobia and accuses the straight guy who calls it out as “getting offended on somebody else’s behalf”, they feel even more powerless.
Thankfully this attitude is dying out. But it’s taking a painfully long time.
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Re: Statement from Nigel Travis
How is the price of a hermit cave holding up in today's housing market then?Beradogs wrote: ↑Sat Sep 07, 2019 1:30 amDon’t think I have ever met a gay person either. Tell me more. What are they like? Actually, don’t bother. I will print this off and spend some time reading it over the next few days.P&O wrote: ↑Fri Sep 06, 2019 10:20 pmMy thoughts about “being offended on someone’s behalf”
My boss is gay.
A number of my (excellent) colleagues are gay.
Two good friends from my childhood have since come out as gay.
I partied and hung out with homosexuals and lesbians on a weekly basis at college.
At uni, my friend circle included a number of gays and lesbians
The most loyal, closest and important friend of my missus (and subsequently a good friend of mine) is gay.
So I’ve spent a lot of my life with gays. Talk to them all the time. In serious, sober moments. In whimsical drunk moments. In crises. And in everything in between.
And do you know the thing which gay guys and girls despair at the most?
Funnily enough it’s not the homophobia directed at them. Sadly, they come to expect it. What really gets them down is when their straight friends get dismissed as “snowflakes”. Or as “virtue signalling”.
When their straight friends stick up for them and are immediately shot down as if they are only defending them through some sort of defect. As if only somebody with something wrong with them or something to prove would ever stick up for gays whilst not being gay themselves.
When some dinosaur brushes over homophobia and accuses the straight guy who calls it out as “getting offended on somebody else’s behalf”, they feel even more powerless.
Thankfully this attitude is dying out. But it’s taking a painfully long time.
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Re: Statement from Nigel Travis
What a life you have led. When is the autobiography coming out?P&O wrote: ↑Fri Sep 06, 2019 10:20 pmMy thoughts about “being offended on someone’s behalf”
My boss is gay.
A number of my (excellent) colleagues are gay.
Two good friends from my childhood have since come out as gay.
I partied and hung out with homosexuals and lesbians on a weekly basis at college.
At uni, my friend circle included a number of gays and lesbians
The most loyal, closest and important friend of my missus (and subsequently a good friend of mine) is gay.
So I’ve spent a lot of my life with gays. Talk to them all the time. In serious, sober moments. In whimsical drunk moments. In crises. And in everything in between.
And do you know the thing which gay guys and girls despair at the most?
Funnily enough it’s not the homophobia directed at them. Sadly, they come to expect it. What really gets them down is when their straight friends get dismissed as “snowflakes”. Or as “virtue signalling”.
When their straight friends stick up for them and are immediately shot down as if they are only defending them through some sort of defect. As if only somebody with something wrong with them or something to prove would ever stick up for gays whilst not being gay themselves.
When some dinosaur brushes over homophobia and accuses the straight guy who calls it out as “getting offended on somebody else’s behalf”, they feel even more powerless.
Thankfully this attitude is dying out. But it’s taking a painfully long time.
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Re: Statement from Nigel Travis
I’m still young! Maybe I’ll release it in instalments.Disoriented wrote: ↑Sat Sep 07, 2019 9:02 amWhat a life you have led. When is the autobiography coming out?P&O wrote: ↑Fri Sep 06, 2019 10:20 pmMy thoughts about “being offended on someone’s behalf”
My boss is gay.
A number of my (excellent) colleagues are gay.
Two good friends from my childhood have since come out as gay.
I partied and hung out with homosexuals and lesbians on a weekly basis at college.
At uni, my friend circle included a number of gays and lesbians
The most loyal, closest and important friend of my missus (and subsequently a good friend of mine) is gay.
So I’ve spent a lot of my life with gays. Talk to them all the time. In serious, sober moments. In whimsical drunk moments. In crises. And in everything in between.
And do you know the thing which gay guys and girls despair at the most?
Funnily enough it’s not the homophobia directed at them. Sadly, they come to expect it. What really gets them down is when their straight friends get dismissed as “snowflakes”. Or as “virtue signalling”.
When their straight friends stick up for them and are immediately shot down as if they are only defending them through some sort of defect. As if only somebody with something wrong with them or something to prove would ever stick up for gays whilst not being gay themselves.
When some dinosaur brushes over homophobia and accuses the straight guy who calls it out as “getting offended on somebody else’s behalf”, they feel even more powerless.
Thankfully this attitude is dying out. But it’s taking a painfully long time.
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Re: Statement from Nigel Travis
Chapter by chapter.P&O wrote: ↑Sat Sep 07, 2019 9:26 amI’m still young! Maybe I’ll release it in instalments.Disoriented wrote: ↑Sat Sep 07, 2019 9:02 amWhat a life you have led. When is the autobiography coming out?P&O wrote: ↑Fri Sep 06, 2019 10:20 pm
My thoughts about “being offended on someone’s behalf”
My boss is gay.
A number of my (excellent) colleagues are gay.
Two good friends from my childhood have since come out as gay.
I partied and hung out with homosexuals and lesbians on a weekly basis at college.
At uni, my friend circle included a number of gays and lesbians
The most loyal, closest and important friend of my missus (and subsequently a good friend of mine) is gay.
So I’ve spent a lot of my life with gays. Talk to them all the time. In serious, sober moments. In whimsical drunk moments. In crises. And in everything in between.
And do you know the thing which gay guys and girls despair at the most?
Funnily enough it’s not the homophobia directed at them. Sadly, they come to expect it. What really gets them down is when their straight friends get dismissed as “snowflakes”. Or as “virtue signalling”.
When their straight friends stick up for them and are immediately shot down as if they are only defending them through some sort of defect. As if only somebody with something wrong with them or something to prove would ever stick up for gays whilst not being gay themselves.
When some dinosaur brushes over homophobia and accuses the straight guy who calls it out as “getting offended on somebody else’s behalf”, they feel even more powerless.
Thankfully this attitude is dying out. But it’s taking a painfully long time.
Good idea fella.
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