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  1. #8
    lazzhar's Avatar
    lazzhar is offline Banned pervert, Lazhar Rekik
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    Dude ! I'm just self-saught and my english still sucks so please bear with me because my trasnlator was jumping from a meaning to another.
    Anyway, if it's turning aound the intolerance against all kind of new "bizarroïdes" and if you like never let deviants take over this world then yes I'm a big fan of this bigotry.

    Lazhar Rekik
    of Barika, Algeria,
    currently working in Al Ain City, UAE,
    The perverted sender of pornography to female members of this site


    جبان أ ، أ الجنسي المنحرف وخاسرا

  2. #9
    voltaire is offline Registered User
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    LOL, I wouldn't criticise your English, which is a hell of a lot better than my proficiency at my second language (Turkish).

    Bigotry as generally understood is an irrational prejudice towards a group, entity or practice (in this case gay people). Given that there is no rational reason to dislike gay people for being gay (this is quite separate from having a particular theological stance on the merits of homosexuality as a practice), it counts as a form of bigotry in my book.



    V
    "I have never made but one prayer to God, a very short one: 'O Lord, make my enemies ridiculous.' And God granted it."

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  3. #10
    Al-khiyal is online now Super Moderator
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    About......turn!

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Pentagon no longer deems homosexuality a mental disorder, officials said on Wednesday, although the reversal has no impact on U.S. policy prohibiting openly gay people from serving in the military.

    After a 1996 Pentagon document placing homosexuality among a list of "certain mental disorders" came to light this month, the American Psychiatric Association and a handful of lawmakers asked the Defense Department to change its view.

    The Pentagon said in a statement: "Homosexuality should not have been characterized as a mental disorder in an appendix of a procedural instruction. A clarification will be issued over the next few days."

    "Notwithstanding its inclusion, we find no practical impact since that appendix simply listed factors that do not constitute a physical disability, and homosexuality of course does not," the Pentagon added.

    The 1996 Pentagon document, which had been recertified as "current" three years ago, had listed homosexuality as a mental disorder alongside mental retardation, impulse control disorders and personality disorders.

    The American Psychiatric Association, responsible for a definitive listing of mental health classifications, declassified homosexuality as a mental disorder in 1973.

    In fiscal 2005, which ended last September 30, 726 military personnel were discharged under the "don't ask, don't tell" policy, the Pentagon said.

    Adopted by Congress in 1993, the policy allows homosexuals to serve in the armed forces only if they do not reveal their sexual orientation and abstain from gay sex.

    It was a compromise worked out with Congress under President Bill Clinton, who had tried to lift the military's long-standing prohibition on homosexuals.

    Those opposed to gays in the military have argued the presence of homosexuals could undermine good discipline and order in the ranks.

    Changing the classification "will be consistent with the scientific consensus on homosexuality and mental health," said Nathaniel Frank, a researcher at the Center for the Study of Sexual Minorities in the Military at the University of California at Santa Barbara.

    The center recently found and released the 1996 document.

    "I'm glad the language has been changed," said Steve Ralls, spokesman for the Servicemembers Legal Defense Network, which opposes limits on gays in the military.

    Ralls said he believed it was a simple oversight by the Pentagon, not malice, that the document continued to list homosexuality as a mental disorder.

    The Servicemembers Legal Defense Network said the rate of troops discharged under the "don't ask, don't tell" policy had fallen by about 40 percent since the beginning of U.S. military operations following the September 11 attacks on the United States.

    "There is no good reason for keeping the ban in place and there's every good reason for repealing it," Ralls said. "It's discriminatory and robbing the military of talented men and women who want to serve. It's unnecessary. We've seen bans lifted among our closest allies. In Iraq and Afghanistan, Americans are serving alongside openly gay British troops."

    Pentagon says homosexuality not a mental disorder

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