Re: The struggles of being gay
Posted: Mon Sep 26, 2011 7:45 pm
@Nick: Looks like ya got me all figgered out :>
The Place to Start for Operating System Developers
http://forum.osdev.org./
A central axiom of psychohistory is that the population should remain in ignorance of the results of psychohistorical analyses.NickJohnson wrote:@gravaera:
You forgot:
- The meta-analyst: This person will deconstruct every possible direction the rest of the thread could go, and theorize on it's eventual course. This, through reverse psychology, will prevent any of the predictions from occurring. Including this one.
1/28th the size i was talking about... i guess it will have to do..gravaera wrote:@Nick: Looks like ya got me all figgered out :>
Does the OMGPonies! skin for this forum count?DavidCooper wrote:It does, however, remind us that there could be an advantage in providing a pink mode for all our OSes, and a purple one too.
I forgot about that skin. Needs more Pinkie Pie.Solar wrote:Does the OMGPonies! skin for this forum count?DavidCooper wrote:It does, however, remind us that there could be an advantage in providing a pink mode for all our OSes, and a purple one too.
I wasn't trying to offend anyone, and I doubt anyone hostile to gay people will want to comment in this thread at all, not least because from the index page it looks as if the last person to post to it is the person who's declaring himself to be gay.NickJohnson wrote:But in all seriousness, I think DavidCooper's implication that pink/purple == effeminate == homosexual could be seen as offensive.
So you say that the relationship between GNU/Linux and hobby OSs is much like being gay, so what about the relationship between Microsoft Windows and GNU/Linux??? what about Microsoft Windows and hobby OSs??? I am SURE it is like the relationship between bisexuals and homosexuals xD xD xD xD Or you have another opinion???BlueVelvet wrote:As a gay man, I take positive representations where I can get them. Any time a same-gender relationship is portrayed in a positive but very real light benefits us all. The same can be said of GNU/Linux and hobby OSs, which, much like being gay, will likely remain minorities in the a world that seems married to proprietary software, and never really "come out of the closet" and be truly ready for acceptance the desktop. But anytime we can get some good press, it helps us all. I'm a big fan of Ubuntu (even over Mac!) and I'm proud that Dell has taken a stand and acknowledged that some of us are different, and thats ok.
OMG!! all of that would happen because someone said he is a gay??!!!!gravaera wrote:Actually, it's just that this topic itself is confusingly random and really adds nothing to the forums. It doesn't add humour, interesting but unrelated knowledge about some intriguing development, a social-decentralizer, a "chance to unwind", or anything really practical at all. It's just like a plain statement of the OP's opinion on a random topic which really gives no room for comment, and honestly presents no opportunity for stimulating discussion.
There are several fixed template responses that this thread would have received if we weren't all pragmatic nit-pickers, and hadn't just got fixated on the impracticality of the thread, but had rather decided to discuss homosexuality itself; the various post archetypes would present themselves roughly this order:
The debate is now ready to burst into a flurry of activity. The following key components will begin cropping up, and several alt-accounts will be created by various members in order to reply anonymously and avoid staining their forumz reputation which they have built over months or years of e-p33n stroking.
- The moral precedent establisher posters: these posters would seek to make statements laced with a "forward looking" undertone which tries to present anti-gay views as being archaic, and try to present the pro-gay view as being modern, sophisticated and tolerant; the idea is to post with a tone that implies that "the majority" supports the pro-gay view.
- The personal experience and encouragement sharing poster: this poster would post with an "upbeat" tone and attempt to use a personal experience (whether good or bad) to open, then try to set up subtext of "progress" of the human species as a whole based on the progress of gay-rights, etc, and will most likely end with some encouraging words both to gays viewing the thread, and to non-gays who support homosexuals, asking both sides to continue their efforts.
- The unimpressed and unmovingly anti-gay poster: this poster will break into the thread's sequence of pro-gay posts and state that he does not surrender to the current surge of LGBT rights, etc, and will present counter-arguments for the pro-gay view.
- The accord and support providing poster: this person will agree with the above poster and present edifying points to further concrete the anti-gay view.
- The scientific evidence and research paper lobbyist: This person will call the anti-gay posters arcane, and will use tongue-in-cheek linguistics to embellish various scientific theories du jour which support the pro-gay view.
- The counter scientific evidence and research paper neutralizing poster: This person will attempt to prove using other scientific theories du jour that the anti-gay view stands firm.
Now let's wait and see how far this thread gets
- The person with no hard evidence who has an "opinion": This person typically will make a statement about a loved one who is currently struggling under an oppressive burden inflicted upon them by none other than "people like" the anti-gay posters, and will state that "they think" that people should leave people alone and that "in their opinion" love is all that matters.
- The guilt and shame slinging attacker: This person will state that they are ashamed to be human/black/white/young/republican etc, and will use barely understandable attempts at sarcasm and irony to avoid using facts to concrete their argument, and then generally "rage quit" the argument several times, returning at least once on each page to sling more mud before solemnly vowing to leave the pathetic thread and never return.
- The Troll: The sign that the thread is now going nowhere.
- The summoner of the moderators: This person will, along with other summoners of varying levels of power attempt to conjure up a mod to close the thread.
- The moderator: The great envoy to the end. The Alpha and Omega, the dark lord. He will close the thread in his fury and infinite wisdom.
--Peace out,
gravaera
Actually, the majority of people use proprietary software (by a huge margin). Secondly, you're suggesting that everyone is gay but some have not yet come out of the closet (which is obviously wrong) and that the same thing applies to software (which is even more wrong, since there would be no reason to pretend to like proprietary software when you actually don't). Your rant was a bunch of baloney.BlueVelvet wrote:As a gay man, I take positive representations where I can get them. Any time a same-gender relationship is portrayed in a positive but very real light benefits us all. The same can be said of GNU/Linux and hobby OSs, which, much like being gay, will likely remain minorities in the a world that seems married to proprietary software, and never really "come out of the closet" and be truly ready for acceptance the desktop.
You're absolutely right but please learn to write more concisely because your verbosity almost always loses me after one paragraph, and I suspect I'm not the only one, yo.gravaera wrote:Actually, it's just that this topic itself is confusingly random and really adds nothing to the forums. It doesn't add humour, interesting but unrelated knowledge about some intriguing development, a social-decentralizer, a "chance to unwind", or anything really practical at all. It's just like a plain statement of the OP's opinion on a random topic which really gives no room for comment, and honestly presents no opportunity for stimulating discussion.