>>>By the constant need to ascribe homosexual leanings to any two men who happen to be in the same room together for more than a few minutes, we are in fact teaching a terrible lesson to society and especially to young men. We are in fact teaching them that any kind of emotional connection between two males is in fact 'gay'. We are teaching that any kind of emotional connection between male fictional characters is to be ridiculed and considered 'queer'. No, there is no such thing as two men or young boys being close friends and even having an emotional connection. Nope, they OBVIOUSLY have to be secretly gay and/or in love with each other. Bring that down to a societal level, especially one such as ours that still often punishes homosexuality, and you have an entire generation of men and boys who are convinced that being friends with another 'dude' on any level other than surface-level will cause them to be called out as 'gay'. And, if it must be said, this kind of automatic presumption of homosexuality is indeed an insult to actual gay men. It is insulting both in its content (it doesn't take real homosexuality seriously) and its reaction (the constant teasing and mockery). Sometimes, two guys hanging out together, be it for solving crime or teaching the alphabet, are really just friends.>>>
Seems it all started with Bert and Ernie:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/scott-mendelson/because-they-are-not-gay-_b_925111.html?utm_source=DailyBrief&utm_campaign=081211&utm_medium=email&utm_content=BlogEntry&utm_term=Daily+BriefMy first reaction is: if we can de-stigmatize homosexuality ( I mean *really* de-stigmatize it) , everyone.... could just friggin' relax.
So.... wtf is the delay here? Seems to me, said de-stigmatization is a win/win. Both from GLBT POV *and* from straight peoples' mental health perspective.