Wednesday, April 9, 2008

What's Wrong of Being a Gay?


SmileyCentral.com
i wonder myself when someone i know here, from asia,
told me that being a "queer of folk" is somekind of sickness/illness.

i disagree with him. 'coz it's natural endowment.
it's imprinted since in matrix of mother's belly.
some said that it is "because of the circumstances"
which influence one to be a "queer".yeah it might be.

but most of gays are just give their theory or pretext using the reason above (because of circumstance) or sometimes they just give a pretext
"because of broken heart with his pussy"
then switch himself to be a gay!
hahahhahha what a nonsense statement.
this is sometimes make me feel ridiculous!
if a man could be stimulated by a mascular man or
handsome man. it is truly a kind of homosexual.

and a pure gay it basicly shown through his eyes
when seeing a hot guy right in front of him.
you could notice it.
so you can not pretend to be a straight man!
this is happened with a gay that i recognized before.

he said something bullshit that i actually
know him better than other.
he acts as if he is a cool straight man.
but his heart always desire only for havin' sex
with man although he made love with a girl.
it's just the "cover up".

yes of course when a man's "pee pee" get into
a "pussy" it can stimulate him.
but that's not make him a straight or cool genuine man!

west people espesially in HollandSmileyCentral.com
(The Netherlands was the first country to allow same-sex marriage in 2001)
are more opened about the orientation sexuality.
may be we are in asia are more "discreet or undercover" about it
so some gays in asia just pretend to be a straight man.
:)

talking about homosexual's marriage
not every western countries are accepted this homo case.
especially in chatolic countries.
these following countries are still debating about the homosexual marriage:
1.Argentina
2.Australia
3.Austria
4.Estonia
5.France
6.Ireland
7.Italy
8.Latvia
9.Lithuania
10.New Zealand
11.Norway
12.Portugal
13.Romania
14.Sweden
15.United Kingdom
16.united state of America (except Massachusetts state, USA (2004))
also from asia : china & Taiwan

------------------

nowadays, same sex marriage are
legally in some western countries and south africa, such as:
Belgium, Canada, South Africa, Spain, and the U.S. state of Massachusetts.

CanadaSmileyCentral.com and SpainSmileyCentral.com are the only countries
where the legal status of same-sex marriage is exactly the same as that of opposite-sex marriage,
though South Africa is due to fully harmonize its marriage laws.
*****

ok, back to the point about gay
take an attention about the next article,
taken from psychology today:

".....Despite the cancellation, the APA has not issued a ban on reorientation therapy, instead believing that therapists should follow specific guidelines for treating patients seeking to alter their sexuality (therapies are not frequently regulated by the organization). In the meantime, Spitzer is working to discern whether or not homosexuality can be reversed, but with only anecdotal evidence, he's calling for more scientific research. His current study examines those who believe they have benefited for at least five years from reorientation therapy.

'I don't do this kind of therapy, and I am skeptical about the results' Spitzer says. His early findings indicate that reorientation therapy is not always successful, but he hesitates to condemn it before more research is conducted. Spitzer plans to present preliminary data next year, and hopes his work will add credence to the need for an APA symposium on the topic"

and also take a look at the following picture that content of
correspondence of Psychology about man, gay, well ok you just click
the picture for the enlargement,
so you could see what they're talking about:



so being a gay is not sickness/illness.
they are also in love, and also do the sexual intercourse
like the normal heterosexual do.
and even in history era, gay's already existed.
the problem is your choice.
re u still feel that you are a gay?
or you want to be a straight?
and haw ist your determination?
the answer is inside your heart.

if you are gay and not accepted in your country.
just try to approach the other country.
SmileyCentral.com

Pedofilia


i saw a movie called Trade last night.
this is the movie that describe a real situation
about kidnapping in Mexico included the abusive thing or
arbitary to a children & then sell them to pedophilia in USA.

i just realize it, that not just in mexico, but
probably in any other poor countries such as
thailand, vietnam, or maybe Indonesia
this is so sad thing.

why dont let them, the children, choose their own path of life?
why should they kidnap the children?
why should the children're condemned to be in sexual slavery situation?

and i really grateful found some article of...
well may be the FbI or any other government security in USA
that caught the pedophilia who tried to do imorality
toward children.

hope this movie could arouse and thouch our deeper heart
of always not to bother children toward imoral thing.
God bless you.

hmmm. ok let's see the synopsis of this movie:
Trade(2007)

When 13-year-old Adriana is kidnapped by sex traffickers in Mexico City,
her 17-year-old brother, Jorge, sets off on a desperate mission to save her.
Trapped by an underground network of international thugs
who earn millions exploiting their human cargo,
Adriana's only friend throughout her ordeal is Veronica,
a young Polish woman captured by the same criminal gang.
As Jorge dodges overwhelming obstacles to track the girl's abductors,
he meets Ray, a Texas cop whose own family loss leads him to become an ally.

From the barrios of Mexico City and the treacherous Rio Grande border, to a secret internet sex slave auction and a tense confrontation at a stash house in suburban New Jersey, Ray and Jorge forge a close bond as they frantically pursue Adriana's kidnappers before she is sold and disappears into a brutal underworld from which few victims ever return.

When Dj in action

Enjoy the rhytem

World's worst places to live if you're gay

U.S. allies listed among
gay human rights abusers

By ELIZABETH WEILL-GREENBERG
MAR. 17, 2006


The latest U.S. State Department human rights report has some gay activists calling on the government to heed its own advice and impose sanctions on countries that target gay citizens with abuse.

Each year, the State Department issues a human rights report detailing abuse committed by foreign governments, including abuse motivated by victims’ sexual orientation and gender identity.

Gay rights advocates applauded the 2005 report, released last week, for its detailing of anti-gay abuses committed in a range of countries, including Iran, Poland, Brazil and the United Arab Emirates.

"I was glad to see [the report] talked about issues of discrimination," said Scott Long, director of the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender Rights program at Human Rights Watch.

Past reports, he said, "were willing to address egregious persecution but not everyday life."

Murder and discrimination

The violations detailed in the report range from criminalizing homosexuality in Nigeria to banning gay rights parades in Warsaw, Poland, to the murders of gay rights and AIDS activists in Jamaica.

The report also criticized Nigeria for health care and employment discrimination against HIV-positive people. The public, the report stated, believes HIV is "a result of immoral behavior."

The United Arab Emirates, recently in the news because of the attempted takeover of some U.S. port operations by the UAE-owned company Dubai Ports World, criminalizes homosexuality. The UAE was cited in the State Department report for arresting 26 gay men and reportedly giving them hormone treatments to change their sexual orientation.

While homosexuality is not illegal in Nepal, the report states, police still harass and abuse gays.

It is unclear what criterion is used to define abuse, as some human rights violations-—-like criminalizing sodomy-—-were the law of the land in a dozen U.S. states until a Supreme Court decision in 2003.

The State Department declined comment on the report.

The report’s inclusiveness of gay-related abuse can help asylum seekers who must prove persecution based on sexual orientation or gender identity in their home country, said Chris Nugent, a D.C. attorney who specializes in gay asylum cases.

The report "is a vital source of information concerning treatment," said Nugent. "It’s relied on by immigration adjudicators as evidence of human rights conditions abroad."

While the report may help asylum seekers, it is less clear what it will mean for U.S. domestic policy and relationships with other countries. The State Department is required by law to issue the reports, which are supposed to help determine funding granted to foreign countries, said Elisa Massimino, D.C. director of Human Rights First, a human rights advocacy group.

Countries with egregious records of human rights violations are not supposed to receive certain types of aid, she said.

"The consequences are what the U.S. government makes of them," said Human Rights Watch’s Long, who claimed his group helped compile some of the anti-gay abuses chronicled in the report.

‘Turning a blind eye’

The report’s inclusiveness of gay rights, Long said, "stands in conspicuous contrast to the vote at the U.N."

The U.S. recently sided with Iran and Cameroon to block two gay rights groups from having consultative status at the U.N., which allows involvement in discussions with member countries. Nearly 3,000 groups have consultative status, according to Human Rights Watch.

The report "doesn’t seem to conform with the administration’s own record," agreed Paula Ettelbrick, executive director of the International Gay & Lesbian Human Rights Commission.

While the report acknowledges the egregiousness of anti-gay abuses, Ettelbrick said, "the bad news is [the U.S.] doesn’t seem to be applying that standard to the U.S. government."

"The State Department report is enlightening but it won’t be effective if the U.S. government keeps siding with abusers like Iran in supporting silencing human rights watchers," HRC President Joe Solmonese said in a statement.

"Countries like the U.A.E. are abusing men and women and the best the U.S. government can do is give them a multimillion dollar contract to manage our ports," he said. "We should be demanding accountability for human rights violations, not simply turning a blind eye toward the problem."

Where does U.S. rank?

There also is the problem of credibility because of the United States’ own human rights record, which is absent from the report, several activists noted.

In the past year there has been international outcry over U.S. policies to torture and indefinitely detain suspects, as well as the policy of "rendition," or sending a foreign suspect to a third country for interrogation. Critics have alleged that some terrorism suspects are sent abroad to be tortured.

These charges are missing from the country reports, even for those countries where suspects were sent, noted Massimino of Human Rights First.

Human Rights First conducted critiques of the State Department reports from 1978 until 1996 and then in 2003, when it saw that the State Department instructed embassies not to report actions requested by the U.S., she said.

Despite this instruction, the report remained thorough, unlike earlier years that were influenced by U.S. foreign policy, she said.

But the United States’ own record should not deter the government from condemning human rights violations abroad, Long said.

"The U.S.’ moral authority was progressively eroded by things like the images of Abu Ghraib," he said. "But the erosion of authority doesn’t detract from their authority to speak out."

Other countries will use U.S. human rights violations to justify their own, Scott said. For instance, he said, both Uganda and Nigeria passed anti-gay marriage laws in the past year.

"Uganda is one of the largest recipients of [U.S.] AIDS funding," he said. "They are very attentive to policies at home. If [the U.S.] throws the principle of equality out the window, it resonates everywhere."

take a look on more info below:

Ronald's travel

an Indonesian executive manager of a company,
his name Ronald.
after saving money, he takes the day off
and having tour to europe.

he searchs in newspaper about the traveling package.
finally he found "travel agent Singapore" who offer the cheap
touring.

in fact, Ronald so careless,
the tour he takes actually a tour group for gays.
some said, that gays or homos if they are farting, they fart with no sound,
just soundly "haaah"(empty sound), because his back(red: anus) has already loose.

and then, the second day in Paris,
in a tour bus, Ronald intend to farting.
but he persist it. he try his best to hold it.
but the more he hold it the more he couldn't stand it.
so he farts softly.
but what can he do? it sounds so noisy.

Ronald became so very worried about this.
worried of being scolded by other passenger in that bus.

but what he got is,
the other passengers simultaneously yelling
like a choir:
"hmmmmm......! still virgin!"
OMG!

circumcision




is that nessesary? i dont think so.
if a man really wanna do that. just go for it.
but in some islam country, it seems to be obliged for a man
to be circumcision, especially if they are muslim.

it's really pain or hurt using the traditional treatment.
and some circumcision makes man more invulnerable or more numb.
so it's not really fun when we are masturbating. :)


a hygiene reason is just the pretext!!!!!
not true. the fact is the man who circumcision
also can get sexual desease. right?
and uncut or cut man also need to clean up his dick
after fucking.
so hygiene reason is not totally true.
on the contrary, it is more risky than not circumcision at all.
some men get trauma after do circumcision.
==========


uncut picture

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