This is something that I have noticed recently.
One example would be the whole gay rights thing. Let's say some anti-gay person is spouting off about how homosexuals should be second class citizens; they shouldn't have their relationships acknowledged as marriage; they shouldn't be given equal protection under the law; they are filthy, bloodsucking perverts, etc. I have noticed that many times when such a person is spouting such bile, he or she will follow it up with something like, "Now, I'd like to say that I have many friends who are gay."
Another example would be something I saw on Fox News a few months ago. A few of the anchors were talking about people who don't follow any religion and/or do not have a belief in a deity. One of the anchors said that such people should be treated like trolls, and that everyone should constantly harass and ridicule them. Then, in the very next breath, she said, "Now, I have to say that many of my closest friends are atheists."
Now, I don't know about any of you, but if someone called me a pervert, a troll, said that I shouldn't have equal rights, or anything else of the nature, then I probably wouldn't be interested in being friends with that person. I'm not gay, so I probably won't ever have to deal with any of the stuff they have to deal with, but I am one of the (roughly) 15 percent of Americans who do not identify with a religion. If some religious person said the sort of things about me that the aforementioned Fox News anchor said about people like me, then I probably wouldn't consider that person a friend.
One example would be the whole gay rights thing. Let's say some anti-gay person is spouting off about how homosexuals should be second class citizens; they shouldn't have their relationships acknowledged as marriage; they shouldn't be given equal protection under the law; they are filthy, bloodsucking perverts, etc. I have noticed that many times when such a person is spouting such bile, he or she will follow it up with something like, "Now, I'd like to say that I have many friends who are gay."
Another example would be something I saw on Fox News a few months ago. A few of the anchors were talking about people who don't follow any religion and/or do not have a belief in a deity. One of the anchors said that such people should be treated like trolls, and that everyone should constantly harass and ridicule them. Then, in the very next breath, she said, "Now, I have to say that many of my closest friends are atheists."
Now, I don't know about any of you, but if someone called me a pervert, a troll, said that I shouldn't have equal rights, or anything else of the nature, then I probably wouldn't be interested in being friends with that person. I'm not gay, so I probably won't ever have to deal with any of the stuff they have to deal with, but I am one of the (roughly) 15 percent of Americans who do not identify with a religion. If some religious person said the sort of things about me that the aforementioned Fox News anchor said about people like me, then I probably wouldn't consider that person a friend.
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