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HardTranceProd
Supreme tranceaddict

Registered: Jun 2004
Location: Washington DC
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god damn this is hilarious, read this:
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Sen. Larry Craig peered through a crack in a restroom stall door for two minutes and made gestures suggesting he wanted to engage in "lewd conduct," according to the police officer who arrested him.
Craig's blue eyes were clearly visible through the crack in the door, Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport police Sgt. Dave Karsnia wrote in the report he filed on the June 11 incident.
"Craig would look down at his hands, 'fidget' with his fingers, and then look through the crack into my stall again," Karsnia wrote in documents accompanying the arrest report.
The Idaho Republican later said the officer misinterpreted his actions.
But Craig, 62, pleaded guilty August 8 to a misdemeanor disorderly conduct charge in the incident, according to Minnesota criminal records.
The officer wrote that he was on a plainclothes detail in the restroom because of citizen complaints and arrests for sexual activity there.
Karsnia wrote that when the person occupying the stall beside him left, Craig entered it and blocked the door with his rolling suitcase.
"My experience has shown that individuals engaging in lewd conduct use their bags to block the view from the front of their stall," the officer said in his report.
The senator then tapped his right foot, "a signal used by persons wishing to engage in lewd conduct," Karsnia wrote, and Craig ran his left hand several times underneath the partition dividing the stalls.
"The presence of others did not seem to deter Craig as he moved his right foot so that it touched the side of my left foot which was within my stall area," the officer's report said.
When the police interviewed him later, the senator said that "he has a wide stance when going to the bathroom" and that was why his foot may have touched the officer's, the report said.
Craig also told police that he had reached down to the floor to pick up a piece of paper, the officer wrote.
"It should be noted that there was not a piece of paper on the bathroom floor, nor did Craig pick up a piece of paper," Karsnia wrote.
"During the interview, Craig either disagreed with me or 'didn't recall' the events as they happened."
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http://www.cnn.com/2007/POLITICS/08...rest/index.html

___________________
"The favorite American pastime is not baseball, it's moral crusades."
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Aug-28-2007 20:06
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HardTranceProd
Supreme tranceaddict

Registered: Jun 2004
Location: Washington DC
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His press conference
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gJgSl_auejM
"Thank you for coming out" - hahaha!
At the end, some guy says, "Hey, what if you *were* gay? Not like there's anything wrong with being gay" - LOL.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy...ml?hpid=topnews
| quote: |
A Senator's Wide Stance: 'I Am Not Gay'
From the opening line of his statement yesterday, Sen. Larry Craig was in trouble. "Thank you all very much for coming out today," he began.
"Coming out" was perhaps not the best phrase for a guy who had pleaded guilty to some rather un-senatorial conduct in an airport men's room -- and now stands accused in his home-state paper of a homosexual encounter in Union Station.
Alas for the Idaho Republican, it was not his first mistake.
No, his first mistake was on June 11, when he went into a restroom stall in the Minneapolis airport and, according to the arrest report, tapped his foot in a "signal often used by persons communicating a desire to engage in sexual conduct."
This was followed closely by his second mistake: handing the arresting officer his business card and asking, "What do you think about that?"
Mistake No. 3? Explaining to the police that his foot touched the undercover officer's foot in the next stall because he has "a wide stance when going to the bathroom."
Mistake No. 4: Pleading guilty on Aug. 8 to disorderly conduct, and telling nobody -- not even a lawyer or his wife -- before the news broke Monday and Craig's spokesman chalked it up to a "he said/he said misunderstanding."
This quartet of errors landed the senator before the television cameras yesterday outside the Wells Fargo building in downtown Boise. Standing next to his wife, who wore sunglasses and looked as if she felt ill, the senator almost shouted as he asserted his heterosexuality.
"Let me be clear: I am not gay. I never have been gay," Craig said. Evidently, Craig did not think this was clear enough, because moments later, he explained why he kept the arrest a secret. "I wasn't eager to share this failure, but I should have anyway -- because I am not gay!"
The Associated Press rushed out a bulletin: "Sen. Larry Craig says, 'I am not gay.' " CNN put up a "Breaking News" banner announcing, "Sen. Craig: I am not gay, and never have been gay."
The Drudge Report went with the headline "Brokeback Bathroom."
As the Craigs departed, somebody in the crowd that had gathered called out after the senator: "Hey, what if you _were_ gay?"
Heckling the disgraced lawmaker at that moment seemed over the top, but the question was a reasonable one. Craig didn't get into trouble for being gay; he got into trouble because he "engaged in conduct which I knew or should have known tended to arouse alarm or resentment."
Though he has been writing laws for the past 32 years, the senator spoke yesterday as if he lacked the most basic grasp of the legal system.
"While I was not involved in any inappropriate conduct at the Minneapolis airport or anywhere else, I chose to plead guilty to a lesser charge in hopes of making it go away," he said, blaming this on his failure to hire a lawyer. "I have now retained counsel, and I am asking counsel to review this matter and to advise me on how to proceed."
The retained counsel will have a difficult job, given the two statements that appear on the guilty plea right above the signature of one Larry Edwin Craig: "I understand that the court will not accept a plea of guilty from anyone who claims to be innocent," and "I now make no claim that I am innocent of the charge to which I am entering a plea of guilty."
Who is to blame for this fundamental misunderstanding by the veteran lawmaker? Of course: the media. In particular, the Idaho Statesman, whose article published Monday night quoted a man with close ties to Republican officials as saying he had a sexual encounter with the senator in the men's room in Union Station.
"My family and I had been relentlessly and viciously harassed by the Idaho Statesman," Craig complained. He was so mad about it, in fact, that the word "viciously" at first came out has "vicially."
The senator wore a casual, short-sleeve shirt tucked into a pair of khakis -- presenting a softer image than the mug shot that had been on television all day showing a severe Craig in business attire with an American-flag pin on his lapel. But no fashion adjustment would overcome what the senator acknowledged was "an issue that is not yet over."
That's a safe bet, considering that his Senate colleagues offered no support as they sent the matter to the ethics committee, and presidential candidate Mitt Romney, on CNBC, dismissed the man who had until Monday been his Idaho chairman as "disgusting" and beneath "the level of respect and dignity that we would expect."
Twice in his statement, Craig, speaking beneath sunny skies, apologized for the "cloud over Idaho" caused by his arrest. Actually, the cloud is over Craig, not his home state.
But it's easy to see how Craig might overestimate the size of his shadow: He has a wide stance.
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___________________
"The favorite American pastime is not baseball, it's moral crusades."
Last edited by HardTranceProd on Aug-29-2007 at 17:55
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Aug-29-2007 17:41
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Renegade
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Registered: May 2001
Location: Prague, Czech Republic
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| quote: | Originally posted by Q5echo
i disagree. openly gay men participate in those same lewd acts you described those Republican lawmakers engaged in everyday in every city in America and get caught doing it.
closeted gay men who are not necessarily religious get caught doing the same things. |
The issue isn't that the average homosexual is incapable of dangerous or immoral patterns of sexual behaviour, but rather that the probability of dangerous or immoral sexual behaviour is far higher among those homosexuals who believe that their homosexual desires are inherently immoral to begin with.
Off the top of my head, I could think of four conservative politicians / religious figures that engaged in promiscuous or - much worse - criminal acts of homosexuality and yet can think of no conservative / religious figures that are involved in healthy homosexual relationships. I needn't even indclude Catholic clergymen and their taste for alt... well, you get where I'm going with this, right?
There are undoubtedly many outed homosexuals - men that are comfortable with their sexuality - who still engage in "lewd" acts as you put it, but the ratio doesn't even compare to the number of self-loathing homosexuals - and I would include basically any homosexual involved with conservative politics or religion in that number - that engage in the same sort of behaviour with the same sort of consitency.
| quote: | | those patterns of "immoral" or unlawful behavior are not symptomatic of repressed homosexual desires they are a product of deviant homosexual desires. the repression exists seperately. |
The repression of desire causes deviancy of desire - we've known this since Freud. If you prevent yourself from being angry - even in cases where anger is a natural reaction to the situation you find yourself in - then the anger will often manifest itself in "catastrophic" (in the psychological sense) ways. If you try to prevent yourself from laughing in a situation that you find profoundly humourous, then you'll find the same thing happens: small, managable bursts of laughter are supressed, while large, "catastrophic" bursts emerge beyond your control. The same, I'm sure, could be said for sexual desire: supress the desire for long enough and it will emerge in a capacity largely beyond your control.
| quote: | | these same men could just as easily lead sexually fullfilled, non-deviant "closeted" lives but either chose not to or in all likelyhood actually do. how do we know? |
No, they couldn't have "just as easily lead sexually fullfilled, non-deviant 'closeted' lives" because that was just the sort of life that they had programmed themselves (or been programmed) to be repulsed by. No-one - particularly not conservative politicians or Christians with a vested interest in living the chaste lifestyle - would choose to live a life in which their sexual desires could only be satisfied by deception or criminal misconduct, regardless of their sexual orientation. The four men I mentioned believed their desires to be "lewd" and the actions they performed to satisfy these desires, unfortunately, reflect those initial beliefs. If you think that homosexual desires are inherently "lewd", then chances are your expression of homosexual desires will be "lewd" too!
___________________
http://eschatonnow.blogspot.com/
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Aug-29-2007 20:13
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