(What other opinions would be expected than "I say if you love someone it doesn't matter who they are. [Even if they're eight years old.]" from somebody who announces themself as a supporter of Micheal Jackson? Talk about paedophiles and child molesters...)

A while ago, homosexuality was considered vile, disgusting, and unnatural. Now, I still consider it as such, but society has changed their views on this and accepted it as simply an "alternative" to heterosexuality. Paedophilia (or carrying it out, rather, in child molestation) and beastiality are still, as far as I know, considered to be pretty damn sick. As they should be.

The italicised is paraphrased and/or quoted directly from another member, through instant messaging.

Alfred Kinsey was the first one to normalize homosexuality, and his research in "sexuality and the human male" and "sexuality and the human female", so flawed it simply has to be fixed [(as in rigged, not in need of repair)], was used in the 1968 decision by the APA [(American Psychiatric Association...also my (Sasquatch) initials--just a coincidence)] to declassify homosexuality as a sexual disorder. It's the same research that NAMBLA [(North American Man-Boy Love Association)] is now using to lobby for the declassification of pedophilia.

Among Kinsey's tricks was to take 25% of his surveys among convicted prisoners--not exactly an accurate profile of the population. In "Sexuality and the human female" he considered prostitutes and any woman living with the same man for more than a year as "married women". And page 33 of "Sexuality and the Human Male" has a little chart... times to reach orgasm, for boys ranging from 14 years to 5 months.

The two men who killed 10-year-ol Jeffery Curley while trying to kidnap him for rape were both members
[of NAMBLA]. His parents are suing, and the ACLU is defending them.

Kinsey made it clear in his statements that he thought people should experience a variety of sex--heterosexual, homosexual, group, beastiality, etc.--~before~ age 6---before "preconcieved notions" set in.

One of his little advancements was the seven-point scale, with heterosexuality at one extreme and homosexuality at the other, to make it appear that both were equally extreme and bisexuality was the norm. That was in "sexuality and the Human Male" published in 1948; my psychiatry teacher in college showed it to us as "the latest research".


lionx, I don't believe Garnet was referring to all perverted people in general. Only those who enjoy sex with children ("consent" or no), and possibly others equally as disturbed.