As best I can remember, he said nothing defamatory. It was basically introductions, standard stuff which turned into a rant about how his type of person was destroying the world.
Yep. It's that whole thing people do, consciously and subconsciously, look at past relationships, look at interactions between each sex and add up all those gender things (make-up, sports, skirts, hairstyle.) I'm much more comfortable around girls, big surprise. I'm touchy feely, but moreso with girls. I had a very 'touchy' relationship with a friend who's a very out lesbian. (This accounts for one of the confused men.)
I have seen But I'm a Cheerleader. I had a disproportionate number of non-straight friends in highschool and for them it was some sort of biblical adaptation. On one hand, it's weird that flaunting some gender stereotypes (like shaving, wearing skirts) makes me feel like I stand out in a bad way, but other things make me feel empowered (like a young person knitting, or a check-out chick having a brain [I used to bleach my hair to be a smart blonde.])
no subject
Yep. It's that whole thing people do, consciously and subconsciously, look at past relationships, look at interactions between each sex and add up all those gender things (make-up, sports, skirts, hairstyle.) I'm much more comfortable around girls, big surprise. I'm touchy feely, but moreso with girls. I had a very 'touchy' relationship with a friend who's a very out lesbian. (This accounts for one of the confused men.)
I have seen But I'm a Cheerleader. I had a disproportionate number of non-straight friends in highschool and for them it was some sort of biblical adaptation.
On one hand, it's weird that flaunting some gender stereotypes (like shaving, wearing skirts) makes me feel like I stand out in a bad way, but other things make me feel empowered (like a young person knitting, or a check-out chick having a brain [I used to bleach my hair to be a smart blonde.])