Archive for February, 2009

Gay Crush: Elizabeth Taylor

February 25, 2009

Elizabeth Taylor has been a trusted friend to the gays, and the gays a loyal fan base for her—even when we’re both so doped up we hardly recognize one another. We love Elizabeth Taylor because, like all gays, she’s a woman of contradictions: truly classy yet perfectly campy, deeply kind yet shamelessly embarrassing, perennially lonely yet serially monogamous. And the greatest contradiction of all: she is not gay. We’ve been with her through the teen flicks, the perfume commercials, and the mascara—gobs and gobs of it. And now, Dear Breeder, we want to tell the world why.

"Why, yes, that is my handsomely-framed diploma. I have a PhD in On-Screen Chemistry.”
“Mind if I slip into a glass of gin?”

Elizabeth Taylor is Hollywood glamour defined, but she–as do most gays–had to start somewhere. And why shouldn’t that somewhere be “eyebrows”? Thanks to her well-connected parents, Elizabeth began acting at a young age. These early experiences (see films: Lassie Come Home I & II and National Velvet) allowed her to perfect cross-species method acting, while pretending to be well-read (see films: Jane Eyre and Little Women). After teaching the world the true meaning of doggie-stylin’, falling from a horse, and having her first period drama, Taylor’s acting chops were officially fierce: it was time for her to become the most glamorous celebrity-in-crisis in the world.

"You amateur! I've batted more balls from my face than I care to remember. Check out my blouse!”
Film still of the epic ping pong scene from Cleopatra.

Against her will, Taylor was consistently cast in the kind of boring romantic melodramas that only we gays can truly appreciate. Thanks to these films, Elizabeth Taylor helps us realize just how ridiculous heterosexuality truly is (see film: Father of the Bride). Another important Liz Lesson comes from her first adult roles, where we learned that implied abortions and veiled sexual storylines can be occasions for impromptu gay holidays. We just eat that stuff up!

Indeed, Elizabeth’s superstardom and all that it entails reads like a gay wish list:

1. Star turns in numerous film adaptations of such gay plays as Tennessee Williams’s Suddenly Last Summer and Edward Albee’s soul-doucheing Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
2. Soap opera cameos on All My Children and General Hospital. √
3. A taste for expensive pharmaceuticals, rich fabrics, and even richer men. √
4. Eight tumultuous marriages, leading to a public denunciation issued by The Vatican because of her home-wrecking ways. √√√√√√√√
5. A dramatic tracheotomy scar, of which she is unashamed. √
6. A love affair with jewelry that inspired her 2002 book My Love Affair with Jewelry. √
7. A wardrobe of no fewer than 65 extravagant costumes in the blockbuster bomb Cleopatra. √
8. A brief turn as both EMT and nursemaid, when she discovered gay heartthrob Montgomery Clift’s broken body after he wrecked his car, leaving a dinner party at her house. √
9. Unswerving gay activism in her attention to HIV/AIDS. √
10. And, most recently, a legacy of YouTube clips, replete with slurred speech, inelegant gestures of elegance, and displays of dignity in the face of devastation and ruin. √

Cleavage and diamonds are forever.
Elizabeth Taylor, in her latest roll.

It’s as plain as the nostrils on your face, Elizabeth Taylor, that you have stolen the hearts of gays everywhere with your lifelong commitment to opulence, strife, and perseverance. And, because your white diamonds always bring people luck, Liz, be a lady tonight and accept our offer to serve as Head Roulette Mistress at the Breeder’s Digest Resort, Casino & Outpatient Celebrity Rehabilitation Center.

We’re going all in!

Emma

The Civilian Awards

February 22, 2009

Step away from whatever it is you’re doing, Dear Breeder. Stop planning out family menus two weeks in advance. Put down the power mower. We’ve got something we want to talk to you about…

We know how overwhelmed and guilty you must feel about the ongoing repression of homosexuals practically everywhere, and yet you can’t seem to get your collective act together long enough to actually do anything about it. How frustrating. Fortunately, we’ve given the matter a lot of thought, and have arrived at a reasonable compromise:

Throw us an award show!

Medieval bike messenger meets envious blond business woman.Hugh Hefner casual meets Princess Leia widow's peak meets Elvira's Goodwill pile.
Behind every provocative award show garment stands a shiny, hollow man.

In lieu of recognizing our basic civil rights, can we at least acknowledge that homosexuals are basically some of the most civil people, right here in your city or unincorporated township? And can we do so with an annual event populated with stars and spectacle and covered by all the major news and media outlets? Can it have a multi-million dollar budget? Can we invite women in tuxes?

The Civilian Awards (or Civvies, as they’ll come to be known) will be wholly unprecedented in the world of award shows, as their aim will be to highlight and celebrate, not the big-budget Hollywood blockbusters or the Bonnie Raitt spoken word comedy albums of the year, but all the simple ways we gays brighten up the cities in which we live, just by our sheer presence. Remember that barista with the thumb ring whose smiling face and friendly disposition made your morning vaguely pleasant for a few, fleeting moments? That, Dear Breeder, was a homosexual. And he deserves an award for it.

"I want you to notice my smile, without noticing my teeth.”
“My highlights are the highlight of your day.”

The Civvies will recognize and honor the outstanding contributions the LGBTQQI community has made toward improving life in general, and your life in particular. The show will feature categories like “Best Catty Comment Overheard in a Supermarket,” and “Best Unsolicited Piece of Fashion Advice.” We’ll have prizes and ribbons of achievement for such civic virtues as “Takes the Fewest Sick Days,” “Most Consistent Mood,” and “Always Considerate When Using the Copier.” And the final award of the evening? The most glamorous and coveted Civvy of them all? This award will go to that one special homosexual who, throughout the year, has made unparalleled contributions in the areas of advanced friendliness and ultimate reliability across all social strata. And this award shall be called the “Just Hangin’ in There Award.” Because, let’s face it: even when a homosexual simply phones it in, his or her worst day is invariably better than your best.

The Civvies will be known for going on and on like this, for hours and hours on end, with winners and co-winners, honorable mentions, a vocabulary contest, and an impromptu crêpe suzette bake-off. The Civvies will also be known because once a year, all straight people everywhere will be forced to sit through them from start to finish, no talking.

We gays will do everything, of course. All the decor and design and writing little jokes for people to read off teleprompters. And the lesbians can all pitch in and build something. You won’t have to lift a finger, Dear Breeder. All you’ll have to do is show up. But leave the kids in the car this time, okay? In fact, why don’t you guys just stay home and watch it on tv, as a family? That could be fun for you, right?

Why are straight people so boring?
“Quiet, kids! They’re about to give out the award for Best Memory!”

That’s it, Dear Breeder. That’s all we want. Honestly. We know we’ve come up with these crazy schemes before, but we promise it’s completely different this time. Just throw us a glamorous award show, once a year without fail, and we promise we won’t ever bother you with anything else again. Goodness knows, we’ve given up trying to convince you that a forty- or fifty-yearlong homosexual partnership may be just as worthy and valid as a quickie Vegas marriage. It’s not like we’re asking for the right to adopt children who will otherwise grow up parentless and neglected. And we certainly aren’t bringing up the holding hands in public thing again, either, Dear Breeder. You were completely right, it just feels silly.

John

Homosexual Shorthand: G-Words

February 20, 2009

This week’s edition of Homosexual Shorthand continues your ongoing introduction to the in’s and out’s of our richly-coded homosexual lexicon. With your expensive and time-consuming weekend leisure activities in mind, Dear Breeder, this edifying edition of our homosexual glossary is set in one of your favorite straight locales: the golf course! It’s our hope that, by cruising these manicured greens with us, you’ll become a real pro when it comes to impressing friends with your mild tolerance of gays and impressive command of a foreign language. Join us as we walk you through nine holes of gay golfspeak…

manplayinggolf
“They’ll never find my wife’s body in this golf bag.”

Expensive and Time-consuming Golf Vocabulary

Gay Bash: What happens when a homophobe goes all John Daly on a gay, either verbally or physically. Usually both.
“Wow, Pam! You really gay bashed that tee shot!”

Granola: A little bit country and a little bit California roll, this stocky, stock lesbian type has a vegetarian appetite and hippie tendencies. Look for flowing organic fabrics and the humming of folk songs. With her tangled bird’s nest of salt-and-pepper hair, you’re sure to score an eagle every time!
“I really pulled that shot, Linda. Let’s take this cart to the pond, I think I dropped my granola in the drink!”

Gender Police: LesbiGay slang assigned to people who are judgmental, fussy, or uncomfortable when it comes to queer, non-conformist genders or gender roles.
“Did you see the gender police on duty at the LGPA tour this year? Man, they sure gave those gals a rough time!”

0568921800
“If I hear one more joke about the penal code…”

Gasp!: The gasp is a notably silent-ish gay expression, most useful in moments of astonishment, alarm, and grief: when someone gets slapped across the face, when something unkind has been said about Liza Minnelli, when we realize that your Chanel is a dimestore knock-off. Gays gasp incessantly, mostly because it’s difficult to breathe when you’re this fabulous.
Gasp! Damnit Tad, why didn’t you tell me there was a sand trap the size of Kauai behind the putting green?”

Gold Star: This designation shines down upon the manger of those homosexuals who have never, ever, ever messed around with a person of the opposite sex. Hey listen, we’ll buy your scrap gold and precious metal family heirlooms and make you a star!
“I thought Pinecrest was an official Gold Star course, but Pat told me Jack Nicklaus won’t even set foot on those links!”

Gaydar: Yet another innate gay ability, this highly-attuned “gay radar” uses sonic wavelengths and dolphin-age technology to inform us whether you’re friend or ‘mo.
Gaydar, Inc. makes the finest in Golf GPS technology. Let’s buy something today!”

hp-ipaq-rx5965
Wii golf while you golf!

Golden Retriever: For lesbians, this is a trusted friend and confidant who always gets your newspapers, slippers, and jokes. For gay men, this is slang for a urinal. Either way, you’ll wake up with something slobbering at the foot of your bed.
“I always use my Titleist Golden Retriever for green shots at about 60 yards out from the cup.”

Gym Queen: A gay man who works out obsessively, pretends to work out obsessively, or doesn’t work out at all and lies about it on Craigslist.
“That gym queen has his grip all wrong. See how floppy his club is?”

Going to Denmark (or, Gender Reassignment Surgery): Gay slang (and clinical jargon) for a sex change operation, popularized by America’s former top tranny “bombshell” Christine Jorgensen (née George Jorgensen). The Nordic lands (Copenhagen, in particular) were the first frontier for early gender reassignment surgeries.
“My wife and I are going to Denmark for chic golf slumming. I hear they’ve added a few new holes…”

christine_jorgensen_630px
Watch the subtle transformation from military man to lady golfer!

As you start working on your swing, Dear Breeder, try practicing this, the latest installment of Homosexual Shorthand. While you’re more likely to encounter gay men giving the back nine a few strokes, you’re sure to find the course swarming with lesbians from the first hole to the last, if you’ll only open your eyes. So tuck your new words into your G-spot and (gasp!) go to Denmark with this gold star vocabulary that will really put the gay bash in your game of couples’ swinging, ritualized course etiquette, and public ball-washing. Fore!

Emma

What Do You Think?

February 12, 2009

You’ve done it to us before, Dear Breeder, and I’ve no doubt you’ll do it again. You just can’t help yourself, can you? As soon as I let my guard down, those four most dreaded words come tumbling out of your mouth:

“What do you think?”

Without fail, these words point instantly to some imperceptible difference between me and everyone else in the room. By asking my opinion on some trivial matter, you’ve unwittingly conferred the burdensome status of “expert” upon me, based on nothing more than my homosexuality. I hate to let you down, Dear Breeder, but unlike the homosexuals you may have seen on television, I am an expert at almost nothing, and my opinions are usually crap. It probably hasn’t occurred to you before, but the countless gays who come into your living room via your cable box were given television shows because they are experts in some field. Maybe they went to fashion school, or interior design school, or hair school. Me, I struggled my way through drama classes and ended up working for the same hopeless company as you, remember?

Cock me, Amadeus.
Granted, my one-man production of Twelve Angry Men did receive some favorable reviews.

When you ask my opinion, Dear Breeder, I’m frequently not even sure to what you’re referring, and therefore have no idea what response is actually expected of me. Am I supposed to acknowledge that you got a new, risky haircut sometime over the weekend? Am I supposed to offer an opinion on your scarf, your slacks, your children? Am I supposed to congratulate you on your noticeable pregnancy? Well, I’ve already thought you were noticeably pregnant on no fewer than three previous occasions, and have wisely managed to keep my mouth shut. I’m not about to start guessing now.

What makes you value my opinion more than other people’s, anyway? Gay men consider both Bea Arthur and Stevie Nicks to be equally well-dressed, and I myself have been known to wear a polka-dot, peep-toe, cork heel shoe in combination with a three-piece suit and beret. And lesbians always look like they’re about to go on a three hour nature hike, what with all the polar-tech fleece and Nalgene bottles. It would be more sensible if you asked for fashion advice from someone in a persistent vegetative state or, worse, your spouse.

We gays would really rather not be put on wife support...
“I think you should definitely wear the blue one.”

Nevertheless, I can be a good sport, Dear Breeder. Two can play at this game. In the interest of satisfying this compulsive need of yours to have any and all personal style choices validated by the approval of a gay man, let me answer your nagging question, to the best of my ability.

For once and for all, here’s what I think:

Severe bangs don’t look good on anyone in general, and they make your face in particular look like you’ve just been dredged from a river, having suspiciously drowned three weeks ago. The controversial color of your scarf doesn’t bother me quite as much as all the dandruff it seems to have collected over the course of the day. I don’t understand why you would ever walk out of the house in pleated pants, unless you want to intentionally create the illusion that you are a man with the hips of a female Arby’s employee. Your children are ill-behaved, unbridled monsters, and everyone who comes in contact with them quickly devises no fewer than three creative ways to put your entire family out of its apparent misery. And yes, Dear Breeder. Yes, yes, yes! Those slacks make your ass look absolutely, ridiculously, and catastrophically huge. And for the record, I can completely see your beaver dam.

I didn't expect to be on beaver patrol today.
Only you can pull off that look, Dear Beaver.

Now what do you think?

John

The Lesbian Olympians

February 8, 2009

As a trusted gay expert, I sometimes like to claim that lesbianism was invented alongside the game of tennis, that these two consuming pastimes developed organically from the same voluminous flower. How else can one explain the perfect hybridization of sport and sexuality in the valiant figures of Martina Navratilova and Billie Jean King? As lesbians, we need an origin myth to explain the obvious, yet enigmatic, correlation between lesbianism and tennis. And guess what, Dear Breeder—so do you. Lesbian Tennisism is hard work on and off the court, but be assured you have a lot to learn about tight grips, short skirts, and carefully placed backhands, if you’ll only look to the fine example set by…the Lesbian Olympians!

Let me guess, a lesbian did your hair?
Navratilova on display at the BODIES exhibit.

When I play tennis, I don’t even call it tennis anymore. I call it “exploring my heritage” because this game of precision, etiquette, and quiet intensity rewards lesbians for their natural tendencies toward precision, etiquette, and quiet intensity. Although the game itself is centuries old, tennis came to its aesthetic culmination within courtly French society, where the self-conscious mental control of the body was highly celebrated. And, if you’ve been following along with this blog, Dear Breeder, the phrase “self-conscious mental control of the body” should remind you instantly of one thing and one thing only: Lesbianism. Ever since the French made tennis—along with everything else—gay, lesbians have gravitated toward the sport like moons to a gaseous planet. And each time these celestial bodies align, a new Lesbian Olympian is born.

Lesbian dating practices are based on the concept of “mixed doubles.”
Fifteenth-century handballing was known simply as “jeu de paume.”

Every casual historian-folklorist-Native-American-theologian-storyteller knows that the game of tennis was originally played by ancient lesbian Gods and Goddesses in their luscious, mythological wonderland high atop Mt. Saint Vagina on the Isle of Lesbos. While most of their tournaments were harmless backyard frivolity, on occasion, a deep-seated rivalry between highly-seeded players would erupt into a terrible display of sound and fury. When Aphrodyke scored the final match point at the Harvest MoonCup, her opponent “Athena: Warrior Princess” furiously cast infection across the precious yeast crops, much to the dismay of sexually-active lesbians everywhere. Each time Dymytyr’s tennis elbow acted up during a match, so did the great North winds, destroying carefully-constructed houses and mullets across the land. As is the way with the fickle moods of the gods, mortals would occasionally benefit from a colossal victory, as when ArteMs. secured her first title and so granted each earthly household a golden retriever and three gallons of organic wheatgrass. With these divine Lesbian Olympians alternately bestowing great turmoil and great abundance, lesbians of the ancient world resorted to annual sacrifices meant to placate the mighty goddesses during tennis season. Although this chapter in classical herstory has for the most part been lost, each year at Wimbledon we see the remnants of these ancient practices. Just as Aphrodyke, Dymytyr, and ArteMs. celebrated victory by feasting from that cherished silver trophy plate, today’s Lesbian Olympians do the same. And let’s face it. The only time lesbians will ever be handed anything on a silver platter, Dear Breeder, is if they win big at Wimbledon.

Lesbian world champions Martina Navratilova and BJ King are merely the descendents of these deities who date back to our sexual and leisurely origins as a people. However, like all innovations made by marginalized subcultures, now and again, even straight tennis pros harness (by which I mean, strap on) the power of the ancient Lesbian Olympians. Serena Williams’s 2008 white trench tennis coat? Girl, please. Yes, you changed my life with this ostentatious display of high-concept, gumshoe fashion, but the Lesbian Dolphin Sea Nymphs—and Dionne Warwick—were all wearing tennis trenches way before Pangaea disbanded.

After she wore this, I didn’t have to eat for three days. Like the other Witches of Warwick, she appeared through a cloud of smoke.
This trench coat mini-skirt makes tennis and disco a cinch!

Over the centuries, the Lesbian Olympians have fallen far from their lofty laurels atop Mt. Saint Vagina. Today, lesbian athletes (and their achievements) are frequently glossed over in favor of more marketable players. Even off the court, sporty lesbians get a bad rap, and I’d like to correct those who would chuckle at women wearing athletic sandals, perky ponytails, and gender neutral sweatgear. Khaki windbreakers and assertive gay hairstyles are no laughing matter. They are the designations of a higher order, a noble lineage, a time-tested approach to the outdoors. Indeed, the sporty lesbian was born to eschew the passing trends of fashion in the interest of something far superior: Glory.

Have you ever wondered, Dear Breeder, about those lesbians who stand out so obviously at the gym, those girls you see at the supermarket in matching WNBA caps, and the young ones who so consistently and single-handedly lead your daughter’s sports teams to victory? The confusing symbology of casual sportswear and aerodynamic hairstyles may have been difficult for you to parse. But now you know that these female athletes are actually the new Lesbian Olympians—women who have sipped from the trembling cup of godly elixir and been granted their rightful inheritance: dominance, perseverance, and the steady command of a bland fashion palette.

Emma

The Silent Alarm

February 3, 2009

It always begins with eye contact. A certain light, a glimmer of recognition. We try to comfort with subtle glances, but alas, always too late. A deafening silence blankets the room. A warning call goes out to all. Another breeder has sounded the silent alarm.

Straight people have been sounding the silent alarm for millennia, since the first homosexual caveman sidled up to a straight couple, said, “Hey, how’s it going?,” and instantly made them feel kinda creepy.

"Is there cumin in this? I think I taste cumin."
Early homo erectus was known for his discerning palate.

In the public sphere, the stakes are less raised, everyone is relaxed and going about their business, and the alarm is therefore less urgent. In the men’s section of a local department store, for example, I may come face to face with your husband over a rack of young men’s casuals. We aren’t fooling each other, but we are fooling half the store. Or, better still, we may sidle up to one another at a display of pants. Just as I make my move to scootch past him, our eyes meet, and the alarm is sounded. In a flash of neural activity, your husband has recognized that he is dealing with a gay, at close range. The silent warning cry alerts all straight men in the vicinity that there is, indeed, a homosexual on the premises, and that they should all report immediately back to their wives.

Can I please speak for all gays who have ever lived, and who are living now, and who will someday live, from hereon out in perpetuity throughout the universe, when I say that nothing can happen to you in the men’s section of a local department store? I’m not going to turn you gay and I’m simply not willing to expose myself to you, physically or emotionally, under these harsh lights. I swear I only wanted to see how tall you are, and what you’re wearing. I’d no more want to sleep with you than with the store manager up front. And did you see what he was wearing?

"And men's pants are half off."
“Ladies’ slacks are over there, sir.”

As you and I both know, Dear Breeder, in the fragile intimacy of a men’s locker room, everyone’s hackles are raised, just as their pants are lowered. No one wants to be perceived as being gay in a men’s locker room. Why, the implication of homosexuality would suggest that a person is somehow less than a man, and that he will totally be checking out your package. Oh, what a stir it can cause, when a real-live gay turns up in a men’s locker room!

Just as I unleash myself from my sweaty workout clothes and undergarments, and clasp the white towelette to my body, he rounds the corner. A straight person, of the male persuasion. Our eyes meet. He sees me for exactly what I am: a naked and shivering gay man standing on a crummy tile floor, throwing myself upon his mercy. But he knows as well as I do, that once the ball is set into motion, it cannot be stopped. The silent alarm has been sounded!

The hissing of the showerheads comes screeching to a halt, as all men in the locker room simultaneously reach for the nearest towel, pair of workout shorts, or trashcan liner, and immediately cover all visible parts of their anatomies, from stern to prow. The alarm quickly reaches the dry sauna, where all hard-working, American men innocently reading the sports section, are alerted to evacuate at once. Within three minutes flat, the gay has the locker room all to himself, without a care in the world.

But again, Dear Breeder, why the rush? What are you afraid could possibly happen? When I left the house this morning, I really hadn’t planned on overpowering anyone. I clearly don’t have any type of recording equipment on my person. Oh wait, are you afraid I’m going to look at your package? I have a dream, Dear Breeder, that one day we will come together as a people, gay and straight united, to hold hands and openly acknowledge that basically everyone is looking at everyone’s packages all the time. Because it’s endlessly fascinating to compare and contrast nature’s little snowflakes. And I swear, that’s all that will come of it, Dear Breeder. A casual glance. Besides, if you’re so self-conscious about someone seeing your package, you should relax. You’ve got a really nice package. (I casually glanced at it earlier.)

He approached each day with zest.
“Hey, would ya mind backin’ off, there, buddy?”

Contrary to what you may imagine, Dear Breeder, very few things can set off the silent alarm when a gay is visiting in the home of a straight. The kind of straight people who invite gays into their homes are typically close friends, family, or easygoing coworkers, who more or less know what to expect from the gay, and how it should be swiftly handled. These affairs tend to be more relaxed, more open, more socially intimate, and therefore more pleasant for gays and straights alike. But don’t allow yourself to get too comfortable, Dear Breeder. The threat of the silent alarm lurks ever-present.

What happens, over time, is that gays with one foot in the straight world are eventually exposed to pregnancy, childbirth, and babies. Aww, listen to the baby, over there. Hey, isn’t the baby cute, over there? Crap, someone’s picking up the baby, over there. And then it happens. The baby is handed to the gay. What may have started out as a lighthearted gesture, an innocent stab at inclusion, a festive parlour game, has turned into something much more ominous. The silent alarm has been sounded!

Of course, Dear Breeder, you already know that the gay-holding-a-baby silent alarm is the loudest and most urgent of them all. This alarm simultaneously communicates danger to all straight men and women within a three block radius, and results in a palpable silence and the exchange of concerned glances among all straight people gathered.

What’s unclear to me, Dear Breeder, is exactly what your knowing looks are communicating. I didn’t even ask to hold the baby. Are you worried I might drop the baby? Well, here’s your answer: Probably. But babies, like gay people, are resilient. Are you worried that some of my gayness might rub off on the baby? In answer to that, Dear Breeder, I wholeheartedly attest to you, right here and right now, that we homosexuals only rub it off on each other. Or could the concern in the room be more elephantine in nature? Come clean with me on this, Dear Breeder: Do you honestly think I am about to attempt to make love to your baby? Really, Dear Breeder? Really? Then why am I still holding this baby?

Let’s think this through. Your baby is gross. Even you don’t want to be around your baby after a certain point, and you went to all the time and trouble to make it. Plus, there is an enormous chance that your baby is going to urinate, defecate, and vomit on me, and I am not interested in having that happen tonight. (There is, however, an entire subset of the gay community you’ll have to take that up with separately. Sorry, guys!) Please rest assured as you drive home, Dear Breeder, that there is absolutely nothing about your baby that I would ever care to know more intimately, beyond what already drooled on me tonight. And please, please rest assured that I meant what I said about the dry cleaning.

"Thank god I have some club soda in the glove compartment."
“Randall’s gonna kill me when he sees what happened to his new chinos.”

As you consider the various contexts in which the silent alarm might be sounded, Dear Breeder, remember that we gays, too, have our own intricate catalog of bells and whistles, which communicate efficiently to our own kind whenever an intruder is near. We have entire systems of taps and double taps worked out, and we can clear our throats in hundreds of distinct ways, depending on the message to be conveyed. Ever hear a man order a Philly cheese steak with a side of fries? You don’t even want to know that means.

At the end of the day, Dear Breeder, many of your silent alarms are false ones. You should feel no reason to shield yourself or your offspring when in the proximity of a homosexual. We gays offer nothing but good times, and actually pose very little threat to your emotional or sexual ideals. I can wholeheartedly assure you, Dear Breeder, I will never step out of line or make unwanted advances toward you. This is surprisingly easy for me to do, as I’m in constant fear you’ll kill me for being different.

John


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