The New York times recently published an article about how to tell if you are gay, bisexual, transgender, etc. It included the usual hash of self-contradictory talking points, beginning with the assertion that LGBTQ feelings are completely normal, and then proceeding directly to an all-out attack on the idea that there can be any such thing as “normal” in the realm of sex or gender at all. But buried beneath all the recycled propaganda and open denials of the most basic facts of life (it’s hard to get more basic than the fact that there are differences between men and women), there was one absolute gem of truth:
The Pursuit of Happiness
The Pursuit of Happiness
The Pursuit of Happiness
The New York times recently published an article about how to tell if you are gay, bisexual, transgender, etc. It included the usual hash of self-contradictory talking points, beginning with the assertion that LGBTQ feelings are completely normal, and then proceeding directly to an all-out attack on the idea that there can be any such thing as “normal” in the realm of sex or gender at all. But buried beneath all the recycled propaganda and open denials of the most basic facts of life (it’s hard to get more basic than the fact that there are differences between men and women), there was one absolute gem of truth: