
PepperoniAndFingernailPizza
104370
262
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Here is part 1 if you haven't seen it.
https://imgur.com/gallery/so-much-lgbtq-history-DhawH8w
Heather Renner on Social media is the original poster.
Aug 14, 2025 2:13 PM
PepperoniAndFingernailPizza
104370
262
35
Here is part 1 if you haven't seen it.
https://imgur.com/gallery/so-much-lgbtq-history-DhawH8w
Heather Renner on Social media is the original poster.
MaleekTheFreak
Thank you for your this!
obviouslyrob
indomara
Thanks for posting these!
bippityboppitybuttsex
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7qnNr68KCaA
NotThatPrivate
Kim Davis (That bigot who wouldn't sign same sex marriage licenses) is now attempting to overturn obergefell v hodges in the Supreme Court. Doesn't look good
thecomfycat
Kim Davis. Married four times, divorced three times. Had children with husband #3 while married to #1. Ironically worried about the sanctity of marriage
Theshnazzyone
Always has been, don't act like gay and trans magically appeared recently.
blzrdphoto
And they were roommates…
gnomedeplume
https://media3.giphy.com/media/v1.Y2lkPWE1NzM3M2U1eWdyYzMxY3U5a3JmeHUyOGJ5ZjhiNm8ybmdlcjZvdGV1eG56NzJuayZlcD12MV9naWZzX3NlYXJjaCZjdD1n/Thdu56cIZr0IVzs3P9/200w.webp
maybeamonster
DADT was the military telling the pissants that would go out of their way trying to hunt and out gay folks to calm the fuck down and mind their business. DADT wasn't good. The service members still had to be discrete and avoid making their sexuality known, but it was better than what preceded it, which was open persecution. It was a positive step, and not something that suddenly forced gay service members into the closet. They were already there or had been discharged, unfortunately.
bourbonandbaddecisions
I joined right after DADT and Served for 22 years. Served with a lot of folks across the spectrum I never cared about their sexual orientation. Only thing I ever cared about was were they qualified to do the job and did they meet standards. Nothing else matters.
maybeamonster
I served during DADT and thought it was stupid that the gay service members I knew when I was in couldn't be openly so. I was very happy when service members were allowed to start serving openly starting in 2011. DADT wasn't good, but it was a step in the right direction. I just felt like the video mischaracterized it as though it caused the persecution of gay service members, when it was aimed and successful at relieving some of that persecution.
azazyel
IDK if this is true but I was told you could spot a gay person by them doing their job well. Not too good or not too badly, basically doing their job in such a way that they wouldn't draw attention to themselves.