No, there is nothing sexually offensive about a Diwali celebration versus drag performances and celebrations of gender reassignment.kurt vonnegut said:10andBOUNCE said:
My example at the ski resort - I am in no way more entitled to shredding that powder more than you. That's not even the point. I'm happy to share a chair lift with you or whatever. The point and question at hand is why it needs to be broadcast out which impacts basically everyone there at that point. I'm not saying that it needs to be some kind of secret, but why the advertisements and dedicated weekend? Go ski with your gay buddies anytime for all I care.
Would you have been equally upset to arrive at a ski resort and find that a certain number of people had gathered to have a Diwali celebration? Would you be cursing Hindus and telling them to just keep it to themselves?
And for the real test, what if it was a Christian gathering? You know . . . Gays aren't the only ones that get together in public to celebrate an idea? What am I supposed to tell my kids when they see Christians loud and proud and worshipping God? They are only children for crying out loud!!! How can I, as a responsible parent, expose children to the idea that not everyone thinks exactly like 'us'?
Read that last paragraph as tongue in cheek, but the point it makes is very real.
So - is it okay for all groups of people, like Christians, to gather and celebrate something? Or should all groups of people be pressured against public self expression? Or are there different rules for different people?
As far as Christian gatherings in public - I am not really sure I know of any specific examples to be honest. I know there might be some outreach with folks trying to share Christ or something, but that's more of a one on one conversation. There usually aren't Christians blocking freeways demanding that everyone repent. I also may not be the most supportive of some of the mainstream "christian" worship type things also. But thats for another day.