Sure. I'm not going to be influenced by it or ask them to go into their orientation any more than I'm likely to inquire about another man's politics or religious affiliation. Maybe it's a cultural thing. :idunno:Really?
I'd bet he'd find himself in the same hot water for sexual harassment that a straight man would for the same conduct around a woman in the unit...and the report would be more likely to be filed and seconded.And what if this openly gay person flamboyantly talked about his exploits on a daily basis as a way to gain attention and you were forbidden to ask him to stop?
I've worked around and know a few. The guy who cuts my hair is gay. As nice a fellow as you could imagine. I've noticed that [proclivity you mention] in some of them, not in others. But then, I know any number of heterosexual guys who, without invitation, go into the same sort of conquest recital, etc. I find a cold reception tends to cure people of that crude practice.I've worked with gays and they tend to be attention starved and enjoy trying to "shock" others by reminding everyone constantly about their bedroom activities and attractions.
Not if the showers are used as showers. It's not as though gays would somehow become anything other than a very real minority presence in the military. Now understanding the sort of young man who enters into military service, how likely do you think it is that the gay fellow is going to misbehave? Put a woman in that shower room and I suspect you're going to get a far different outcome, both because of the nature of (young, heterosexual) men and the fact that, like the gay man, she'd be the sexual minority present.Furthermore... men and women's barracks, bathrooms, showers, etc. are separated in the military for obvious reasons but with openly gay soldiers they wouldn't be separated from the other men. Doesn't that strike you as a bit odd? Or at very least awkward?
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