Broadway Legend Joined: 8/2/03
I'm not hitting anything. I'm just not labeling anyone as gay or straight since there's nothing in this article to suggest it.
ah, re-reading the article I see that's possible......so I stand corrected
That's not what I meant.
At all.
Broadway Legend Joined: 9/3/04
"We get homophobic attacks in Southwark - normally we get something in the region of ten a month."
--Ian Thomas, Southwark's borough police commander
IT WAS NOT A HOMOPHOBIC ATTACK WOULD YOU JUST ACCEPT THAT FACT?
munk I like it because of how it feels, and I look good in it. I don't live in it, like some do......and frankly it's been a LONG time, since it's shrunk.......ok, maybe I'm slightly bigger.
It was the gay-subculture that I most identified with. It's the group I found communion with.
jailyard, Prada doesn't count ;oP
Broadway Legend Joined: 9/3/04
I agree it is definately possible that it wasn't a homophobic attack. But, we just don't know that for certain. Which is the problem to me.
Sorry to have made you so upset.
From the BBC News site:
When news of the killing hit the newspapers there was speculation the motive had been homophobia.
Mr Morley, who was gay, worked as a barman at the Admiral Duncan pub in Soho and had survived David Copeland's murderous nail bomb attack in 1999.
But the attacks were not homophobic and Mr Morley, like the other victims, had simply been chosen at random.
Although the attack on Mr Morley was the most ferocious of the night the gang - who came from nearby Lambeth - did not stop.
Instead they conducted three more attacks, one of which was filmed on a mobile phone camera.
Broadway Legend Joined: 8/2/03
I have no doubt that if prosecution felt it was an element of the crime the media would have seized on it like the rabid dogs that they are.
what about a roving band of toughs that beats up morons?
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