Loose Lips Jeremy Irons Backtracks on The Lucidly Homophobic Statement He Made


Jeremy Irons
 
Jeremy Irons … buttoning his lip. Photograph: Ernesto Ruscio/Getty Images
I thought today as I was editing this post and as I typed the titled I thought how weird it is to accuse a gay man of making a homophobic statement. Then in a flash to my forgetful memory it came. That’s what the word implies and it is because it’s been gays afraid of themselves that had cause them to cause harm to other gays. "Fear of Homosexuals” Key word is highlighted.
The gay-civil rights struggle is as much a civil rights fight than any other. Just like in any other but in a more acute way the people that inflict the most damage are people belonging to the group that is lacking civil rights. In the black movement one of the names given was “ an uncle Tom.”  In our lacking of civil rights is more acute because we get it from people afraid to be gay and those who don’t understand gays and don’t want to. They like the status quo the way it is because it always feel better for human beings to be at a higher plateau than others’. Superiority. We can make kids we can make a woman want us, we are better….that’s the general thought anyways. 
Jeremy Irons most feel that either him or someone he knows in his nightmares would somehow marry their son to then have sex???? Makes no sense anyway you turn it. He most change the person that supplies him with a stash. The are for sure giving him bad something. Currently I’ve heard of Older wealthier men( like Jeremy, age wise)straight men that would go to a poor country or neighborhood and adopt a youngster so he can buy him with money and sometimes with the fear of deportation for sex and companion. May be that’s were he got confused. 
Below I read a posting from Ben Child at  guardiannews.com and Im including it here for background purposes.
Adam Gonzalez, adamfoxie*blog
The Oscar-winning actor told BBC interviewer Stephen Sackur he wished he had "buttoned my lip" before discussing the issue in aninterview with the Huffington Post.
"I think gay marriage is wonderful. I think any reason that holds anybody together in a relationship is great," he said. "If it works as glue, if it makes you feel better, if it makes you feel you love your partner more, then great."
In the earlier interview, Irons mused over the benefits of a change in the law, which he said might lead to fathers marrying sons in order to pass on property without incurring tax penalties. "I worry that it means we change or debase what marriage is," he said. "Tax-wise it's an interesting one. Could a father not marry his son? It's not incest between men. Incest is there to protect us from inbreeding. But men don't breed, so incest wouldn't cover that."
Irons also said during the interview that he had no strong views either way on gay marriage, but his comments nevertheless caused controversy.

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