Ran into
this video over at Bill Lindsey’s Bilgrimage and his eternal campaign for human rights and human
dignity – all human dignity.
Very
interesting video of Stephen Fry. I have to admit that the same video word for
word from an American openly gay actor produced by PBS would not have the same
impact on myself. Something about the mother tongue and the mother culture that
on some level has true stage presence in the documentary side of English
speaking common cultures.
As for the
little men in the former "British Raj" for lack of a better term in
Africa, I agree that these little men want control more so that spirituality or
human justice. That these little men first want to be praised for being
honorary white men before they can begin to try and build a native culture
unique to their particular situation and geography. Dangerous little men. I
hope there are forces in each one of these countries that gravitate to native
culture and not imported "bully beef" tastes and such.
I recently
saw something and I had to wonder if it was a joke or real. The thing stated
something like the number one Google term search hit was the term "kissing
men" in the state of Utah. Sounds about right with repressed feelings in a
repressed religious state of mind which is Utah to most of the population. But
the term suggests curiosity and or a searching out or accommodation with the
emerging reality of a modern world.
That it is
interesting to me that twenty five years ago, there were few words to
accommodate the gay life style and or half hidden culture. That it will be
twenty years in March of the passing of Misha, my brother's partner. That they
in our presence did not kiss or hold hands. That they did not have an easily
acceptable word like "spouse" to openly use. Living together in redneck Arizona
and calling themselves for the sake of convention then as
"roommates". And Misha when he died was a light, a great spark of the
joy of living rarely seen in life by others, gone forever.
Stephen
Fry's work is a great masterpiece of humanity and seen a hundred years from now
a valuable cultural artifact of the future global culture with which to compare
notes to.
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