Um, no, we had to coach them on how to make an unreasonable argument sound convincing and argue like they cared. My colleagues-- the ones on this board-- are not phobic in this regard and had a hard time arguing the point of view of a 'phobe.Gil Hamilton wrote:That's great that you had to coach people how to copy paste information that's already out there (arguments that many of your military colleagues do make) and wouldn't be unreasonable to be coming out of their mouths anyway.
And why is it sensitive? Why is it off-limits?However, you didn't answer the question. If it isn't funny or ironic, what is the point? Just to prod a sensitive issue for the sake of it...
Prank, not joke. Jokes are supposed to be funny. Pranks not necessarily so. It is called "April Fool's Day", not "April Funny Day". Mislead and confound someone. Invoking the giggle reflex in them is not guaranteed."Jokes don't have to be funny!" is the line of someone who just told a joke badly, not a truth, you know.
Which sacred cow are you roasting there? "Ha ha, you got angry about something that you rightfully should have gotten angry about, we got you"?
It is interesting that many were so quick to pile on without asking WTF was going on. Why the sudden change in behavior, why no official censure was given beforehand... As for sacred cows, perhaps the idea that gays need to be treated with kid gloves? Gays and Bis I know can be pretty rough-and-tumble types; they don't need special protection in a field such as this. This whole thing was an excersise in satire; parody of the attitudes of phobes and parody of the resultant windmill tilting charge that resulted-- even if it was for all the right reasons against all the wrong ones.
Maybe what's funny is how seriously you're being about this. Step back. Laugh at yourself. It's okay. And it doesn't mean that you've invalidated your beliefs.
As surely as I shan't hide behind Mike's permission (although not only is the board but the rules themselves his property, free to do with as he pleases) so I also won't refute that the guys made their positions and actions based on a plan that I pretty much started and directed. If they "broke the rules" it was at my behest.Ah, no. The people who actually broke the rules should be punished if any rules are to be enforced in the matter. After all, they were the ones that actually did it, not you.
Swapping one petty action for another... Mmmm, the sweet swill of revenge.However, I think that right there would be appropriate enough a punishment for it being your idea, to watch other people go down for it.