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Old 04-18-2011, 11:59 PM   #5
cheapphenonline

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
364
Senior Member
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Personally I don't appreciate any hidden sexuality secret with politicians. It is a matter of truth and trust. The highly maintained moral image and profiles are most usually false, and with wisdom one should not believe any politician fronting images that are perfectly dressed up. If you know more dirty truth of a politician, the better you can assess them, and even if the the truth looks ugly it does not indeed mean that you can not trust them, but the rather you can have better confident level to measure them up. You know where these politician can and can not be, and you will know when they are telling truth or lie. This is way better than those who are obviously falsifying a front, that compel you to disbelieve even if they were telling truth.
Uncle,

1. Regarding nudity, I don't have any problems with that at all but only when it relates to adult chio bus who voluntarily pose nude. The men can keep their clothes on and for children, the adults should ensure that their clothes are kept on as well and let the children decide themselves whether they want to pose nude when they become adults. On this point, I don't agree with you and Shih at all.

2. As for chairperson Tsai's sexuality, personally I don't give a hoot whether she's straight, gay or bi. But don't agree that this should be something she should reveal just because she is a presidential candidate. Of course, Shih has the right to ask, just as Tsai has the right to decline to answer.

My argument would be that there are so many things that Tsai can be made to answer and make a clear stand, why choose this topic? Is it because Shih supports Shi Jing Liang and they know that many Taiwanese people still cannot accept homosexuality? Don't know if that's the case, but once you start asking about candidates' sexuality, does it mean that you can start asking how many lovers they have had, ask the married ones if they are bi, ask the single ones if they are gay, ask how many times the married candidate has sex with his or her spouse, etc etc? What relevance do all these have to being president?

Would it not be better if they ask Tsai how she would implement their trade agreement with China or if she intends to abolish it if she becomes president? That's relevant to Taiwan's future, not whether Tsai is straight or gay.
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