I have huge fans. Gays love me.

Gays are the molecular opposites of blacks.

I'm fine with gays. I have nothing against gays.

Coming out to gays is a way of affirming sanity and self-worth.

At RightNow, we employed gays, and we ran a complete meritocracy.

Gays are some of the nicest, kindest, most loving people in the world.

I do have a lot of gays in my family now, but some will never come out.

I'm a comedian, and my comedy has never endorsed violence towards gays.

God did not create gays and lesbians so He could have something to hate!

Yet through history gays have always dominated religious life and churches.

I was never an assimilationist. I always thought gays had some special mission.

I don't think it's the responsibility of gays and lesbians to reinvent the family.

The party of Lincoln should be reaching out to blacks, Hispanics gays and so forth and so on.

Many people secretly think that gays are a lot happier than they are, and want to punish them.

I am a huge fan of gays. They love me, and I love them. They think of me as sort of a gay icon.

The disgust and latent hostility I felt toward gays were subcategories of hatred, plain and simple.

Our duty was to declare God's standards to the world: no adultery, no fornication, no gays, no idolatry.

Seriously, I love my gays. They accept me, and I accept them. Imperfections and all, we accept each other.

If we are endowed by our Creator with rights, then why shouldn't those be attainable by gays and lesbians?

Lesbians and gays... they still have to fight, even inside. It's not that simple, even if they seem to be accepted.

Gays and lesbians began to gain civil rights when Americans realized that their brothers, cousins, daughters were gay.

Gays and lesbians should have the same rights as anybody else, and when they're in Jamaica, they do have the same rights.

AIDS had won gays sympathy; they no longer seemed the privileged brats that the general populace had resented in the 1970s.

Gays and lesbians are sick people. It's definitely a disease. They haven't invented a cure for it yet, but I hope they will.

There are gays and lesbians in every country, so there should be no discrimination against them just because of their destiny.

What people love about Santorum is he is who is he. He speaks his words. He loves God. He loves his country, and he loves gays.

My hope is that gays will be running the world, because then there would be no war. Just a greater emphasis on military apparel.

Well, it'd certainly be fascinating if we discovered that gays were better at being married than heterosexuals are. Talk about irony.

I now realize that I am a gay man before anything else. Other gays may think they're a Jew first, or black, or a banker, but I'm gay.

In today's U.S., it's possible for almost anyone - women, gays, African-Americans, Jews - to run for, and be elected to, high office.

It's a shame that gays who ought to be pushing boundaries have been domesticated and tamed and turned into pets by the Progressive Left.

I don't think there is any good answer to the question why shouldn't gays and lesbians who want to serve their country be allowed to do it.

Wherever there was injustice, war, discrimination against women, gays and the disadvantaged, I did my best to show up and exert moral persuasion.

Some people go to the West and claim they are gays and that their lives are at risk in the Gambia, in order for them to be granted a stay in Europe.

I think that in many ways, gays are behind women and behind blacks, as far as rights go. But I always say, if you know one of us, it's hard to hate us.

Originally I was opposed to gay assimilation and targeted gay marriage as just another effort on the part of gays to resemble their straight neighbours.

Being a teenager, a gay teenager, in such a small village is not that much fun. I am part of the gay community and most gays have a similar story to mine.

Sometime in the not too distant future, denying gays the right to marry will be viewed as historically corrupt - as corrupt as denying slaves their freedom.

It's definitely my responsibility not to stereotype any character, but especially a gay character because of the misperceptions people still have about gays.

Securing for gays and lesbians the basic right to have their relationships and families recognized as part of a community makes all of our communities stronger.

I have seen too many of my male friends - no matter whether they're on the football field or inside a church - bash gays and then revel in their machismo or piety.

First, I used some of my own experiences and observations from attending a public high school. Secondly, I joined in some Internet chat rooms for gays and lesbians.

If you had told me 28 years ago that the largest organization in the world touching the lives of gays and lesbians would be a church, I would not have believed you.

There are too many different kinds of people in this world. Not just drags or gays, everybody is different from each other. We should proudly own our individuality.

I've always felt very strongly about human rights for blacks, women, and gays. Our Constitution is about equality for all - that's got to mean something to all of us.

America is off-the-hook gay. I will not go all Ann Coulter on you and say, 'Our gays are better than their gays,' but as far as countries go, we are in-your-face gay.

The marginalization of African-Americans within their own community based on sexuality is a construct that is more complex than the idea that 'blacks just hate gays.'

The most important fact is that gays have been here since day one. To say otherwise is a gross denial and stupidity. We played an enormous part in the history of America.

The thematically related 'Boys Don't Cry' and 'Brokeback Mountain' reinforced the narrative that gays like Mr. Shepard are regularly isolated for cruel and unusual attacks.

Like me, the great majority of Americans wish both to preserve the traditional definition of marriage and to oppose bias and intolerance directed towards gays and lesbians.

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