Do these scores of acronym asshole cocksuckers and twattwinkie munchers know that recruits are coming and we have a national stage?
Nobody gives a flying burrito up their fagola ass if GLBTQ & the GLC along the Johnny Ola's (OLAA, she is smoking hot), and his crew of white queso swallowing queerizoids have a homohumpathon, but not on Gameday Week??
Get the fuck outta my alma mater and come back the road game weekend when you can have a twattaco festival.
GLC, OLAA Gather To Discuss Homosexuality In Latino Community Published in the Monday, September 28, 2009 Edition of By Andrew La Follette
As a part of the celebration of Hispanic Heritage month, the GLBTQ Leadership Council (GLC) and the Office of Latin American Affairs (OLAA) co-sponsored a panel discussion titled "From the Closet to the Classroom Intersections: Latino Masculine Gender and Sexuality." The event brought the two communities together to discuss important aspects of the Latino homosexual community and the homosexual experience at Boston College.
Four panel speakers, each with ties to the BC Latino culture, were present to answer questions and speak about their own personal experiences in dealing with homosexuality and how they have responded to the challenge of educating others about the struggles that the community faces.
The coordinators of the event were Larissa Belcic, GLC vice-president and A&S '10, and Jeans Santana, AHANA Leadership Council (ALC) and OLAA member and A&S '10. The two invited panel members not only from the Latino homosexual community, but also from outside of it to give a comprehensive view of the subject from different angles.
The four panel members stressed the importance of continuing to strive for acceptance despite the great strides made in the United States with the election of both President Obama and Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor.
Jennie Purnell, a professor in the political science department, reminded the audience of current problems with acceptance. "There was a large backlash in the U.S. when same sex marriage was legalized in Massachusetts, and work on acceptance should not end now," she said. Victor Marchetto, a panel member and A&S '10, said that we can constantly improve our own communities by educating others about the homosexual community.
Manuel Vasquez, a resident director at BC, highlighted the importance of individuality in Latino culture. "Being who you are is the most crucial thing you can do, your parents will not stop loving you," he said.
Jorge Gaitan, BC Law '11, said that acceptance does not always come easily and may take a long time to reach even with the closest people in our lives, but that should not stop people from being themselves.
Marchetto said he recognized this when he arrived at BC and decided to join GLC despite being straight. His bond with many gay and lesbian friends was strong enough for him continue the fight against discrimination in light of uneasy receptions from close people in his life, he said. "Nothing would get done if we did not act on our connections with people in our lives."
The panel stressed that education is at the forefront of eliminating the barrier that often separates the homosexual community and the mainstream straight community at BC. Purnell said that differences should not become something bigger than they are. Vasquez also said that even things that may seem trivial can be positive.
"Refraining from using words that show discrimination is a step in the right direction,"(MUSTA MISSED THAT ONE) he said. For Gaitan, the biggest challenge is to branch out from the cliques that people find themselves in to meet people outside their comfort zone. "If we don't do this, we stay in circles that don't intersect," he said