Have you just heard, or never until now heard, about the homosexual agenda? How they claim that it is genetic - therefore one CAN NOT change what they want to have sex with (aside - it would surely also also apply to wanting to have sex with farm animals and inanimate objects if it's genetic - what one wants to have sex with that is). Since there are many, many, people who have lead lives as practicing homosexuals yet are now completely heterosexual, it shows that the "it's genetic" argument is a lie (it's never been proved scientifically anyway). This is why government run school systems won't allow ex-gays to be mentioned. They are homosexual activists and don't particularly care about giving children an accurate education.
It's stunning that you didn't understand this yet are a member of FR.
This reminds me of the story of Noé Gutierrez:
A 22-year-old man stands before a classroom of middle schoolers, describing how he came out as a homosexual and going so far as to declare, "there are gay students in this classroom."The radicals pushing the homosexual agenda do not want anybody knowing ex-gays exist, for it destroys their born that way argument. Their attempts to silence the message of and from ex-gays speaks volumes.The young man is Noé Gutierrez, Jr., and the scene is one from It's Elementary, an award-winning 1996 video (widely aired in 1999) which aims to give "practical lessons on how to talk with kids about gay people."
You won't find that scene in Gutierrez's latest video [I Do Exist], however. Although he requested permission to use it, producer/director Debra Chasnoff turned him down. Apparently, she doesn't want school children knowing what's happened since then.
You see, Gutierrez is no longer gay.
Don't forget there is no such thing as a homosexual agenda. </sarcasm>