he only mentioned gays in his question and when responding to his question say you were curious about "that" as well but "disagreeing with something is often branded discriminatory"
Right. He only mentioned gays. So why should I ask about whether this group also discriminates against, say, blacks? When my dentist asks me if my tooth hurts, I don't reply "well, you know, I have this nagging pain in my thumb."
I guess we could assume you meant disagreeing with homosexuality or race or whether someone is handicapped
You can assume whatever you want but what I meant was that people who disagree with a particular viewpoint are often branded with names by those with whom they disagree. You don't believe in university quotas: you're a racist. You don't believe that a fetus is a person: you're a murder. And so on. The problem with that approach is that words have meaning. Disagreeing with University quotas doesn't make me a racist, and believing that a fetus isn't a person doesn't make me a murderer.
do alot of people normally "disagree" with someones race or whether they are handicapped
If a group is arguing for segregation on the basis that races must be kept separated, then yes, I disagree with that group; I can do that without disagreeing with someone's race. Similarly, if a group argues for more quota systems in Universities, then yes, I disagree with that group; I can do that without disagreeing with anyone's race.
It's disingenuous (although stupid might be more apt) of you to pretend that anything I wrote this is even
remotely controversial.
I assume even though Dario only mentioned gays that you were agreeing with him about how confusing it is that when you "disagree" with someones race or the fact that they are in a wheelchair that it is often branded as discriminatory
Except that's what not what I meant, your assumptions notwithstanding. I wanted to know
how this group was discriminated against, more specifically than was actually stated in this thread. How this morphed into whatever it morphed to in your head is beyond me.