I used to go to Rudy's gym. He's a great guy and a fountain of knowledge. Would definitely be a good person to talk to. I would also recommend Jeff Tincher (not sure about last name spelling) at Crossfit Fairfax, in Fairfax, VA. Super smart, placed in the CF games while in his 40's, and very friendly.
As I've said before, the correct term should be misohomosexual (same Greek root as "misogynist") but gays don't use it, perhaps because it sounds too gay.
Look, gays have won the culture war in a rout (latest example: your kid's breakfast cereal is now gay - http://www.theamericanconservative.c...-lucky-charms/). Maybe it's time to rein in the thought police a bit.
You make a lot of stupid arguments, but this one is pretty up there.
1) No one, and I mean NO ONE, has gotten rhabdo doing starting strength, nor is there a long list of shoulder injuries, exploded Achilles's tendons, etc associated with the program.
2) This is moderately fair, though you have to admit that having people ride fucking exercise bikes in a stadium is among the stupidest things ever.
3) Couch is not "prickly", and Rip tolerates/encourages a level of dissent among the people here (and inside his own organization) that would never be tolerated in Xfit. It is to laugh.
Ah. It's a medical term. I should have known.
Often, yes. It's more the vehemence of the response that is telling. If one understands homosexuality as one orientation along a natural spectrum of possible orientations toward sexual attraction, then it's difficult to understand why one would go to such lengths to denigrate it and even attempt to violently suppress its expression in others. Those who do the latter appear to feel threatened by its mere existence in others. "Feeling threatened" and "being afraid of" are fairly synonymous in common English usage.
Now you use the much less provocative phrase "do not approve of" in an attempt to lend sentiments of intolerance toward homosexuality a more dispassionate air - but what would you say of someone who "does not approve of" someone else's race or gender or eye color - or Texas accent, for that matter? "Not approving of" only makes sense with respect to behaviors that are elected and can be changed (OK, so Texas accent is maybe not the best example) - "not approving of" something about someone else that is unalterable - and that in no way involves you - must have some more emotional basis, and some sort of "fear" or "feeling of being threatened" seems a reasonable inference.