You don't want your privacy invaded? Then don't tell us what you do behind closed doors. I'm a very tolerant guy when the gay agenda isn't being forced down my throat. But when I'm sitting in class and I open the UCLA Daily Bruin to read about public gay marriages in Bruin Plaza, I get angry.
I don't think I'm alone in this respect. Most Americans believe that homosexuality is sinful. They're not going to break down your doors looking for pink feather boas, but they're not going to sit idly by when you tell their children that men can marry men.
We accept you. You are human beings. But we do not approve of you. No matter how many gay parades you hold, we will not approve of you. No matter how many rainbow stickers we see, we will not approve of you.
So don't push us too far. When you tell us that we are secretly homosexual if we oppose your agenda, we get angry. When you tell us we are bigots for upholding God's definition of marriage, we get angry. When you tell us that "gay relationships are just as good and the same" as straight relationships, as UCLA Queer Alliance Co-Chair Kian Boloori did last week, we get angry.
Do what you want. Just don't tell us about it or expect us to care.