I don't think one can argue about being gay and a Muslim. It's possible to be gay and not a Muslim, or a suppressed gay and a Muslim. But not an active gay Muslim. It's pretty clear on that ruling.
On the TV and being trendy, that's fine I think. Nothing in Islam stops that.
That's just how I see it. Any thoughts?
Ah again the gay issue!
Since you ask for thoughts, why not?
This gay issue is a very minor issue in the whole context of rethinking applicability of some of the religious points of view in the modern context.
You raise a very interesting point. A suppressed gay, or even a closeted gay, following very piously and outwardly all the issues of Islam (with all fanfare to be noticed), will be taken as good Moslems. But a gay, who equally follows Islam piously, is not to be accepted as a Moslem.
From the religious point of view, the closeted gay is not known to the world as gay and so long as one does not know, he is a great person. But a person who is a gay and yet an equally pious person is condemned since he is a known gay and that contravenes the tenets of religion,
What is the outcome? It thus encourage deceit! Therefore, would be acceptable to the religion that it promotes deceit? Obviously not since no religion actively encourage a false life!
Thus, there lies the paradox that requires to be addressed.
One wonders if what Mujahideen has to say about religious laws cannot be violated or reinterpreted.
Usury is not allowed in Islam. And yet, Pakistan has to conform to the world economic protocol that is based on usury! Are the banks in Islamic nations not following usury? If religious laws do not conform to the modern times and is ensconced to what was practical 1400 years ago, then how will Islamic countries exist in the comity of nations?
Telling lies is not permitted in Islam.
How many are free from this sin in Islamic countries?
Therefore, where is the ideal world that is following all the tenets of religion?
One has to use common sense in the contemporary world environment before being blinkered by the religious laws that are difficult to implement given the necessity of the times.
As far as feasible, the religious laws should be followed, but to demand that others too follow it, without understanding the compulsions of others would appear to be a bit fundamentalist in view and divorced of compassion and reality of the situation!