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“Bichona YES!” After having graffiti on his wall, a university student with a destructive response on Facebook

Homophobes were not prepared for this university samba Ramon Habitsenther 21 years old.

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What a bad day to be homophobic…
 
Imagine waking up and seeing graffiti on the wall of your house with the words: "BICHONA". How would you react? Would you rush to delete it? Would you call the police to investigate the crime? Would you no longer leave the house feeling ashamed? Well, the young resident of Volta Redonda went far beyond that and made his offense his triumph.
 
To the despair of homophobic on duty, Ramon published a victorious response on Facebook, which won the support of more than 4 thousand people on the social network.
 
 
Check out Ramon's answer/samba/seal/tiro:
 
"I was never one to be shaken by people's comments regarding my sexual orientation, I grew up hearing and experiencing the worst kinds of things that any human being can hear for simply being who I was.
 
My earliest memory is when I was around 8 years old and wanted to play dodgeball with the girls and not football with the boys, but on that day there was one boy missing from the school's male football team.
 
I never liked playing with balls, cars or flying kites. My little friend who lived next door was actually the one who lifted my kites because she did it much better than me. But going back to what happened at school, there was one boy missing to complete the team, I continued to play dodgeball and their team ended up missing out and they weren't able to play the game they wanted.
 
I went about my day normally like the good student I was, without worrying too much about the threats and jokes I heard all the time and from all sides.
 
The bell rings to go home, as I lived and still live on the same street as the school I went to, I walked alone to my house every day. But that day I didn't go alone, that group of boys accompanied me, arriving close to an empty field that was right after the school, I was pushed into it and then, well, I was beaten that day because I didn't want to participate in football, because according to them I was a little girl, I was "Ramona" and I didn't deserve to go home without going through that.
 
But which is it? I was just being myself, I just didn't know how to be any other way, I WAS BEING WHAT I WAS. My mother and father always raised me as a boy, gave me balls, cars and skateboards, but I was always more interested in my sister's dolls and shoes, that was always natural for me. And why wouldn't it be?
 
Why would it be wrong for me to like what was much cooler to me? Well, I've asked myself these questions my entire life. Until I no longer needed to do them, until I understood myself, understood myself, accepted myself, loved myself and felt very sorry for those people feeling so little.
 
I was born, raised and live in the same neighborhood as always, with insults, humiliations, beatings, harsh words. But after listening to them so much they stopped making sense, they no longer affect me, they don't hurt me, simply because I'm sure of who I am and what I believe!
 
When it's about me, I simply ignore it and let it go, but this time they went further and exposed my entire family, a wonderful family by the way, who respects me and loves me above anything else! They simply messed up, they ruined something that my father worked his whole life to achieve. And for what? In who's name? To hurt me? They didn't make it.
 
I'm a big-name queer and I'm not ashamed of it at all, I'll never pretend to be something I'm not to be accepted and I'll never stop sharing and exposing my ideas so that people like these think that "it's okay, just not You might be gay around me." YES, WE EXIST AND PERSIST! I will not remain silent about this or anything else. And to these people I give all the love that is inside me and that they lack.
LOVE IS FREE!! "
 
We are speechless and happy to see that Ramon is not silent in the face of the homophobic act. We agree with you Ramon,"LOVE IS FREE!"
 

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