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I can't go here,
I might be seen and all the gay people that had
important government positions were petrified to socialize. They just socialized
at house parties. - I think I realized
years after the damage that it caused.
Because often I felt paranoid, because, the weekends you would
go to the gay bar in London, you always
look over your shoulder
I might be seen and all the gay people that had
important government positions were petrified to socialize. They just socialized
at house parties. - I think I realized
years after the damage that it caused.
Because often I felt paranoid, because, the weekends you would
go to the gay bar in London, you always
look over your shoulder
Full Transcript
00:00:01.000 --> 00:00:02.802
I can't go here,
I might be seen
00:00:02.868 --> 00:00:07.273
and all the gay people that had
important government positions
00:00:07.339 --> 00:00:09.341
were petrified to socialize.
00:00:09.408 --> 00:00:12.244
They just socialized
at house parties.
00:00:12.311 --> 00:00:15.915
- I think I realized
years after the damage
00:00:15.981 --> 00:00:21.042
that it caused.
Because often I felt paranoid,
00:00:21.487 --> 00:00:26.258
because, the weekends you would
go to the gay bar in London,
00:00:26.325 --> 00:00:28.828
you always
look over your shoulder.
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Movie Summary
Some softened by age and sadness, others loud and angry, the voices of the survivors of Canada’s public service homosexual purge are now united, and determined. They are torqued by decades of silence, years of being ignored. They demand justice, and they want to be heard. Theirs is a story of betrayal that is both national and deeply personal. Men and women who dedicated their lives to public service, some signing oaths of allegiance and servitude; casualties of a political tapestry woven in the fibers of acute security measures that somehow became normalized.