Is Sponge Bob Square Pants, gay?

by free2beme 34 Replies latest jw friends

  • freetosee
  • freetosee
    freetosee

    SpongeBob controversy Jan. 20: The little yellow guy who lives in a pineapple under the sea, is at the center of a controversy— again, not of his making. A conservative Christian group attacking the cartoon character for allegedly being part of a quote "pro-homosexual video." Video

  • Nathan Natas
    Nathan Natas

    This was taken from EnchantedLearning.com. I have edited it slightly (removed illos and some text) :

    Sponges

    Sponges (poriferans) are very simple animals that live permanently attached to a location in the water. There are from 5,000 to 10,000 known species of sponges. Most sponges live in salt water - only about 150 species live in fresh water. Sponges evolved over 500 million years ago.

    The body of this primitive animal has thousands of pores which let water flow through it continually. Sponges obtain nourishment and oxygen from this flowing water. The flowing water also carries out waste products.

    Anatomy: The body of a sponge has two outer layers separated by an acellular (having no cells) gel layer called the mesohyl (also called the mesenchyme). In the gel layer are either spicules (supportive needles made of calcium carbonate) or spongin fibers (a flexible skeletal material made from protein). Sponges have neither tissues nor organs. Different sponges form different shapes, including tubes, fans, cups, cones, blobs, barrels, and crusts. These range in size from a few millimeters to 2 meters tall.

    Diet: Sponges are filter feeders. Most sponges eat tiny, floating organic particles and plankton that they filter from the water the flows through their body. Food is collected in specialized cells called choanocytes and brought to other cells by amoebocytes.

    Reproduction: Most sponges are hermaphrodites (each adult can act as either the female or the male in reproduction). Fertilization is internal in most species; some released sperm randomly float to another sponge with the water current. If a sperm is caught by another sponge's collar cells, fertilization of an egg by the traveling sperm takes place inside the sponge. The resulting tiny larva is released and is free-swimming; it uses tiny cilia (hairs ) to propel itself through the water. The larva eventually settles on the sea floor, becomes sessile and grows into an adult.

    Some sponges also reproduce asexually; fragments of their body (buds) are broken off by water currents and carried to another location, where the sponge will grow into a clone of the parent sponge (its DNA is identical to the parent's DNA).

    Classification:

    Kingdom Animalia (animals)

    Phylum Porifera (sponges)

    Classes: Calcarea (calcerous sponges - having spicules), Demospongiae (horn sponges, like the bath sponge), Scleropongiae (coralline or tropical reef sponges), and Hexactinellida (glass sponges).

  • BizzyBee
    BizzyBee

    There you have it. Sponge Bob is just your everyday, normal, pineapple-inhabiting, hermaphoditic sponge.

  • Devilsnok
    Devilsnok

    Hmmmm. Donald Duck doesn't wear pants either!

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