Gay Snapchatter shares vile homophobic ‘survey’ from when he was bullied at school

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An out gay Snapchat personality has shared an awful story of bullying from when he was a teenager.

James Kavanagh shared the post to Facebook, which showed a “survey” passed round his class in high school by a bully.

It is divided into columns and titled ‘how gay is James?’.

He said the bully passed the paper around the class asking people to tick either ‘not gay’, ‘a little bit gay’ or ‘very gay’.

The note

There are three ticks in the ‘very gay column’, but Kavanagh says they were written all by the bully as others in the class had refused to take part.

He says he was then handed the note by the bully who told him: “Here you go, faggot”.

He wrote: “From my diary in 2003/2004… When I was in 3rd year, there was a boy who was incredibly homophobic toward me and would torment me daily.”

Adding: “[The guy who wrote the note] was utterly obsessed with my sexuality and would invent new ways to try and bully me. This one day, he made this survey and ‘passed it around the class’ for people to fill in. He then proudly gave it to me after class with a little evil smile; ‘here you go, faggot.’”

The Snapchat personality is Irish, and his country recently elected its youngest and first out gay Prime Minister Leo Varadkar.

Varadkar has pledged to speak up for LGBT rights across the world during a Pride event in Dublin.


The Taoiseach, Leo Varadkar, spoke to a crowd of an estimated 30,000 people during Dublin Pride.

James Kavanagh

Varadkar, who is the first gay man to be elected as the head of Government, told marchers that he would “be the voice for toleration, respect and equality around the world”.

“I pledge as Taoiseach to use my office, for as long as I hold it, to advance the cause of LGBT rights, to press for marriage equality across Ireland, to speak up for LGBT rights around the world where they are under attack, and to push for the implementation of the sexual health strategy here at home at a time when it is more important than ever,” he said.

The Fine Gael politician went on to speak about the leaps and bounds that LGBT rights have made in the last few years in the country.

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