Pauliesonne
Bi Gi
- Joined
- Jan 2, 2006
- Messages
- 2,687
My contribution.
What do you guy's think?
What do you guy's think?
...Every once in a while, when a high-profile christian fundamentalist rants about how all gay people are running around the Folsom Street Fair humping each other in a big pile, Dan Savage will post pictures of his crazy gay lifestyle. The last one I recall was baking cookies with his family. So far as I can see, this has converted exactly 0 fundamentalists to his cause.
...Also, lesbians, far from being known for crazy sexual lifestyles, are "known for" jumping into monogamous relationships with each other immediately. (I know it's a stereotype, please don't jump all over me. That's what this argument is about: perceptions about "gay lifestyles" by straight people.) So by your logic fundamentalists should be "comfortable" with lesbians.
As for your hypothetical "high profile gay person who doesn't have a crazy lifestyle or promote one,"
Rachel Maddow pretty much fits that bill.
Or how 'bout the Log Cabin Republicans?
Also, who exactly is in favour of the sexualization of children?
(Besides Billy Ray Cyprus...) Is this really something people need to come out against?
Dan Savage isn't a prude. He doesn't act like a prude. He doesn't even try to pass himself off as a prude. But how, exactly, would you know what difference that made? And why do you think he does it, if it makes no difference?
I bet you that they are more comfortable with lesbians than gay men.
That wasn't my hypothetical. There are plenty of prominent gays who seem to lead rather mundane personal lives. But that's not enough to make a prude.
No, she doesn't. She's not a prude, at least not publicly. However conservative her own habits are, she doesn't make a habit of actively promoting such behavior among others. Hence, not a prude.
How about them? Can you name a single one of them? I can't. I doubt most people can.
The Log Cabin Republicans aren't high profile.
The people who keep doing it. It's all over the bloody place in popular culture.
If you think it's a problem, then yes. And most fundamentalist Christians probably do.
All that I'm hoping for with the idea of a prudish gay person admonishing the outré lifestyles of less conservative gay people is this: That non-gay people will eventually have the attitude that gays and non-gays have more in common than not.
I know, it's just a fantasy, but why should people on either side try so hard to flaunt their differences?
You really think that having more people fussing about what other people do, in their own lives, that effects no one else, would be a good thing?
And people who commit suicide, and gays in particular, have mental health issues. Platitudes and generic speeches that apply to everyone apply to no one. The videos give nothing to work with for a kid bullied in school anyway. "Your pain right now is inconsequential, in a few years it will all be awesome?"
My first reaction to this was irritation, but I am going to take a deep breath and answer calmly and seriously and not be sarcastic at all.
The entire gay pride movement is a reaction. It is a reaction to years upon years of being forced into the closet; forced into silence and shame by bigotry, hatred, violence, mockery, assumptions of mental illness, revulsion etc etc etc. Then, in the late 60's/early 70's, on the heels of the civil rights movement and the women's lib movement, the anger and frustration of the gay communities in big cities started to swell, and the Stonewall riots were a catalyst (although not the only one). Gay people started to fight for their rights, but they concurrently had to change their attitudes about themselves. The government, the mental health profession, the media, the stranger on the street and good old mom and dad: every message coming from everywhere was telling homosexuals that homosexuality was wrong and bad and shameful. How can you fight for your rights when you don't feel you deserve them in the first place?
So the gay pride movement was born. It was started by those who couldn't hide; the gay folks who were too different to "pass." It was about believing that everyone was worthy of being treated well; everyone should be proud to be himself. Being gay is in and of itself defined by difference. Straight is the norm, gay is the other. It was, therefore, a movement that was based entirely on being proud of differences. And since the difference is all bound up in sex, the movement that celebrates that difference has to embrace sex.
I hope you can see why asking why gay people have to "flaunt" their differences is a... loaded question. If society had never treated homosexuals the way it did, there would never have been any need for the "flaunting" of differences.
Also, would you ask that same question about another group? A cultural group, for instance?
("Why do you people have to eat that "soul food", anyway? Why can't you just eat what I eat? And the way you talk!!! Why can't you just learn how to speak good English? Why do you have to flaunt your differences? If only you would just act more like white folks, then maybe we could see that we have more in common than not. Like that Cosby family on TV. I liked them.")
If you still don't see, please read up on LGBT history before you ask another question.
I think it would improve relations between the gay community and fundamentalist Christians. That doesn't mean it wouldn't have any other effects, effects which you might not like. I'll leave it to you to decide whether you think that could ever be a net benefit.
I think that would work if fundamentalist christians were known for compromising and/or meeting people half way.
(I would just like to remind you at this juncture that Fred Phelps protested at the funeral of Coretta Scott King.
Also, that fundamentalists believe masturbation is a sin
and that humans rode dinosaurs.)
Even if fundamentalist christians were known for that, and it did improve relations between gay people and christians, it would still not be, in my opinion, a net benefit.
It would, in fact, just be a bunch of hypocritical homos. ("I know that I flouted traditional sexual mores in order to be who I am, but you shouldn't! Bad! Bad! Do as I say, not as I do!")
Fred Phelps is not representative of any large group. He is on the fringe even among fundamentalists.
They also believe humans can't help but sin. So... not necessarily very significant.
Some do. Many don't. There's nothing in the bible about dinosaurs, or humans riding on them.
Perhaps.
Nothing about being gay, or even engaging in gay sex, is in any way contradictory to the way I defined prudery. The perception that it is inherently contradictory is both false and harmful.
First, the goal isn't compromise, it's tolerance. Second, there's more than a little irony here. You speak of what a large and diverse group is "known for" in disparaging terms, yet isn't that precisely the problem? That people sit around thinking about how other groups, with whom they actually have little contact, are "known for" all sorts of terrible qualities? Christian fundamentalists aren't the only people on the planet with prejudices.
I notice you did not address my main point, about fundamentalist christians being known for compromising and meeting people halfway.
The examples given were extremes
I also noticed how you tried to twist my meaning there, to make it sound like I implied that two men having sex was all perverse and stuff. Nice try.![]()
Achieving tolerance in the way you want to achieve it (having high profile gays and lesbians promote sexual "prudery") would indeed involve compromise. It would involve a compromise on the part of fundamentalist christians who currently believe being homosexual is a sin that's on a different level entirely than other sins.
(Except abortion.) Yes, they SAY everyone is a sinner, but they don't kick people out of their churches, deny them basic rights, or fight to keep anti-bullying statutes from including them for any sin but homosexuality.
Are you honestly trying to say that this is a mischaracterization of fundamentalist christians in this country?
That fundamentalist christians do not vote in overwhelming numbers to keep gay people from getting the same rights as everyone else?
That they don't preach against homosexuality from the pulpit and exclude homosexuals from their churches?
Quit being a concern troll. Of course they're not the only group with prejudices. They are the group with prejudices that we happen to be discussing right now.
The "We're here, we're queer, get used to it" strategy has brought homosexuality from "illegal sign of mental illness" to the verge of equal rights in 40 years.
It brought the AIDS epidemic into the light when Regan was trying to keep the lid on it.
Do you really think we should give up that strategy in favour of "oh, no, we're not all like that-- some of us are just like you!" just to try to win over a group that will lose anyway?
When's the last time anyone really fought for equal rights for murderers? Or demanded ant-bullying statutes for rapists? Etc, etc.
You might want to think about reformulating your argument, because as it stands now, this is simply absurd.
What, you mean gay marriage? Yeah, they oppose that. Maybe it would help if, oh, I don't know, you could find a way to soften that opposition. Maybe allay some of their fears, at least enough that they don't bother turning up at the polls.
You missed the point, which is that YOU have prejudices, against fundamentalist Christians.
...I'm not suggesting that the gay community needs to become uniformly prudish. But what message do you think it sends if there are NO visible gay prudes? Do you really think that helps get gays accepted? Or do you think that maybe, just maybe, that might send a message that the community really doesn't share values with the public at large?
1.Rachel Maddow
2.Log Cabin Republicans (like the Sisters, they are not known individually, but as a group)
3.Ellen De Generes
4.Ian McKellen
5.Barney Frank
6.Mary Cheney
7.Tim Gunn
8.Neil Patrick Harris
9.George Takai
10.k.d. lang
11.annie leibovitz
12.Chuck Palahniuk
13. Elton John today
14. The Amazing Randi
All that I'm hoping for with the idea of a prudish gay person admonishing the outré lifestyles of less conservative gay people is this: That non-gay people will eventually have the attitude that gays and non-gays have more in common than not.
I know, it's just a fantasy, but why should people on either side try so hard to flaunt their differences?
I think it would improve relations between the gay community and fundamentalist Christians. That doesn't mean it wouldn't have any other effects, effects which you might not like. I'll leave it to you to decide whether you think that could ever be a net benefit.
What might help is some high-profile gay prudes. Part of the fundamentalist discomfort with gays is that the community is often perceived as being very permissive about sexuality in general.
I'm a bit fuzzy on the details here, but aren't gays all over the country working very hard to be in state recognized monogamous relationships? As in spending tons of money and risking violent backlash for the right to be in state recognized monogamous relationships.
I mean, what is more prude than wanting to be married?