Puppycow
Penultimate Amazing
There's currently an argument about whether Michele Bachmann's husband Marcus is a closeted gay man based on his lisp and his mannerisms.
Read My Lisp: Is Michele Bachmann's husband gay? Don't trust gaydar to settle the question.
The article goes on to talk about those studies, which seem to indicate some evidence for gaydar working at least a little bit for out of the closet gay men, although not with anywhere near 100% accuracy. We don't know whether it works for closeted gay men because, well, they are closeted so we don't know.
Personally, I think we should lay off the insinuations and stereotyping based on a lisp or a mannerism. It really seems like a kind of bullying to me. It doesn't raise the level of conversation, but lowers it. It's also confirmation bias. You assume that gaydar works because it seems to work most of the time, and so you assume that it works all of the time, and if a straight-identified man sets off your gaydar, you assume that he's a closet case. So it's not falsifiable anyway.
Read My Lisp: Is Michele Bachmann's husband gay? Don't trust gaydar to settle the question.
Now Marcus Bachmann, husband of Republican presidential candidate Rep. Michele Bachmann, is setting off gaydar alarms. It started as a subtle joke among bloggers. Then it progressed to parody and overt insinuation. On Tuesday, Dan Savage said the Bachmanns' marriage was frigid because Mr. Bachmann may have "tiptoed down" the road to homosexuality "just a couple of inches … maybe six, maybe seven." As evidence, Savage cited Bachmann's "mincing" in a YouTube clip, plus "the sound of his voice." He concluded that Bachmann "appears to be a lying closet case." On Wednesday, Jon Stewart said Bachmann, who counsels homosexuals to overcome their urges, seems to be doing this "so he can hoard all the gayness for himself." Stewart said Bachmann "dances and sounds not only gay, but center-square gay."
There's nothing new about calling somebody gay based on a lisp or a girlish gait. We all saw, did, or suffered it in grade school. What's unusual is seeing grown-up gays and liberals do it in 2011 with such open ridicule. But don't worry: The new queer-hunters are progressive. They detect homosexuality based on science, not stereotypes. Savage cites a series of studies, written up two years ago in Scientific American, in which college students correctly distinguished gay from straight men based on facial features. He concludes: "Gaydar is for real."
The article goes on to talk about those studies, which seem to indicate some evidence for gaydar working at least a little bit for out of the closet gay men, although not with anywhere near 100% accuracy. We don't know whether it works for closeted gay men because, well, they are closeted so we don't know.
Personally, I think we should lay off the insinuations and stereotyping based on a lisp or a mannerism. It really seems like a kind of bullying to me. It doesn't raise the level of conversation, but lowers it. It's also confirmation bias. You assume that gaydar works because it seems to work most of the time, and so you assume that it works all of the time, and if a straight-identified man sets off your gaydar, you assume that he's a closet case. So it's not falsifiable anyway.
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