01-22-2015, 01:50 PM
The article here (http://www.outsports.com/2015/1/12/75322...orts-wrong) tries to assert that "homosexual" is a term used in a sort of war of words, that it deliberately is employed to make gays sound "all about sex."
What bunk. Homosexual and heterosexual are sexual terms. They speak to sexual orientation. And yes, sexual orientation is about sex. I'm attracted to men sexually. It doesn't mean I don't have women and men friends who are platonic.
"Gay" is slang, and finding itself more and more preferred, often paired with "culture" or "lifestyle." I'm sorry, but I don't believe either is appropriate. I can be a watermelon-seed-spitting hick in Birmingham, Alabama, or a high-toned architect in Vancouver, and I'm still homosexual, but may have almost zero other culturally shared ties. And the lifestyles could not be more different. Both terms are weak euphemisms to speak to the homosexual attraction.
Likewise, two gay men could be both out, but one in a monogamous and sedate LTR while the other may be out five nights a week at bars or clubs, and they likewise may have almost no overlap in values or lifestyles.
I've no beef with identifying self or others as gay, nor using a slang term as the predominant one to describe sexual orientation, but that doesn't mean trying to suppress the use of a technical term is acceptable. I am homosexual. I am attracted to men in an erotic manner. That doesn't mean I have signed up to liking Lady Gaga, raves, abstract impressionism, pride parades, drag queens or any other incidental aspect of SOME gay men.
What I see is the progressive acceptance of gays in America is threatening to some who have grown accustomed to defining gay culture, when in fact, what they are protecting is but a splinter within the much larger homosexual population.
Take away my homosexuality, and I don't have any particular common culture with other homosexual men.
What bunk. Homosexual and heterosexual are sexual terms. They speak to sexual orientation. And yes, sexual orientation is about sex. I'm attracted to men sexually. It doesn't mean I don't have women and men friends who are platonic.
"Gay" is slang, and finding itself more and more preferred, often paired with "culture" or "lifestyle." I'm sorry, but I don't believe either is appropriate. I can be a watermelon-seed-spitting hick in Birmingham, Alabama, or a high-toned architect in Vancouver, and I'm still homosexual, but may have almost zero other culturally shared ties. And the lifestyles could not be more different. Both terms are weak euphemisms to speak to the homosexual attraction.
Likewise, two gay men could be both out, but one in a monogamous and sedate LTR while the other may be out five nights a week at bars or clubs, and they likewise may have almost no overlap in values or lifestyles.
I've no beef with identifying self or others as gay, nor using a slang term as the predominant one to describe sexual orientation, but that doesn't mean trying to suppress the use of a technical term is acceptable. I am homosexual. I am attracted to men in an erotic manner. That doesn't mean I have signed up to liking Lady Gaga, raves, abstract impressionism, pride parades, drag queens or any other incidental aspect of SOME gay men.
What I see is the progressive acceptance of gays in America is threatening to some who have grown accustomed to defining gay culture, when in fact, what they are protecting is but a splinter within the much larger homosexual population.
Take away my homosexuality, and I don't have any particular common culture with other homosexual men.