Hokay, I'm writing this as I'm thinking it, so it might come out a little bit jumbled, for which I apologise ... I will draw a conclusion at the end though - promise
.
To my mind, there are different types of "pride" ...
I am proud to be a healthy, happy gay guy with a really good, strong, loving family and network of friends at my back and sides ...
I am proud to be good at modern languages ... to be reasonably intelligent, and to have a decent ability to articulate myself in writing.
Hell ... I'm proud to be
alive :biggrin:.
Then you have "gay pride" which, to
my mind, is a
different type of pride - demonstrated by proactively edging the topics and issues of homosexuality in a considerably more public manner than I myself would perhaps adopt alone ... so you get gay pride marches, gay pride festivals, and so on and so forth, some of which are designed purely for the amusement of the participants; some of which are designed as specific purpose vehicles for politics.
Whilst I think it is important for homosexuals as a section of society to have a number of outlets through which they
can campaign for equal rights in certain key areas, together with the ability of raising awareness of gay issues, I am saddened that when most people think of "gay pride" they think of divas and drag queens storming the streets in feather boas and sequins, playing cheesy music and camping it up BIG stylee ...
... so for my part I agree with some of what Drocko17 and others are saying, in that (as Portugal_the_man has already said, and very well too I might add) all that we have in common is our common same-sex sexual preference and that, consequently, we should take pride in
ourselves; and equally I can see how younger people would look at people heavily involved in gay pride events/some of the more militant homos out there and think "DAMN I don't want anything to do with people like THAT - they give people like ME a bad reputation !!", but if you think about it historically, sometimes great achievements come from those people that are willing to stamp their feet and be recognised ...
Genuine question: Do you think we'd have the emergence of so much pro-homosexual legislation if people
didn't jump up and down about gay issues as gay pride-sticklers do ?
Yes, of course, we could submit our pleas to Governments around the world in a considerably more civilised and collected fashion, but I think sometimes that "gay pride" is about examples ... it's about breaking the closet door down and screaming "it doesn't matter WHAT you think of us, we're here, and we're here to stay" ... and so whilst the repercussions of that are that the quieter, more regular Joe's like myself, Drocko17 and others do feel like we're having to dodge the bullets periodically from people that use the opportunity to go "That drag queen's gay ... and ... YOU'RE gay ... so you're the SAME !!", that's as much about the ignorance of the person making the observation as anything else ...
Therefore, to sum-up (and once again, my apologies for the rather back-and-forth post) I would say that, in
my opinion, whilst I consider myself as having very little to do with "gay pride" in what I consider to be its publicised form, and whilst I do sometimes CRINGE at the extremely camp gay guys that, I feel, do cause people to tar us all with the same brush, I believe their hearts are in the right place, and I think that, statistically-speaking, they have done more good than bad for our cause, and so shouldn't be dismissed out of hand ...
mile:.
With love and respect, I go.
!?!?! Shadow !?!?!