Subject: I don't follow your reasoning.
Author:
Posted on: 2014-03-26 18:39:00 UTC

Been following this thread silently for a while; stepping in here because I think I have a brilliant argument and I want to share it.

If I understand you right, you're concerned that if gay people get proportionate, positive representation in the media, this will automatically characterize people like yourself as ignorant and hateful in the eye of the public.

Er, how? How exactly does showing people different from you in a positive light say anything at all about you one way or the other?

Lemme draw an analogy with drinking alcohol. This is my self-presumed-brilliant argument.

NOTE: This is PURELY for the purpose of analyzing the question above and is not meant to be a complete or accurate representation of my personal opinions about alcohol OR sexuality.

I don't drink, and I don't want to drink. I prefer tea. I'm against the idea of drinking because I think it's harmful and often ruins people's lives. I also don't much care for the culture of going out to the bar or the club on the weekends and getting drunk for fun. I don't understand how this could possibly appeal to anyone.

However, I believe that people who drink aren't inherently stupid or evil, and are perfectly capable of leading fulfilling, productive lives, contributing positively to society, and generally being awesome. I have lots of friends who drink. What they do for fun on their own time is none of my business. Just as long as no one tries to force me to drink, we're cool.

Drinking and people who drink are quite often portrayed positively in the media (and negatively, too, but we're focusing on the positive for this analogy). Bar/club culture is often glorified, portrayed as something so awesome everyone should want to be a part of it.

Do you see anyone automatically assuming teetotalers like me are ignorant or hateful because we don't like it and are not a part of it? Would you suggest that the media shouldn't portray a fair portion of people who drink? Do you think everyone who sees drinking portrayed positively in the media suddenly feels an irresistible desire to guzzle PBR and hang around in bars, and never enjoy tea again? ... I'm guessing no? Because that's silly?

---

I realize that drinking currently is seen as acceptable in the culture at large and being gay currently isn't, but I think that actually make the analogy stronger, since we're discussing a not-so-distant time when being gay IS accepted enough to have a fair, proportionate representation. I'm not getting into the matter of choice, but let me just make it clear that I don't think anyone chooses their sexuality or who they love, and I do think that people who insist otherwise are ignoring pretty much all the science ever. Anecdotally, I certainly don't recall choosing to be attracted to Phobos. It just kinda happened, and I went along with it even though it scared the bejeezus out of me when I had no idea what the seven hells I was going to do with all those feelings. It turned out pretty awesome in the end! {= D

ANYWAY, the point is that portraying a set of people positively in the media doesn't automatically make anyone who isn't one of them them the bad guy. Portraying a set of people as the bad guy makes them the bad guy. It's entirely possible to have oodles of films, books, etc., that portray gay people being awesome without making a statement one way or the other about people who aren't gay, dislike the idea of getting it on with their own sex, personally abstain from doing so for religious reasons, etc. Also, fearing that you'll look bad simply because other people look good doesn't make any logical sense, and should not be used as a basis for excluding people from representation.

I've assumed here that your views on homosexuality are as reasoned as you say they are, in which case they are open to being swayed if reason can prove them flawed. I've personally never heard an anti-gay argument I didn't find logically flawed and unintentionally harmful at the least or deliberately ignorant and reprehensible at worst, so I'm hoping you'll reconsider thoroughly and often.

~Neshomeh (who will read that chapter eventually. >.

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