Broadly, the shared description covers people who are not straight (gay, bi, pan, etc) or who are not cis and/or do not fit into the gender binary (transsexual, genderqueer, third sex, etc.) Discussing terminology isn't about broadening definitions to the point of meaninglessness; it's about trying to accommodate a variety of granular labels that already fall under the umbrella ideas.Mike Kayatta said:Ha, I am far from comparing homosexuality to bestiality in the way you're implying. Trust me, there are many comments you can track down to be legitimately concerned with, so please take Jesus elsewhere. My point is that EVERYONE is allowed their own identity, but the more you amalgamate them, the more that identity ceases to be. Once you start regrouping everyone, then what identity are you really "allowing"? Who here is qualified to say who is and isn't allowed to be a part of that shared description. And as long as the answer is ~shrug~ then maybe we should move on from trying to be so technical about how we're segregating groups.boots said:Jesus. Fucking. Christ.Mike Kayatta said:I know many people have already touched on this, but frankly, the more letters go into this acronym, the wider a net it casts--sort of the opposite idea of a singling out a minority. I guess the real question is, where do you draw the line? Should we include foot fetishists or furries? What about people who have sex with dolphins? On what grounds would you bar those or include them, and what makes intersex worthy of inclusion, or for that matter, even gay? At some point you have to start defining why these people are different and deserve segregation (or recognition, depending on which lens you're deciding to look through). Personally, I'd say that all sexual tendencies involve one person loving someone else, so why bother trying to say anything other than "not considered the social ideal of perfectly 'straight'" if anything at all?
With that in mind, here is my new proposal for an acronym that's most fair:
ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
Or--and this is radical, I'll warn you--how about people are just people and we stop our endless and pointless categorization to make it easier for us to inaccurately judge or refer to large swaths of the populace?
That's just great. Now we've even got The Escapist writers comparing homosexuality to bestiality.
I can see how this post might have been well-intentioned, but it's just another one to add to the "why should LGBT people be allowed their own identity?" pile.
But more importantly, it is a community. There's a certain amount of shared culture/ideals and factional bullshit, much like in mainstream culture. Not all people described by the terms consider themselves to be part of it, and the goal is to allow all those who do to feel a degree of acceptance they don't get from mainstream culture.
It'd be nice if we lived in a world where these sorts of distinctions and designations didn't matter, but frankly, that ain't the world we live in.