Okay, let me start off by saying that since I'm posting in this thread, I'm (apparently) homophobic since I've been inclined to respond.
I'm a white straight male (went through a small stage of bicuriosity) 20 years old. I'm disabled, as a lot of you people probably know, and as much as people think I'm flaunting it or looking for sympathy, I'm not. I know what homosexuals are going through to a small extent. I knew friends who were gay, I have friends who are gay (hold back the bile...)
I was walking through a suburb of Melbourne a few years ago with my friend and his boyfriend. They were holding hands, like most couples would, they were of course getting looks and slurs shouted at them.
I was scared, so very scared that someone would come out and beat the shit out of the three of us.
This was what homophobia was like to me. Did I support them? Yes, one of them was my best friends, of course I would. You'd probably think I'd have gay pride flags just hanging off me wouldn't you? Being so close to the prejudice my friend was feeling?
No.
Why? Because I've also had gay people shatter my mind, putting me 'out of commision' for months.
Before you come at me like I'm Satan in a Kindergarten surrounded by cops, my point is this:
Fighting for equality is great, be who you want to be, be with whoever you want to be with. But regardless of how much tolerance with something there is in the world, there will always be someone who thinks otherwise.
Sure, I could still be quite fond of gay people had I not let my 'trauma' get to me. But in the end, sometimes it's cultural, sometimes it's societal.
Sometimes it's someone's own experience.
I bring this up because there is so many people saying 'if you dislike/hate X, you're wrong'.
I don't hate gay people, some people believe I should after what I dealt with, but I don't.
I don't give a shit about what they do, as long as they don't try to force whatever about it on me.
To say that I'M bad for not exactly trusting homosexuals or whatever because of whatever reason of acceptance there is, aren't you bad too?
I understand how you want acceptance, to lower the hate and such, having Cerebral Palsy gives you a delightful stigma as well (doubly so if you're quiet). But by trying to say that somewhat can tolerate something, but not accept it is wrong, and that they're wrong, aren't you doing to them what they're doing to you?
I must sound like a massive prick to some of you, and that's fine.If people don't like me for who or what I am, fine. I've often been hated for being disabled because I get 'privileges'. I can preach about how giving me a weird look when I'm walking down the street, or kissing my chubby but not disabled girlfriend is wrong, I probably won't change minds. It's sad, but often true.
In the end, it'll probably take decades, even centuries before it's the norm.
There's every kind of hatred and dislike out there.
But if I'm homophobic for finding a gay guy desperately try to hug me, or watching two kissing for a while unlikable, then shit, I'm homophobic.
But that's who I am, and I'll likely only change on my own terms.