• @[email protected]
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    1 month ago

    Are we seriously going to suggest that queer people are to blame for our own oppression?

    No…?

    I’ve never seen anyone make this claim.

    It makes some sense that the people who violently bottle up all of their impulses, who are then the most unhappy about it, just to fit in with their right wing community are then the ones who A) think about it the most often, and B) imagine that the “devil’s temptation” and the repression thereof is normal for most people, when it really isn’t.

    —But this isn’t the same as saying that only gay people are homophobic. It’s just a kind of pathology that leads to being the most militant about it. You end up working the hardest to fit in because you’re the most at risk of losing that.

    But even more than that, I’m not sure I believe straightness is really “real.” If everyone is “a little bit queer”, and conservatives are the only ones rejecting that, then this is just an indication that their ideas don’t really pan out. They would claim straightness is normal, default, but they can’t hold themselves to it; it’s not actually possible.

    So, those are two different answers to the one problem you’ve put forward, but in either case, or neither, I don’t really see this as the gays attacking themselves. The right wing is just kinda wack, you know?

    • @Voroxpete
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      31 month ago

      If you’ve never seen anyone make the claim that every homophobe is a closeted homosexual, then congratulations, welcome to the Internet, this must be a really exciting first day for you.

      And if you read it a little more carefully, you’ll notice that I was not accusing the previous commenter of making that claim. I said that their argument felt dangerously close to making that claim. It’s important to interrogate the implications of our arguments, even (in fact, especially) when they’re made in jest or for the purposes of mockery. It’s all too easy to get ourselves into mindsets that seem reasonable, but actually have really dangerous implications.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 month ago

        If you’ve never seen anyone make the claim that every homophobe is a closeted homosexual

        No. This one:

        queer people are to blame for our own oppression

        This is a dangerous implication, but I don’t see it being made. In this thread. And elsewhere. I don’t see people, even conservatives, making this accusation.

        • @Voroxpete
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          31 month ago

          Because no one makes that accusation directly. I’m really trying not to be a dick here, but you do know what “implication” means, right?

          If every homophobe is a closeted queer person then that automatically implies that homophobia is only perpetuated by queer people. That’s not what people think they’re saying when they make that claim, but it is the only logical conclusion.

          And just because you didn’t think about the implications of something, doesn’t change the fact that they’re there.

          • @[email protected]
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            21 month ago

            Your interpretation implies that the queer element of the oppressive queer conservative is the more substantive one.

            I think most people correctly recognize it is the conservative element that is the more oppressive one.

            I think even conservatives recognize this because the only time they don’t want credit for the nasty things they do is when they’d get in trouble. They like the oppression. They want the credit.

            So, you are hearing people blame queer people. And I am hearing them blame conservatives.

            A queer person is fine. Naturally. A queer conservative, well… what happened, right?

            The fear you have then, I suppose, is that someone might hear the word “queer” or “lgbt” and think “Ah. You must be a conservative. Too bad you banned gay marriage for yourselves, hm?”, which is something I’m really trying to impress on you here: does not grok with me.

            I don’t see this implication you’re worried about being reinforced—that means reflected in the other things people do and say—because this idea of the self-inflicted wound is not useful to anyone’s political ends.

            Granted, maybe someday in the future, conservatives will try to use ideas like this to absolve themselves, the same way holocaust denial works.

            But today, I only see people pointing out a strong hypocrisy among the conservative community. One that is conservative-self imposed: by living so inauthentically, they are placing themselves into a pressure cooker.

            And further, because the ideal conservative lifestyle is so strict, as authoritarians are won’t to do, everyone is placed in this pressure cooker.

            Heterosexuality, a different sexual pathology, is expressed very conservatively in the incel community.

            Like, on some level, you are arguing against the adage “everything is about sex, and sex is about power,” which, as far as I know, is pretty well regarded. It’s not a secret that the right wing is insanely insecure.


            I am sorry to have gotten a bit condescending here, but then I should be asking why you are giving me lessons on subtext.

            I’ve looked at your comment history, you seem like a smart person. I don’t really understand where this is coming from.

            • @Voroxpete
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              31 month ago

              If all black birds are ravens, then if a bird is black, by definition it is a raven.

              If all homophobes are queer, then by definition all homophobia is enacted by people who are queer.

              Therefore, the statement “every homophobe is a closeted queer person” automatically excludes all straight people from being capable of homophobia. The moment a straight person does something homophobic, they must, according to this line of thinking, actually be a closeted queer person.

              And while the intent is to point out conservative hypocrisy, the effect, very subtly, is to craft a universe where straight people are absolved of any culpability for the existence of homophobia. It becomes, by definition, a queer problem.

              I am not arguing against any of the things you seem to think I’m arguing against, nor am I making any of the points you seem to think I’m making. Everything in your previous comment is a response to an invention that exists solely in your head. I am making the point that I have just stated, as plainly as it is possible to state it. If you’re still not getting it, sit back, have a cup of coffee, and read it again.