Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm noticing more and more, especially with the "baby gays", this mentality of using queerness or alphabet identity as some kind of shield or dodge of bad behavior. I've had people screw up, then claim I can't be upset because they're part of a marginalized group, and even had someone tell me that I can't be upset with them because it would be anti-gay.Maybe I'm just an old fag, but it's really offputting to hear a mostly-younger generation so caught up in their identifiers that they forget their base humanity and agency. Queer or not, you can choose to be decent or a jerk. Being queer isn't a defense for crappy behavior. If anything, you make the rest of us look bad.
Listen... No matter how you personally identify, your integrity is your integrity (or lack thereof). If you do a crappy thing, it's not because you're gay. By the same hand, being alphabet doesn't act as some kind of immunity for the jerkish thing you did. Everybody is capable of being a jerk, and everyone is responsible for their behavior and choices. Your pronouns don't matter nearly as much as your dignity. Do better. Be better.
This isn't an "alphabet soup" thing -- it's a more general issue with Generation Z. While most younger generations go through this, there's a huge element of them lacking any humility, not knowing what they don't know and being frequently wrong and rarely in doubt. The main difference from them and previous generations in their youth is they're more belligerent about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never seen that with LGBTQ+. I've seen it with psychiatric disorders (autism, ADHD, anxiety, depression, etc), and in those situations there are, in certain cases, accommodations to make. But I agree you cannot use a label as a Get Out of Jail Free card.
I've also seen it in the disability community. While it probably sounds somewhat ableist, it seems to happen much more with invisible disabilities than physical/obvious disabilities. As an obviously-disabled person (who can barely pass as a normie on the very best of days, for a very limited time), it's really frustrating to see people who can do more expecting to get away with less and using their disability as some kind of pass. Same as the alphabet poster. I already face scrutiny for being queer. I don't want people to think being queer means I'm going to be a jerk and expect to get away with it.
NP. I see this quite a bit in disability. In particular I have personal experience with abusers using the language of disability advocacy to justify abuse. I have a friend whose husband was physically abusive but claimed that it was his disabilities that made him abusive. She is a healthcare worker prone to compassion and put up with horrific abuse because she had been trained to essentially accept terrible behavior because of disability. He is disabled, but he is also an abuser.
He threatened to kill her with an axe, and used that axe to smash all the family photos in the house when he had one of his rages. And he claimed that it was his disability that caused it, so she was being ableist in fleeing. “In sickness and in health, and I am sick.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm noticing more and more, especially with the "baby gays", this mentality of using queerness or alphabet identity as some kind of shield or dodge of bad behavior. I've had people screw up, then claim I can't be upset because they're part of a marginalized group, and even had someone tell me that I can't be upset with them because it would be anti-gay.Maybe I'm just an old fag, but it's really offputting to hear a mostly-younger generation so caught up in their identifiers that they forget their base humanity and agency. Queer or not, you can choose to be decent or a jerk. Being queer isn't a defense for crappy behavior. If anything, you make the rest of us look bad.
Listen... No matter how you personally identify, your integrity is your integrity (or lack thereof). If you do a crappy thing, it's not because you're gay. By the same hand, being alphabet doesn't act as some kind of immunity for the jerkish thing you did. Everybody is capable of being a jerk, and everyone is responsible for their behavior and choices. Your pronouns don't matter nearly as much as your dignity. Do better. Be better.
This isn't an "alphabet soup" thing -- it's a more general issue with Generation Z. While most younger generations go through this, there's a huge element of them lacking any humility, not knowing what they don't know and being frequently wrong and rarely in doubt. The main difference from them and previous generations in their youth is they're more belligerent about it.
Probably, though. This tracks.Anonymous wrote:I'm noticing more and more, especially with the "baby gays", this mentality of using queerness or alphabet identity as some kind of shield or dodge of bad behavior. I've had people screw up, then claim I can't be upset because they're part of a marginalized group, and even had someone tell me that I can't be upset with them because it would be anti-gay.Maybe I'm just an old fag, but it's really offputting to hear a mostly-younger generation so caught up in their identifiers that they forget their base humanity and agency. Queer or not, you can choose to be decent or a jerk. Being queer isn't a defense for crappy behavior. If anything, you make the rest of us look bad.
Listen... No matter how you personally identify, your integrity is your integrity (or lack thereof). If you do a crappy thing, it's not because you're gay. By the same hand, being alphabet doesn't act as some kind of immunity for the jerkish thing you did. Everybody is capable of being a jerk, and everyone is responsible for their behavior and choices. Your pronouns don't matter nearly as much as your dignity. Do better. Be better.
Anonymous wrote:My workplace had a super young guy whose BF was always showing up to hang. The boss delicately told him that no outsiders were allowed in the laboratory for a myriad of reasons and he took it to the c-suite that the boss was anti-gay!
Anonymous wrote:I've never seen that with LGBTQ+. I've seen it with psychiatric disorders (autism, ADHD, anxiety, depression, etc), and in those situations there are, in certain cases, accommodations to make. But I agree you cannot use a label as a Get Out of Jail Free card.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm noticing more and more, especially with the "baby gays", this mentality of using queerness or alphabet identity as some kind of shield or dodge of bad behavior. I've had people screw up, then claim I can't be upset because they're part of a marginalized group, and even had someone tell me that I can't be upset with them because it would be anti-gay.Maybe I'm just an old fag, but it's really offputting to hear a mostly-younger generation so caught up in their identifiers that they forget their base humanity and agency. Queer or not, you can choose to be decent or a jerk. Being queer isn't a defense for crappy behavior. If anything, you make the rest of us look bad.
Listen... No matter how you personally identify, your integrity is your integrity (or lack thereof). If you do a crappy thing, it's not because you're gay. By the same hand, being alphabet doesn't act as some kind of immunity for the jerkish thing you did. Everybody is capable of being a jerk, and everyone is responsible for their behavior and choices. Your pronouns don't matter nearly as much as your dignity. Do better. Be better.
I’m actually curious what it was that happened to trigger you to make such a long post, would you mind sharing?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never seen that with LGBTQ+. I've seen it with psychiatric disorders (autism, ADHD, anxiety, depression, etc), and in those situations there are, in certain cases, accommodations to make. But I agree you cannot use a label as a Get Out of Jail Free card.
I've also seen it in the disability community. While it probably sounds somewhat ableist, it seems to happen much more with invisible disabilities than physical/obvious disabilities. As an obviously-disabled person (who can barely pass as a normie on the very best of days, for a very limited time), it's really frustrating to see people who can do more expecting to get away with less and using their disability as some kind of pass. Same as the alphabet poster. I already face scrutiny for being queer. I don't want people to think being queer means I'm going to be a jerk and expect to get away with it.
NP. I see this quite a bit in disability. In particular I have personal experience with abusers using the language of disability advocacy to justify abuse. I have a friend whose husband was physically abusive but claimed that it was his disabilities that made him abusive. She is a healthcare worker prone to compassion and put up with horrific abuse because she had been trained to essentially accept terrible behavior because of disability. He is disabled, but he is also an abuser.
He threatened to kill her with an axe, and used that axe to smash all the family photos in the house when he had one of his rages. And he claimed that it was his disability that caused it, so she was being ableist in fleeing. “In sickness and in health, and I am sick.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never seen that with LGBTQ+. I've seen it with psychiatric disorders (autism, ADHD, anxiety, depression, etc), and in those situations there are, in certain cases, accommodations to make. But I agree you cannot use a label as a Get Out of Jail Free card.
I've also seen it in the disability community. While it probably sounds somewhat ableist, it seems to happen much more with invisible disabilities than physical/obvious disabilities. As an obviously-disabled person (who can barely pass as a normie on the very best of days, for a very limited time), it's really frustrating to see people who can do more expecting to get away with less and using their disability as some kind of pass. Same as the alphabet poster. I already face scrutiny for being queer. I don't want people to think being queer means I'm going to be a jerk and expect to get away with it.
Anonymous wrote:I'm noticing more and more, especially with the "baby gays", this mentality of using queerness or alphabet identity as some kind of shield or dodge of bad behavior. I've had people screw up, then claim I can't be upset because they're part of a marginalized group, and even had someone tell me that I can't be upset with them because it would be anti-gay.Maybe I'm just an old fag, but it's really offputting to hear a mostly-younger generation so caught up in their identifiers that they forget their base humanity and agency. Queer or not, you can choose to be decent or a jerk. Being queer isn't a defense for crappy behavior. If anything, you make the rest of us look bad.
Listen... No matter how you personally identify, your integrity is your integrity (or lack thereof). If you do a crappy thing, it's not because you're gay. By the same hand, being alphabet doesn't act as some kind of immunity for the jerkish thing you did. Everybody is capable of being a jerk, and everyone is responsible for their behavior and choices. Your pronouns don't matter nearly as much as your dignity. Do better. Be better.
Anonymous wrote:I've never seen that with LGBTQ+. I've seen it with psychiatric disorders (autism, ADHD, anxiety, depression, etc), and in those situations there are, in certain cases, accommodations to make. But I agree you cannot use a label as a Get Out of Jail Free card.
Maybe I'm just an old fag, but it's really offputting to hear a mostly-younger generation so caught up in their identifiers that they forget their base humanity and agency. Queer or not, you can choose to be decent or a jerk. Being queer isn't a defense for crappy behavior. If anything, you make the rest of us look bad.