Post #104453
August 21, 2017, 11:29:05 PM
I kinda hoped it wouldn't come up, given the pro-LGBT part of the region. You'd think that being on the less fortunate side in one way should make one more understanding in other ways.
I'm white, so even though I try to listen to those who aren't, I know I'll never have the full understanding of the disadvantages that those who aren't white must endure that can only result from experience. I could call it "identity politics". It would be the easy way out. I can walk away and not have to worry about being arrested or getting shot because someone 'felt threatened'. I don't have to worry about being accused of being an illegal immigrant. Nobody is asking me if I speak English. I have the choice to ignore it or just view it as just a political issue because I'm not the one being harmed.
But that wouldn't be right. I am on the less lucky side in other ways, and know what it's like to be on the side of being discriminated against. I am bisexual. When people are being denied service in a store, being denied the right to marry, being denied the right to see their partner in the hospital, that may not just be some political issue for me, that could be my life being affected if I am together with someone of the same gender rather than the other primary gender.
Same thing here. I am a woman. When gender comes up, it isn't just "identity politics" for me. I can't just ignore it and assume it won't affect me. It's about respect, and rights, and what options I get to have in life, things I apparently still have to fight for in 2017. This is not just some fun political issue to debate about in my free time. This affects me. This affects at least half the people I know. This affects my daughter.
Gender, race, sexuality, etc. It's all easy to dismiss as "identity politics" when you're on top. But when you're not, there's far more at stake, and we should fight for everyone regardless of which side we were born on.