Thank you for pointing out the obvious. I am sorry it is necessary.
That is quite deliberately missing the point though.
Homosexually inclined people don’t go about their daily business describing themselves, when asked, as “Same Sex Attracted”. The phrase doesn’t get used. They describe themselves as “gay” as part of their general parlance, whether they’re practising or not.
If we talk to individual gay people on a personal basis (I use the term as synonymous with ‘SSA’) it’s fine to use the ‘SSA’ term, since it’s understandable to the individual. But the moment we decry anything ‘gay’ then the individuals who consider themselves gay in simple ‘SSA’ terms hear that they are being condemned for simply being SSA.
How difficult is it to understand? We need to ensure that when we make a public statement that we don’t inadvertently ensure that people who we aren’t actually condemning feel condemned.
I can’t think of any other way to say this. To condemn ‘gay’ people (which many people do by using the term politically) indisputably includes within it those people who are not political about their sexual orientation.
How we are even arguing about it is beyond me.
It’s simple objective truth - some (I would say most) English-speaking homosexual people define themselves as gay based on nothing more than the recognition of their sexual orientation. I can say it’s an objective truth because I have met them. In person. I have shaken their hands and talked to them. Others I know more indirectly. Some are even priests! (Shock, horror!)
Why do people believe that by using a particular term that’s in common parlance, a person automatically buys into all the political history of it?
A teenager who has no particular understanding of gender politics hears a term being used to describe people who are attracted to the same gender. They recognise the attraction and accept that term as being appropriate to themselves. They don’t go investigating ‘gay rights’ marches, or the ‘Stonewall Riots’ or anything along those lines. They just feel within themselves what their orientation is, they hear the term, it fits, they use it - even if they never wanted to feel the orientation in the first place or act upon it.
Why do people assume that anyone calling themselves ‘gay’ is deliberately cocking a snook at society? Why is it so difficult to believe that for very many people it’s just an adjective with a simple meaning nowadays?
Why -
very much why - do we persist in making sweeping statements about the people that use that adjective in such a way that they ALL would feel condemned, regardless of whether would actually be condemning them? If we use a word that has multiple meanings, we’re naturally going to catch people in our condemnation who we shouldn’t be condemning. To not recognise that is irresponsible. Literally. It is our responsibility to be charitable and truthful and to appear to be charitable and truthful - there’s not point feeling ‘charitable and truthful’ if nobody perceives it as such: then it just becomes feel-good vanity while everyone else suffers.** It’s a pharisaical approach that we really ought to know better about.**
Since this is crystal clear to me, I have to ask you - what do you
think I’m arguing for? (Because I can pretty much guarantee that I’m not!)