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- From: amirza@bronze.ucs.indiana.edu (Anmar Caves)
- Subject: Re: Survivors v. Queers
- Message-ID: <BzM9tt.A40@usenet.ucs.indiana.edu>
- Sender: news@usenet.ucs.indiana.edu (USENET News System)
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- Organization: Indiana University
- References: <1h1mr1INN3sk@agate.berkeley.edu>
- Date: Mon, 21 Dec 1992 16:01:05 GMT
- Lines: 52
-
- In article <1h1mr1INN3sk@agate.berkeley.edu> rsr@soda.berkeley.edu (Roy S. Rapoport) writes:
- >
- >On the other hand, from what I've seen, societal opression of queers will
- >tend to be more deep-seated and more vehement than its dislike of
- >survivors. Harassment of survivors will tend to be more psychological, and
- >not really malicious, as much as stupid and ignorant. Harassment of queers
- >tends to be more active, and more malicious. On at least one level,
- >however, psychological/emotional pain will be much nastier than physical
- >damage ... certainly this is true in the case of most survivors I know,
- >where physical injuries healed much faster than the emotional ones
- >(the question of whether or not these scars ever heal completely, and if
- >not, to what extent they do heal, on an average, is something I still don't
- >know enough about).
-
- One thing I've noted is that those doing the harassing of both
- survivors and people with alternative lifestyles tend to be the same
- people. The opportunists, the
- cowardly predators in this world walk around looking for easy targets.
- I like to think of these types as hyenas. They do not deserve the
- consideration due to the honorable or the innocent.
-
- >It's OK to be a survivor, really. It's OK to be queer, really. Why do you
- >have to be so damned vocal about it, though? Why do I have to know about it,
- >to hear you talking about it? Just shut up and go back into the closet ...
- <deleted>
- >It may be time to start making some noise ...
-
- Is it though? I'm a survivor, and though I'm not queer, I also don't
- exactly lead a perfectly normal lifestyle. It's been my experience if
- you "make some noise" about being different then you can have the
- opposite effect than you want. I've found that the small things
- really make the difference. I feel a lot more change for the good has
- been made when you simply continue with your life in an honest,
- straightfoward manner. That's not to say that you sit down and shut
- up when some bigot is spewing their garbage. A friend of mine finally
- "came out of the closet" out of high school. No noise, no fanfare,
- just a simple resolve to deal honestly with people about who he is,
- and if they can't deal with it, then that's their problem.
- Interestingly, some of our friends who *used* to be openly homophobic,
- lost a lot of their homophobia as a result. He hasn't made a lot of
- noise, but by being who he is he's changed our little corner of the
- world a little bit for the better.
-
- This hasn't been intended as a flame, but as a genuine question. It's
- a possibility that such tactics won't work everywhere, and it's
- certain that it requires more than just a few people doing it.
-
- --
- Anmar Mirza # Chief of Tranquility #My Opinions! NotIU's!#Purveyor of
- EMT-D # Base, Lawrence Co. IN # Legalize Explosives!#nontraditional
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-