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Behind the Aegis

(53,956 posts)
Wed Jun 15, 2022, 12:26 AM Jun 2022

How to be a better straight ally to LGBTQ people

For people who are not LGBTQ, it can be difficult to understand what being a straight ally means. Some might think that allies just need to be supporters and nothing more, but there’s actually a lot more that goes into being an ally.

In this post, we’ll break down what it means to be a straight ally and explain why they’re so important in the fight for equality.

“Ally” describes a person who is “not a member of a marginalized or mistreated group but who expresses or gives support to that group.”

Thus, to be an LGBTQ ally – meaning someone who does not identify as LGBTQ but recognizes the unique challenges faced by members of the community – is to be a straight and/or cisgender person who speaks up for and stands with LGBTQ people against discrimination, oppression, and violence.

1. Be Curious And Open-Minded
2. Learn To ‘Pass The Mic’
3. Recognize Your Privilege
4. Take Action

If you want to be a better straight ally, start by educating yourself on the issues that affect LGBTQ people.

more...

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How to be a better straight ally to LGBTQ people (Original Post) Behind the Aegis Jun 2022 OP
A valuable lesson to everyone IngridsLittleAngel Jun 2022 #1
Yup! But, it almost doesn't seem like Pride Month here. Behind the Aegis Jun 2022 #2
I do sadly IngridsLittleAngel Jun 2022 #4
Yes, just yesterday a DU poster posted that they don't support marriage equality. beaglelover Jun 2022 #10
Re:1 through 4 explained. Oneironaut Jun 2022 #3
Your comments on one are everything. hunter Jun 2022 #6
Curiosity is a wonderful thing IngridsLittleAngel Jun 2022 #8
Well said and explained. My thoughts on your thoughts... IngridsLittleAngel Jun 2022 #7
r&k ❤ Thank you. MerryBlooms Jun 2022 #5
One of my ways sarisataka Jun 2022 #9
Also--Say and mean "I'm sorry,I'm still learning" Maeve Jun 2022 #11
 

IngridsLittleAngel

(1,962 posts)
1. A valuable lesson to everyone
Wed Jun 15, 2022, 02:51 AM
Jun 2022

This post always applies to anyone who wants to be a better ally to any minority. Following those four rules - especially #3 - will make life better for many people, and will help people be a better ally - whether it's an ally to a a person of color, or an immigrant, or someone with a disability, and obviously LGBTQ's.

We do appreciate all of our allies for sure. Thank you. But the key to being the best ally you can be? Those four rules.

 

IngridsLittleAngel

(1,962 posts)
4. I do sadly
Wed Jun 15, 2022, 03:14 PM
Jun 2022

There's been a few things posted here this month that have been rather shocking and a bit hurtful, to say the least. And of course, that says nothing for what's going on in the mainstream media, and what the QOP and their foot soldiers have been doing this month.

beaglelover

(3,476 posts)
10. Yes, just yesterday a DU poster posted that they don't support marriage equality.
Wed Jun 15, 2022, 05:03 PM
Jun 2022

I think they are posting on the wrong website.

Oneironaut

(5,494 posts)
3. Re:1 through 4 explained.
Wed Jun 15, 2022, 03:07 PM
Jun 2022

1. Be Curious And Open-Minded

Actually listen to LGBT when they describe what it’s like to be us, instead of inventing your own theories, or, believing shitty blogs on Facebook. Anyone who fails this one will not succeed in the next three, and isn’t worth trying to convince of anything. They’re a lost cause. If you believe intellectual swill like Breitbart, you’re too stupid to grasp the basic tenets that someone could have a neurological difference from you, and that doesn’t make them evil.

Also, it isn’t up to is to educate you on basic respect. You should have learned that as a 5 year old. Questioning someone’s right to live isn’t a matter of you not being educated on LGBT issues - you’re just a bad person.

I’m happy to educate anyone on the subject, and explain my own experiences. If you say things like, “But, what if I identified as Santa Claus,” then fuck off. Go learn basic logic and common sense and then come back.

2. Learn To ‘Pass The Mic’

Yes. This one is hard for 2022 America, where “I’m not a doctor but…” opinions are treated as near-fact, especially on subjects like COVID or the LGBT community.

You’re not an expert. Learn to ask questions and be curious (#1), and be able to admit you were wrong, rather than digging in and trying to justify being a dumbass by using rhetoric. Stop trying to use the words of disgraced crackpots or self-appointed experts to confirm your opinion, and, be open to it being changed.

Stop telling me what I am. I know what I am. Stop comparing my experience to stupid shit like schizophrenia, which you only do to be an asshole and elicit an emotional response. Stop telling adults what type of adult they should love.

3. Recognize Your Privilege

We’re not your pets, deserving of pity, or a way of scoring woke points. Waving a pride flag doesn’t do anything to help us.

Actually do something to help us. Call out others for being homophobic and transphobic. Point out when erasure happens, and, actually praise LGBT to your friends. Stop using misogynist and hateful language, even as a joke.

Realize that, while you may not have it easier than me at a micro level, I have challenges that you will never face. You will never be fired for being straight. You will never have to worry about being attacked, raped, or murdered because you’re straight and cis. You won’t have to face street harassment or rude stares for being straight and cis.

Many of us face terror for just being who we are. Our families reject us, and we become homeless. People treat us like we’re dangerous, especially to women and children. The police and system has a bias against us.

4. Take Action

Acknowledge 1-3. That’s the bare minimum you can do. And, above us, vote for people locally and nationally who want to help us.

That is all.

hunter

(38,311 posts)
6. Your comments on one are everything.
Wed Jun 15, 2022, 03:31 PM
Jun 2022

Curiosity and open-mindedness are things many cultures literally beat out of their own children.

 

IngridsLittleAngel

(1,962 posts)
8. Curiosity is a wonderful thing
Wed Jun 15, 2022, 03:49 PM
Jun 2022

I've never understood why so many people choose to have a closed mind and have no interest in learning about life and the world and other people...

Sadly, we are (or are becoming) one of those cultures that beats the curiosity out of children. Or at least does such a thorough job discouraging it that they wind up adults who have no interest in anything outside of their few chosen interests.

 

IngridsLittleAngel

(1,962 posts)
7. Well said and explained. My thoughts on your thoughts...
Wed Jun 15, 2022, 03:46 PM
Jun 2022

You say a lot of here that I want to touch on, and that's okay. So don't mind my reply being a bit lengthy as well...

"Actually listen to LGBT..." So much this. I know I've seen it myself, sadly. I've spoken up about the physical impact that Spironolactone has had on me and it feels like some people would rather believe third-hand myths over first-hand experiences. We know of what we speak - no matter where we fit in in LGBTQ. That should carry more weight than the sludge that fills Facebook or any of the alt-right wacko media.

"Also, it isn't up to us to educate you on basic respect..." When I was in preschool, there were signs on the wall. "Do unto others as you'd want done unto you." Nearly 5 decades later, that's still stuck with me.

"But, what if I identified as Santa Claus..."
Many times, these absurd comparisons get to me too. "You're a woman? Fine, I'm an attack helicopter!" and the like. I can't stand them myself. It shows a lack of empathy, a lack of critical thought and a dangerously closed mind. But the kind of crap to be expected from people who believe "common sense doesn't even exist!" It does, but like gravity, they ignore it at their own peril.

But if someone wants to identify as Santa Claus? Hey, go for it. I have done online fundraising with a person who looks a lot like Santa and goes out quite a bit as Santa - year-round - and does good work. So, you know, maybe they should try identifying as Santa Claus and spreading joy to the world - instead of identifying as assholes and spreading misery to the world.

"You're not an expert..." Most of us aren't. Oh, sure, we have things we know real well. I can go on until I collapse about baseball history and 80's music and classic Star Trek, among a few topics. But do I know it all? Absolutely not. Not about those topics or anything else - besides maybe my own life.

I can talk and talk and talk myself. But as they say: When you're talking, you're not listening. I spend more time listening than talking, by choice.

The problem as you said, though, is that some people end up choosing to listen to the wrong sources. Disgraced crackpots and self-appointed experts and their bullshit should not carry more weight than first-hand experiences, or even the words of allies like President Biden.

We are who we are. Which is okay. People should be who they are, as long as they don't hurt others. No one should be told how to live their life, who they should be, who they should love or any of that.

"Actually do something to help us..." That'd be ideal. That'd be the absolute best way to be an ally. Be supportive. Be kind. When you see homophobia or transphobia or even insensitive jokes, speak up.

But, at the bare minimum... don't get in our way. Don't try to disrupt our lives. We have enough trouble as it is. We don't need more. Besides, they wouldn't want us to disrupt their lives... why disrupt ours?

"I have challenges that you will never face..." That, for sure. Few people have easy lives. We all have problems. We all have challenges. Ours are unique in that we face some very ugly behavior from our own families and "friends."

Straight cisgender people don't get fired or denied opportunities, or disowned by their family and dumped by their friends for saying "I'm straight." We do. Coming out cost me my entire family outside of one person. Coming out cost me many friends, many who wanted to make absurd assumptions or spread lies about me. Our reality is what makes Pat Sajak's "I'm taking a huge risk, but, I'm coming out as straight" "joke" so insensitive and tasteless. Pat isn't going to lose his job for being cishet. Many of us could.

I've endured decades of false "You're harmful to children" accusations. And I have no doubt whatsoever that the police and City Hall have a bias against me here (yes, in wonderful, progressive California.)

"Acknowledge 1-3..." Absolutely. But as I said above: At the bare minimum, stay out of our path and let us be. Support and action and being a staunch ally like Lynda Carter or Joe Biden or Nancy Sinatra or so many others would be awesome and great. We'd love that. But at the very least, if people don't want to get their hands dirty, then don't do anything to make life more difficult for us. Don't carry water for the 'phobes instead of carrying water for us.

Maeve

(42,282 posts)
11. Also--Say and mean "I'm sorry,I'm still learning"
Wed Jun 15, 2022, 05:21 PM
Jun 2022

I know I have said insensitive things, having grown up in stupid times, but I hope to get better over time. If called out, remember the first rule of holes and stop digging!
Thanks for the link

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