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In reply to the discussion: I lived and worked openly gay in Saudi Arabia and the UAE for 25 years. [View all]Douglas Carpenter
(20,226 posts)72. from what I have been told by those who are far more experienced in personal relationships
with locals - the men do talk among themselves about such things- and will comment about who they think is really good looking among other men - now these by all means would be men who would certainly consider themselves completely straight
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I lived and worked openly gay in Saudi Arabia and the UAE for 25 years. [View all]
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
OP
actually most gay western people and Asian people for that matter felt little or no oppression
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#3
All that denied but very real sexual activity is part of the problem, Doug.
Bluenorthwest
Oct 2014
#19
I lived in a normal neighborhood in the UAE - but in Saudi I lived on compounds
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#31
as far as foreign Lesbians - I would say they could live their own lives fairly freely
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#105
from what I have been told by those who are far more experienced in personal relationships
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#72
Well, yes, but that's more of a cultural thing--it doesn't always mean what you're saying it means.
MADem
Oct 2014
#83
"and sit on a tribunal that puts a gay guy to death on the other hand." So true, and so sad.
nomorenomore08
Oct 2014
#140
The Western World understands it Doug. I see it as a form of deep denial of truth.
Bluenorthwest
Oct 2014
#25
If its such a common subtext, why are LGBT people hunted and punished under the law?
riderinthestorm
Oct 2014
#46
I am not glossing over anything. I am reporting my personal experience
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#50
well -all I can tell you is talk to other gay people who lived and worked in the Middle East and
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#65
Correct - in Saudi Arabia women can't drive and that sounds pretty damned oppressive to me too
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#81
Why are Women not allowed to drive and walk freely about with their hair in the wind?
seveneyes
Oct 2014
#4
It's because of Wahhabism. And that's Saudi Arabia, not the entire Muslim world n/t
Violet_Crumble
Oct 2014
#5
It's a satrical reading of your views 'they won't accept their gay children and sometimes they
Bluenorthwest
Oct 2014
#13
I'm not selling anything and I am not expressing any views or opinions whatsoever
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#24
as far as I known Saudi is the only Islamic country that has that rule about drving and mandates
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#6
The questoin asked was 'why do they not let women drive' not 'is SA the only country that has that
Bluenorthwest
Oct 2014
#11
There are asinine hijab rules in Iran now, too (not before under shah). Women can drive, though. nt
MADem
Oct 2014
#73
Well, under the Shah, the secret police could rape whoever they wanted, to "force confession"
Scootaloo
Oct 2014
#152
The whole manteau/hijab business is simply representative of more horrific things--it's not a start
MADem
Oct 2014
#190
yes, Western people are treated with lots of favoritism - no doubt about that
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#22
Who would have thunk Riyadh is a Middle Eastern version of Chelsea, West Hollywood, and Fire Island?
DemocratSinceBirth
Oct 2014
#23
that it was not. Riyadh is got to be the most soulless city I have ever visited. The place has no
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#26
Arguing with anecdotes or one's personal experience as a basis is always fraught with danger, ergo
DemocratSinceBirth
Oct 2014
#159
I know about these reports a I have scene the youtube videos - I'm only reporting the on-the-ground
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#157
On the ground? You lived in a COMPOUND in SA--you might as well have been living in Cleveland.
MADem
Oct 2014
#169
I worked with lots and lots of Saudis - I knew many, many gay people who lived downtown
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#171
You most have been working amidst an elite… people wealthy enough to live in a protected bubble.
KittyWampus
Oct 2014
#27
My first job was in a remote village in the mountains in a tribal region - I did live on a western
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#34
forget it. it's a lost cause here on DU. There is a very loud although I have to wonder just how
liberal_at_heart
Oct 2014
#29
Jeeze, what's next - "Saudi Arabia is a great vacation hot-spot for Jews"?
bullwinkle428
Oct 2014
#30
no, actually I an glad I don't live there anymore. I am only trying to explain what it was like
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#32
What is was like for gay men -- It's only hellish for HALF of the human race, then.
whathehell
Oct 2014
#42
the society is very oppressive toward women. It is not possible for any rational person to deny that
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#47
I would say most western women who worked there enjoyed theit time there. But westerners in general
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#48
I hope you can understand this. For me, the way I was raised, it is not good to enjoy being treated
Bluenorthwest
Oct 2014
#54
ANY western person living, working or even vacationing in ANY developing country is almost certainly
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#58
They still can't go anywhere without hijab/chador or a male guardian--so it's only "OK" on the
MADem
Oct 2014
#100
there's little if any acceptance of people openly identifying themselves as gay in the Islamic world
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#45
"whenever a man and woman are alone in a room the third person is Satan." That is just...
nomorenomore08
Oct 2014
#141
It is the same way here. The fundamental religionists preach against and seek to punish gay people
Bluenorthwest
Oct 2014
#56
Is it still true SA does not allow Churche or other house of worship built there?
hrmjustin
Oct 2014
#57
yes, however there are two churches on the Aramco compound in Khobar and of course there are chapels
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#59
as far as Saudi Arabia is concerned - that would pretty much be the case
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#67
there are churches in the UAE and Hindu temples too. It is not a western democracy but it is a lot
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#97
Maybe what you are describing is how gay folks used to be treated in the USA
DemocratSinceBirth
Oct 2014
#62
the premise of my OP is that I was openly gay in Saudi Arabia and it was well known by everyone I
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#89
Yes, I think you have fully argued against the premise of your op with your own replies.
NCTraveler
Oct 2014
#107
You were an infidel; had you been a practicing Muslim you would have had trouble. BIG trouble.
MADem
Oct 2014
#173
I knew only a few gay Muslims - but they were married with children - they never had any problems
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#176
I think your commentary and "No problem, dude" attitude is disturbing in the extreme.
MADem
Oct 2014
#177
I guess if I just made up a bunch of lies It would be less disturbing - but I am reporting what I
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#178
I'm simply reporting what I saw,lived and experienced for 25 years- living and working closely with
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#180
You're simply turning a blind eye to persecution and discrimination because it didn't touch YOU.
MADem
Oct 2014
#181
It didn't touch anyone else I knew either except when I was working the remote tribal region of
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#185
So, those people at Amnesty International are a buncha liars? Those people pleading for asylum
MADem
Oct 2014
#191
I don't understand the contradiction either - Lots and lots of openly gay foreign workers in a place
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#192
This is probably a bit TL/DR, but I hope you'll try to wade through it and I hope I am expressing
MADem
Oct 2014
#197
I was certainly treated with more deferance and respect when I worked in the Middle East than when
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#198
Had you been "one of them," though, that deference and respect would have given way to
MADem
Oct 2014
#202
I think the article is a bit more nuanced than what you are describing
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#204
It's plausible deniability--as someone upthread averred, it's "Republican Gay"--but with the added
MADem
Oct 2014
#205
I wrote that up thread. The OP stipulates being GLTB is no biggie. It's all cool
riderinthestorm
Oct 2014
#116
I didn't say that and you know I didn't say that. I am writing about my personal experience
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#122
Your OP is a "contradiction" of pretty much every other post you've made in the thread
riderinthestorm
Oct 2014
#123
well I knew lots and lots of very openly gay western people who worked in the middle east
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#124
it is not a liberal democracy - that's for sure. Of course I could not have imagined anyone
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#92
well that's true. Both societies advanced a lot since the 1960's - considering where they were at in
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#95
But people did so identify and advocate, not just in the 60's but in previous decades....
Bluenorthwest
Oct 2014
#164
I also don't buy the rationale, "they have to do gay sex because of segregation
closeupready
Oct 2014
#90
you're probably right about that. In the Philippines where there is a fair amount of mixing between
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#91
They are closeted. Some call it being on the DL, the down low. Denial is the opposite of acceptance.
Bluenorthwest
Oct 2014
#99
you do understand that in many non-western societies the vast majority of males have had numerous
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#149
Then they are all bisexual hypocrites, punishing others for the very thing they do, according to you
Bluenorthwest
Oct 2014
#161
Not just Islamic countries - you will find around th world many places where most young men have
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#163
Interestingly, in the global survey they did last year, people in the Philippines expressed higher
nomorenomore08
Oct 2014
#142
Yes, and I didn't know you were describing events of "more than 50 years ago"
whathehell
Oct 2014
#134
Extremely lucky if you were doing this openly... I lived for the last 12 years in the UAE and yes
JCMach1
Oct 2014
#112
I was out in the sense that everybody that knew me and socialized with me knew I was gay
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#119
I was in Al Ain Abu Dhabi working at Tawam Hospital from August 1989 to November 1991
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#151
All well and good, but I have watched the CID arrest numbers of people at establishments that cater
JCMach1
Oct 2014
#182
and doesn't compute with the experience of the vast majority of Gay foreign people living and
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#186
Ah, The Reagan Years...hardly the "Age of Enlightenment" when it came to gay issues.
MADem
Oct 2014
#206
Do you think you would have found things as easy if you'd been a native? N.T.
Donald Ian Rankin
Oct 2014
#115
if I had gotten married and had kids - then I could do pretty much what I wanted without a label
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#117
Barbaric indeed, and current news. The OP's claims seem lacking in context when he claims:
Bluenorthwest
Oct 2014
#158
If nothing else, he doesn't seem to have put his own (very fortunate) experiences in enough context.
nomorenomore08
Oct 2014
#170
my experience was the experience of the vast overwhelming majority of western gay people
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#174
I'm not saying it is gay friendly - I'm reporting the fact that I knew lots and lots of "screaming
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#188
What would happen if a gay person took the original post literally..
DemocratSinceBirth
Oct 2014
#136
I would hope most people of any orientation are smarter than that. Regardless, I see your point. n/t
nomorenomore08
Oct 2014
#144
anywhere anyone moves - it is best to assess the situation for one's self before they do anything
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#145
Riyadh is the most boring, soulless city I have ever visited in my life
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#172
The challenge is gays in many M E nations have no protection by law or custom.
DemocratSinceBirth
Oct 2014
#200
I agree - there is no real rule of law - everything is very arbitrary
Douglas Carpenter
Oct 2014
#201