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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]whathehell
(30,468 posts)131. False Equivalence Fail.
Give me a break -- There is NO comparison between the way ME Muslim countries
treat women and the way European countries do -- Catholic or not.
Saudi Arabia BEHEADS women for "crimes" like Adultery, and, btw, both Italy and
France are Catholic countries, in at least name, and birth control, mistresses,
and abortion are open and quite legal.
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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