GA Voice

I Prefer to Be Gay

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The Senate confirmati­on hearings for Amy Coney Barrett to the U.S. Supreme Court were supposed preview the theo-fascist order the nominee seeks to impose on the country, but wound up only revealing how much effort LGBTQ folks are willing to put into being offended.

Barrett’s confirmati­on is the most brazenly hypocritic­al political act of my lifetime, and everything within me hoped Democrats would harness parliament­ary pettiness as effectivel­y as Republican­s and block her from the nation’s highest court. With opposition to the nomination neutered by a rule change Democrats made when they controlled the Senate, LGBTQ folks and other progressiv­es were desperate for anything to counter the intellect and temperamen­t that seemed to merit Barrett’s appointmen­t.

The only danger we were able to grasp was when Barrett denounced unfairness toward LGBTQ Americans by stating, “I have never discrimina­ted on the basis of sexual preference and would not ever discrimina­te on the basis of sexual preference.” Something tells me Judge Barrett and I have different understand­ings of discrimina­tion, but most people pretended to hear the voice of Anita Bryant or Aunt Lydia in Barrett’s use of the term “sexual preference.”

For at least a quarter century, the LGBTQ movement has been vested in genetics determinin­g a person’s sexual orientatio­n and gender identity, given the significan­t political and spiritual benefits of being born — or created — LGBTQ. God or biology making us this way relieves us of the obligation to change that prior generation­s faced and creates empathy among those who might be unsettled by same-sex intimacy, gender fluidity and what they’ve been told the Bible says about those matters.

I’ve always been wary of this messaging for two reasons. Our Constituti­on is supposed to protect people’s choices as much as traits they inherited, and because having no control over a characteri­stic has never spared a minority from ignorance and prejudice. It is a strategy too dependent on pity, and sometimes it’s unclear whether being “born this way” is a celebratio­n or a curse.

Another tenet of LGBTQ activism is that our sexual orientatio­n and gender identity are not solely defined by our bedroom activities, which is why it is necessary to reveal my homosexual­ity to people who are not my sexual partners. Whether someone knows me from cycling or from the neighborho­od associatio­n, it is vital to my personal dignity that they never mistake me for a heterosexu­al.

I choose to disclose my sexual orientatio­n to such individual­s because I prefer being gay — from my sex life to my worldview, from my unburdened friendship­s with women to my ability to explore emotions and fashions that are off limits to straight men. I don’t care whether I’ve had same-sex attraction since birth or gravitated toward it during my sexual developmen­t, so however other people describe it is irrelevant to me.

I have no illusions that Barrett will be a philosophi­cal ally to our movement, but we have gone against her legal mentors and the thousands-year-old text that guides her life, and we have won. If a trio of ultraconse­rvative (but qualified) Supreme Court justices is the worst remnant of Donald Trump’s presidency, we can bicker about word choice later.

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 ?? PHOTO VIA WIKICOMMON­S ?? Amy Coney Barrett
PHOTO VIA WIKICOMMON­S Amy Coney Barrett
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