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Christina Rees's avatar

I realize you don’t need to hear it from a stranger, but you are SUCH a great writer. Whenever I get your newsletter in my inbox or see your byline, I’m psyched because reading you is a real pleasure. Since you got hounded out of academia (their loss; the world’s gain) and are now truly liberated, your language always sings; your voice is so clear and fluid and strong and human (and funny!). Anyway, you’re a gift and so is your writing. Thank you.

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Paul S's avatar

I'm not gay (or LBTQI+ etc), but unlike most academics, I do spend a lot of my time talking to people (some of them are my friends and family!) who are not academics themselves, and (shock) don't even live in the south of England. Some 'lived experience' to feed back, on behalf of the provincial yokels.

The broad culture war is broadly won (broadly, because the last hold-outs of homophobic bigotry are going to die of old age in the next 20 years). It's now widely considered OK to be gay, by most ordinary people. This is a fantastic achievement, and one that gay (pride) activists deserve enormous credit for.

But gains can be lost, or at least shouldn't be taken for granted. As per your point above - a whole *month*? A month in which one very particular presentation of what it means to be gay (as per your point above, rainbows) is what is rammed home as the definition? A whole month in which corporate woke bullshit is used to flog everything from packs of Skittles to BMWs, and which absolutely nobody is fooled by? A whole month in which - as on the radio in the taxi I was riding in yesterday - being gay and lesbian and queer and trans (and all the rest) are lumped in together and presented as being *the same thing*? Even though any adult with half a brain cell wants to know why a *gender identity* is now supposed to be the same thing as a *sexual orientation*?

This is, to put the point bluntly, poor political strategy. Ordinary people are on the one hand now quite happy to let other people shag whoever they want in the privacy of their own bedrooms. (This is fantastic, unqualified progress.) But ordinary people still have their own complex, often stressful, not always enjoyable or easy, lives to get on with leading, and what most of them may increasingly start to wonder is why they are being asked to gee up the status of (a particular, partial, selective version of) a select group which many of them may soon start to think are doing *better* than they are.

This is the kind of material that backlashes are made of. And even if you think the yokels are at fault, and need to purge the last vestiges of their bigotry...well unless you've got a magic wand by which you'll be doing the cleansing, it might be smart to stop and think about the political realities of how that might play out in future.

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