If it's an incredibly common experience, why should it NOT have a word to describe it?peruvianskys said:I don't care what people call themselves, but the self-importance it must take to invent a label like "demisexual" or "grey ace" to describe an incredibly common experience most people have and don't care about is staggering - as if your experience of the world is so unique and indescribably special that plebians could not possibly understand without the invention of an entire new set of terminology.
I mean, people are gonna talk about it then?
Yeah, and people like you then make them unwelcome in the LGBT+ communities too.peruvianskys said:I also find it offensive when asexuals or "pansexuals" or whatever relate to their orientations as though they are somehow oppressed in the same way homosexuals are. As a man who has sex with other men and who has experienced serious violence and abuse for that, I am not happy to see someone pull the oppression card because they don't fuck anyone, or god forbid, because they only fuck people they're romantically involved with (like most people in the world ever???).
tl;dr Call yourself what you want, but maybe consider that your particular set of feelings isn't revolutionary and new enough to warrant an entire conceptual category of human desire.
It's not like all homosexuals face the same kind of oppression either. Do you live in a country where homosexuality is illegal? Do you face the threat of violence daily? Not oppressed enough to want better treatment then.
Asexuals might not be oppressed the same ways homosexuals are, but it doesn't mean they aren't.
At the very least face ridicule and erasure. Like in this thread.
Also I don't think you know what a pansexual is, they can be attracted to their own gender and face exactly the same persecution homosexuals do.