This is the best statement about this. It's all ignorance and stupidity; the idea that all men are all horny, all the time, and will latch onto anything remotely attractive.darron13 said:Homophobia in straight males: The fear that a gay man will treat them the way they treat women.
I'm gay and it's stupid. I've encountered it, and I did indeed enjoy telling him not to flatter himself.
It's depressing, really...
Some hetero guys seem to think that gay women really are missing a hefty dose of man-meat, and that all they need to do is shag the gay girl without mercy and she'll suddenly be hetero (or at least bi. The guy wants to watch the girl on girl action, and then nail both of them). Why else do you think it's such a popular trope in porno flicks?Freezy_Breezy said:For the same reason straight guys hit on lesbians?Ando85 said:In fact I've never seen a gay guy hit on a straight guy period. Why would they? Have you ever encountered someone like this?
Also yes, yes I have.
Actually I believe he was referencing something more along the lines of not knowing whether the person they hit on might be gay or not.LadyRhian said:Some hetero guys seem to think that gay women really are missing a hefty dose of man-meat, and that all they need to do is shag the gay girl without mercy and she'll suddenly be hetero (or at least bi. The guy wants to watch the girl on girl action, and then nail both of them). Why else do you think it's such a popular trope in porno flicks?Freezy_Breezy said:For the same reason straight guys hit on lesbians?Ando85 said:In fact I've never seen a gay guy hit on a straight guy period. Why would they? Have you ever encountered someone like this?
Also yes, yes I have.
True. But those guys who feel that way would only feel it was a bonus if the girl they were hitting on turned out to be gay, because of the above. Though it's not like people come with a sexual orientation tattooed on their forehead. You can't always tell.tobi the good boy said:Actually I believe he was referencing something more along the lines of not knowing whether the person they hit on might be gay or not.LadyRhian said:Some hetero guys seem to think that gay women really are missing a hefty dose of man-meat, and that all they need to do is shag the gay girl without mercy and she'll suddenly be hetero (or at least bi. The guy wants to watch the girl on girl action, and then nail both of them). Why else do you think it's such a popular trope in porno flicks?Freezy_Breezy said:For the same reason straight guys hit on lesbians?Ando85 said:In fact I've never seen a gay guy hit on a straight guy period. Why would they? Have you ever encountered someone like this?
Also yes, yes I have.
Ah, now, this is what I would think under normal circumstances, but you really have to know him to understand.Zen Toombs said:If you said that to a girl, would you be joking?The Diabolical Biz said:A really good friend of mine is bi, and he often jokes that he 'would'.
I can't tell if he's joking, so it's kinda awkward.
There's your answer.
I have multiple gay friends, none of them have ever hit on me (of course one is a lesbian, so it'd be kinda odd if she was to hit on merhizhim said:been hit on. didnt give a fuck. he understood and left me alone.
maybe we should talk about how insane it is to be able to do the Gay panic defense.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gay_panic_defenseThe gay panic defense[1] is a legal defense against charges of assault or murder. A defendant using the gay panic defense claims that he or she acted in a state of violent temporary insanity because of a little-known psychiatric condition called homosexual panic.
i totally killed that cat because....uhm.... cat panic defense mechanism.
TheVioletBandit said:You used the word "homophobia", but I think you mean people that hate gay people, not people that are afraid of them?
Thanks for the definition Woodsey, but as illogical as it may seem , when I see the suffix "phobia" attached to the morpheme homo I think:Woodsey said:TheVioletBandit said:You used the word "homophobia", but I think you mean people that hate gay people, not people that are afraid of them?
homophobia
noun
[mass noun]
an extreme and irrational aversion to homosexuality and homosexual people.
http://oxforddictionaries.com/definition/homophobia?q=homophobia
You are splitting hairs. Whether or not the term is technically correct, you damn sure know what someone means when they use it.TheVioletBandit said:Thanks for the definition Woodsey, but as illogical as it may seem , when I see the suffix "phobia" attached to the morpheme homo I think:Woodsey said:TheVioletBandit said:You used the word "homophobia", but I think you mean people that hate gay people, not people that are afraid of them?
homophobia
noun
[mass noun]
an extreme and irrational aversion to homosexuality and homosexual people.
http://oxforddictionaries.com/definition/homophobia?q=homophobia
ho·mo
   [hoh-moh] Show IPA
noun, plural ho·mos. Slang: Disparaging and Offensive .
a homosexual.
and
pho·bi·a
   [foh-bee-uh] Show IPA
noun, suffix
a persistent, irrational fear of a specific object, activity, or situation that leads to a compelling desire to avoid it.
Because of this, I conclude that the words means "a fear of homosexuals". Of course your oxford dictionary definition doesn't necessarily contest my conclusion. It states that homophobia is, "an extreme and irrational aversion to homosexuals", and we can see in our definition of "phobia" that fear would cause an "aversion" or "compelling desire to avoid thing/person/situation/place."
We can even look at the etymology of the word which is:
Coined by George Weinberg in the 1960s,[9] the term homophobia is a blend of the word homosexual, itself a mix of neo-classical morphemes, and (2) phobia from the Greek φόβος, Phóbos, meaning "fear" or "morbid fear".
The term has little scientific standing, and is for the most part a pejorative term. So, I would suggest the term "Homonegativity" or "homonegativism" in order to avoid the term "homophobia", which is regarded as being unscientific in its presumption of motivation.
Yeah, I know what they mean. Whether or not I understood their meaning was never in question. I have seen tons of people on his forum discuss terminology/grammar/etymology, so why is it wrong or "splitting hairs" now? Also, if a discussion about language is boring or trite to you, your in no way obligated to respond.Avatar Roku said:You are splitting hairs. Whether or not the term is technically correct, you damn sure know what someone means when they use it.TheVioletBandit said:Thanks for the definition Woodsey, but as illogical as it may seem , when I see the suffix "phobia" attached to the morpheme homo I think:Woodsey said:TheVioletBandit said:You used the word "homophobia", but I think you mean people that hate gay people, not people that are afraid of them?
homophobia
noun
[mass noun]
an extreme and irrational aversion to homosexuality and homosexual people.
http://oxforddictionaries.com/definition/homophobia?q=homophobia
ho·mo
   [hoh-moh] Show IPA
noun, plural ho·mos. Slang: Disparaging and Offensive .
a homosexual.
and
pho·bi·a
   [foh-bee-uh] Show IPA
noun, suffix
a persistent, irrational fear of a specific object, activity, or situation that leads to a compelling desire to avoid it.
Because of this, I conclude that the words means "a fear of homosexuals". Of course your oxford dictionary definition doesn't necessarily contest my conclusion. It states that homophobia is, "an extreme and irrational aversion to homosexuals", and we can see in our definition of "phobia" that fear would cause an "aversion" or "compelling desire to avoid thing/person/situation/place."
We can even look at the etymology of the word which is:
Coined by George Weinberg in the 1960s,[9] the term homophobia is a blend of the word homosexual, itself a mix of neo-classical morphemes, and (2) phobia from the Greek φόβος, Phóbos, meaning "fear" or "morbid fear".
The term has little scientific standing, and is for the most part a pejorative term. So, I would suggest the term "Homonegativity" or "homonegativism" in order to avoid the term "homophobia", which is regarded as being unscientific in its presumption of motivation.
My apologies. I have had this argument a lot, but it tended to involve way more people becoming disproportionately offended by the very idea of the word "homophobia", which tends to get on my nerves. That did not happen in this case, however, and I am sorry for assuming.TheVioletBandit said:Yeah, I know what they mean. Whether or not I understood their meaning was never in question. I have seen tons of people on his forum discuss terminology/grammar/etymology, so why is it wrong or "splitting hairs" now? Also, if a discussion about language is boring or trite to you, your in no way obligated to respond.Avatar Roku said:You are splitting hairs. Whether or not the term is technically correct, you damn sure know what someone means when they use it.TheVioletBandit said:Thanks for the definition Woodsey, but as illogical as it may seem , when I see the suffix "phobia" attached to the morpheme homo I think:Woodsey said:TheVioletBandit said:You used the word "homophobia", but I think you mean people that hate gay people, not people that are afraid of them?
homophobia
noun
[mass noun]
an extreme and irrational aversion to homosexuality and homosexual people.
http://oxforddictionaries.com/definition/homophobia?q=homophobia
ho·mo
   [hoh-moh] Show IPA
noun, plural ho·mos. Slang: Disparaging and Offensive .
a homosexual.
and
pho·bi·a
   [foh-bee-uh] Show IPA
noun, suffix
a persistent, irrational fear of a specific object, activity, or situation that leads to a compelling desire to avoid it.
Because of this, I conclude that the words means "a fear of homosexuals". Of course your oxford dictionary definition doesn't necessarily contest my conclusion. It states that homophobia is, "an extreme and irrational aversion to homosexuals", and we can see in our definition of "phobia" that fear would cause an "aversion" or "compelling desire to avoid thing/person/situation/place."
We can even look at the etymology of the word which is:
Coined by George Weinberg in the 1960s,[9] the term homophobia is a blend of the word homosexual, itself a mix of neo-classical morphemes, and (2) phobia from the Greek φόβος, Phóbos, meaning "fear" or "morbid fear".
The term has little scientific standing, and is for the most part a pejorative term. So, I would suggest the term "Homonegativity" or "homonegativism" in order to avoid the term "homophobia", which is regarded as being unscientific in its presumption of motivation.
If you want to get pedantic, why stop at phobia? Homo is just a slang term. When used in a scientific context it means either "Homo [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homo]" the genus of modern humans, or a greek-derived prefix meaning "the same". So I suppose "homonegative" would technically mean something that is not human.TheVioletBandit said:homophobia
The term has little scientific standing, and is for the most part a pejorative term. So, I would suggest the term "Homonegativity" or "homonegativism" in order to avoid the term "homophobia", which is regarded as being unscientific in its presumption of motivation.
I accept your apology, and I can see why you would have thought that. Personal, I'm not offended by the term homophobia; as the term doesn't apply to me, and in some cases I actually think it's a good word to describe individuals(those individuals being the ones that are literally afraid of homosexuality, as in they think being around a gay person will make them gay, or some other nonsense), I just think using the term to describe any opposition to homosexuality is a little weird linguistically speaking. Also, I have seen people get offended by the terms pejorative nature which is kind of silly. Although, I guess the people that would be offend by the term already stupidly hate gay people, so maybe we should expect them to be stupidly offended by the term.Avatar Roku said:My apologies. I have had this argument a lot, but it tended to involve way more people becoming disproportionately offended by the very idea of the word "homophobia", which tends to get on my nerves. That did not happen in this case, however, and I am sorry for assuming.TheVioletBandit said:Yeah, I know what they mean. Whether or not I understood their meaning was never in question. I have seen tons of people on his forum discuss terminology/grammar/etymology, so why is it wrong or "splitting hairs" now? Also, if a discussion about language is boring or trite to you, your in no way obligated to respond.Avatar Roku said:You are splitting hairs. Whether or not the term is technically correct, you damn sure know what someone means when they use it.TheVioletBandit said:Thanks for the definition Woodsey, but as illogical as it may seem , when I see the suffix "phobia" attached to the morpheme homo I think:Woodsey said:TheVioletBandit said:You used the word "homophobia", but I think you mean people that hate gay people, not people that are afraid of them?
homophobia
noun
[mass noun]
an extreme and irrational aversion to homosexuality and homosexual people.
http://oxforddictionaries.com/definition/homophobia?q=homophobia
ho·mo
   [hoh-moh] Show IPA
noun, plural ho·mos. Slang: Disparaging and Offensive .
a homosexual.
and
pho·bi·a
   [foh-bee-uh] Show IPA
noun, suffix
a persistent, irrational fear of a specific object, activity, or situation that leads to a compelling desire to avoid it.
Because of this, I conclude that the words means "a fear of homosexuals". Of course your oxford dictionary definition doesn't necessarily contest my conclusion. It states that homophobia is, "an extreme and irrational aversion to homosexuals", and we can see in our definition of "phobia" that fear would cause an "aversion" or "compelling desire to avoid thing/person/situation/place."
We can even look at the etymology of the word which is:
Coined by George Weinberg in the 1960s,[9] the term homophobia is a blend of the word homosexual, itself a mix of neo-classical morphemes, and (2) phobia from the Greek φόβος, Phóbos, meaning "fear" or "morbid fear".
The term has little scientific standing, and is for the most part a pejorative term. So, I would suggest the term "Homonegativity" or "homonegativism" in order to avoid the term "homophobia", which is regarded as being unscientific in its presumption of motivation.
In general I consider myself a descriptivist. I'm not overly concerned with the rules of language and will happily agree that natural languages in general are irregular, and because of this could be seen as illogical. I simply made a statement about the usage of the word to which someone replied by posting an oxford definition. I Then replied in in the same manner to support my original claim.James Joseph Emerald said:If you want to get pedantic, why stop at phobia? Homo is just a slang term. When used in a scientific context it means either "Homo [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homo]" the genus of modern humans, or a greek-derived prefix meaning "the same". So I suppose "homonegative" would technically mean something that is not human.TheVioletBandit said:homophobia
The term has little scientific standing, and is for the most part a pejorative term. So, I would suggest the term "Homonegativity" or "homonegativism" in order to avoid the term "homophobia", which is regarded as being unscientific in its presumption of motivation.
Point being, getting pedantic with language is hypocritical, because if you look too hard nothing we say actually makes logical sense.
On topic: I assume everyone wants me because I'm a narcissist, not because I'm a homophobe.