In the two decades before 2020, visibility, recognition and legal inclusion of gays and lesbians progressed in lock step — larger and more prominent Pride parades, rainbow-lit landmarks, federal legalization of same-sex marriage. That progress translated into something remarkable: Americans’ bias against gay people declined faster than any other bias ever tracked in social surveys.
The NYT says that in just four years, anti-gay bias rose by around 10 percent -- in particular among the youngest American adults — those under 25. This is particularly concerning for those in the LGBTQ+ community, I would suspect. There is much ink being spent on the reasons for this decline in acceptance and support and many ideas offered as to its cause but I am not sure that the decline is all that much of a decline or what that decline means.
If there is such a decline, perhaps the reasons are included in the paragraph quoted above: large and prominent Pride parades, rainbow-lit landmarks, and federal legalization of same-sex marriage. The presumption that to be gay means to embrace the fullness of the LGBTQ+ culture with its over the top flaunting not simply of the desire for someone other than the opposite sex but of a stereotype of what gayness looks like is itself a problem. If you read this blog you know where I stand and I am not going to turn this into another blog post to restate what I have already said. However, I know of and have a few friends with some of gay people who refuse to live out the excesses of scantily clad people wearing rainbows and indulging in sexual acts in public parades, all the rainbow political stuff that attempts to define what it means to be gay, and the desire to change vaunted social institutions and remake them in an LGBTQ+ image. They themselves are rejecting the very stereotypical images of what it means to be gay. In fact, most of them just want to be left alone and live their lives with the same measure of privacy most straight folks enjoy.
The reality is that what is being rejected is probably not so much the freedom for people to do as they please in the privacy of their own homes but the public persona of what some have imposed on the gay community. I do not think that anyone should take much stock in the suggestion of a decline of support for that kind of freedom or privacy but I do think people have had enough of the drag queen culture and the in your face kind of life. That was bound to cause a backlash. The other thing is that the rapid pro-gay bias was its own problem. In the end it did not seem like that campaign was really about equal rights as much as it was about the political and cultural stereotype of what it means to be out and proud gay. The world is moving too fast for most of us -- even liberals! The gains in acceptance and support were not enough for those who insisted upon tying this to the trans culture and those with so-called non-binary genders. People have not had a break in this push for social change that has happened at a dizzying speed and most folks just want a chance to catch their breath.
So before anyone gets the idea that the pendulum has swung on this issue, it would be premature to celebrate. The gay community has the media in their hip pocket and has the educational elite in the other. That is not going to change. Acceptance may be conditioned a bit due to the excesses of those who lived on the liberal and progressive fringe of things but it will take a great deal for American culture and society to return to the public face of the values of the 1950s. I do not believe that is going to happen anytime soon. That said, I am grateful for a slight pause in the whole idea that your sexual desire or your felt gender is the most important part of anyone's identity.



