dwmckim
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Apr 13, 2002
- Messages
- 2,874
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- 848
Just a few various things i'd like to throw out.
As i mentioned earlier (in the other thread) i have tremendous respect for anyone who's a moderator - it's not easy. I was a moderator a LONG time ago when my life was a lot less complicated and had much more free time to devote to the forums. In that entire time, i NEVER deleted or closed a thread. I did bring threads to the attention of other moderators and took place in inter-moderator discussions about certain issues but it is possible to be hands off and view such actions as "last resorts only" and not "hair trigger pre-emptive strikes". No, it's not easy or fun as Fozzie pointed out, but it has been overly and needlessly commonplace as of late and some mods have gone to the extreme of taking the measures as quick easy fixes.
As another openly gay man, i'll also say that in recent years, i've felt like the MC forums have become a less gay-friendly place than it's historically been. I've had similar experiences where when the subject of my affectional preference comes up in a conversation in even a very minor way, threads where the "G" word gets uttered seems to be an early predictor of whether something will happen to the thread.
I've always (online and in real life) been what i describe as quietly open. I don't deny or cover who i am but it's not the first thing anyone has to know about me either. I don't go out of the way to bring it up but i also will honestly and candidly answer when the topic of love interests, crushes, relationships, etc. come up. Even though i'm gay, i've had very little huge experiences in my life in terms of getting involved with anyone, i'm interested in friend-based and not sexual-based relationships and never even really ever been sexually active. It's actually darkly ironic since i've probably done much less than most other gay people i know and have endured the most forms of anti-gay discrimination out of those i know - with the thankful exception of physical violence, i've been through just about every type of bigotry and discrimination - harassment, loss of home/family, loss of ten-year plus job, anti-gay supervisors at other jobs, vandalism to car and home.
I love to discuss areas of my fandom in-depth, including how my experiences as a gay person colors various aspects of my Muppet fandom and vice-versa. I have different perspectives on various things and i like to be able to throw those experiences out on the table as interesting points of view that might not occur to someone with a different background. But it's not as easy to do that here as it once was. There are lots of gay Muppet fans (and i don't think that's at all an accident or a random statistic) and it's nice to also see how shared or diverse those perceptions are among others (in fact there was even once a yahoogroup for gay Muppet fans which was quite active for a while called Friends of Piggy). I also know that a large number of gay fans who were here have given this forum up for TP. And yes, though it's unlikely it would ever happen, i see how through the history of the forum, there have been quite a few people who actually have become real-life couples whose relationships started from their shared Muppet love here on the forum and often think how wonderful if something like that were to ever happen to me. I historically shy away from relationships but a fellow major Muppet/Henson fan is someone that would be at the top of my list of people i would love to get together with.
What so often gets lost is that religion has often become so politicized (due to a lot of major church leaders/television figureheads being more political figures first, religious teachers second) spreading a very false message that "gay" and "christian" (or other religion) are polar opposites. People are led to believe that there are no such things as people who are just as much gay as they are religious. In Phoenix alone, there is a thriving gay Christian community with several churches specifically catering to that community (and others that are openly welcome). In the spirit of full disclosure, i do have to admit that my life experiences have gradually over time led my to my current stage as an agnostic but a decade and a half ago i was very active in our gay church community and it was a major part of my life at that time. I really wish every person who felt that being gay and being religious were mutually exclusive could attend a worship service in a congregation where the majority of attendants were gay - they would see the same love, the same devoted worshipping, the same desires for a spiritual closeness with their deity that exists anywhere else. Having been raised with no formal religious training and given the freedom to grow up and make up own decisions (one of the things my parents really did right), i would actually say that my experiences as a gay person brought me CLOSER to the church at that time in my life.
But i digress, sometimes its subtle, other times more overt but i have noticed a change in the atmosphere in terms of acceptance that never existed before. And part of it comes from the selective closing of threads that often tends to skew suspiciously heavy towards ones where a gay member's openness becomes part of the discussion.
As i mentioned earlier (in the other thread) i have tremendous respect for anyone who's a moderator - it's not easy. I was a moderator a LONG time ago when my life was a lot less complicated and had much more free time to devote to the forums. In that entire time, i NEVER deleted or closed a thread. I did bring threads to the attention of other moderators and took place in inter-moderator discussions about certain issues but it is possible to be hands off and view such actions as "last resorts only" and not "hair trigger pre-emptive strikes". No, it's not easy or fun as Fozzie pointed out, but it has been overly and needlessly commonplace as of late and some mods have gone to the extreme of taking the measures as quick easy fixes.
As another openly gay man, i'll also say that in recent years, i've felt like the MC forums have become a less gay-friendly place than it's historically been. I've had similar experiences where when the subject of my affectional preference comes up in a conversation in even a very minor way, threads where the "G" word gets uttered seems to be an early predictor of whether something will happen to the thread.
I've always (online and in real life) been what i describe as quietly open. I don't deny or cover who i am but it's not the first thing anyone has to know about me either. I don't go out of the way to bring it up but i also will honestly and candidly answer when the topic of love interests, crushes, relationships, etc. come up. Even though i'm gay, i've had very little huge experiences in my life in terms of getting involved with anyone, i'm interested in friend-based and not sexual-based relationships and never even really ever been sexually active. It's actually darkly ironic since i've probably done much less than most other gay people i know and have endured the most forms of anti-gay discrimination out of those i know - with the thankful exception of physical violence, i've been through just about every type of bigotry and discrimination - harassment, loss of home/family, loss of ten-year plus job, anti-gay supervisors at other jobs, vandalism to car and home.
I love to discuss areas of my fandom in-depth, including how my experiences as a gay person colors various aspects of my Muppet fandom and vice-versa. I have different perspectives on various things and i like to be able to throw those experiences out on the table as interesting points of view that might not occur to someone with a different background. But it's not as easy to do that here as it once was. There are lots of gay Muppet fans (and i don't think that's at all an accident or a random statistic) and it's nice to also see how shared or diverse those perceptions are among others (in fact there was even once a yahoogroup for gay Muppet fans which was quite active for a while called Friends of Piggy). I also know that a large number of gay fans who were here have given this forum up for TP. And yes, though it's unlikely it would ever happen, i see how through the history of the forum, there have been quite a few people who actually have become real-life couples whose relationships started from their shared Muppet love here on the forum and often think how wonderful if something like that were to ever happen to me. I historically shy away from relationships but a fellow major Muppet/Henson fan is someone that would be at the top of my list of people i would love to get together with.
What so often gets lost is that religion has often become so politicized (due to a lot of major church leaders/television figureheads being more political figures first, religious teachers second) spreading a very false message that "gay" and "christian" (or other religion) are polar opposites. People are led to believe that there are no such things as people who are just as much gay as they are religious. In Phoenix alone, there is a thriving gay Christian community with several churches specifically catering to that community (and others that are openly welcome). In the spirit of full disclosure, i do have to admit that my life experiences have gradually over time led my to my current stage as an agnostic but a decade and a half ago i was very active in our gay church community and it was a major part of my life at that time. I really wish every person who felt that being gay and being religious were mutually exclusive could attend a worship service in a congregation where the majority of attendants were gay - they would see the same love, the same devoted worshipping, the same desires for a spiritual closeness with their deity that exists anywhere else. Having been raised with no formal religious training and given the freedom to grow up and make up own decisions (one of the things my parents really did right), i would actually say that my experiences as a gay person brought me CLOSER to the church at that time in my life.
But i digress, sometimes its subtle, other times more overt but i have noticed a change in the atmosphere in terms of acceptance that never existed before. And part of it comes from the selective closing of threads that often tends to skew suspiciously heavy towards ones where a gay member's openness becomes part of the discussion.