#2.
What types of discrimination do gay and lesbian people experience?
Your answer :
Two responds from two students
Respond #1
#1. How is the homosexual population similar to and different
from other minority group?
Similar: They have
to fight for many of the same issues as other minority groups did (and continue
to do). Access to equal employment, rights, and services continue to
be a problem. Just like other ethnic minority groups, homosexuals endure
discrimination on a personal level purely based on the group thry identify
with- such as hate speech.
Different: The gay
and lesbian community is comprised of multiple ethnicities and cultures. Unlike
other minority groups, they have no "homeland" that binds them
together and no where that they can go where they are not considered a minority
group.
#2. What types of discrimination do gay and lesbian people
experience?
Beides the constant
hate speech online and elsewhere, gay and lesbian couples are often treated as
though their relationships are not as real or important as those of
heterosexual couples. This is glaringly apparent in states that do not
recognize gay marriage- those couples aren’t awarded the same benefits as
traditional couples (such as hospital visitation and tax breaks. Like their
love is somehow second-class. They are often discriminated against in personal
ways too, business owners have been in the news recently because they are
denying services to homosexuals based on their own beliefs. There is a huge
debate going on between business owners rights to refuse service to anyone, and
customers suing on discrimination-based claims.
Your replay :
Respond #2
#1. The homosexual
population is like all the other groups in our society. They really are no
different except for their partner preferences. They work, go to school, sleep,
eat and breathe the same as we do. They are still looked down upon as some
minority groups and are restricted certain rights in most states. Society as a
whole still have a hard time excepting them for who they are because of their
upbringing and their religious beliefs. That is not to say that don't except
them as people, because they probably do, they just don't approve of the
"choice" they believe they are making. I honestly do not know how the
homosexual population is different from other minority groups other than the
ridicule and lack of rights. They are going through and have gone through what
other groups have suffered through. The majority of people seem to not want to
hear their voices.
#2. I believe people have been
ingrained about what is socially normal. Athletes for example, when we look at
them we don't think about the possibilities of them being gay or lesbian,
because a lot of them are icons or they are in the social media. Recently
severely male basketball players have come out admitting that they were gay and
they just didn't want to hide it anymore. They had a lot of supporters but then
there were the haters. Some players saying they didn't want to share the same
locker room as a gay person or that they were uncomfortable being naked around
a gay person. I think a lot of that comes from fear. Fear of something
different, of it being out of their comfort zones. Gay and lesbians are
ridiculed a lot especially by those with deep religious beliefs and those in
the later generations, because it was not something widely spoke of before.
Your replay :
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