stuff pansexuals need to know
This is a submission and I support it:
http://rainbowgenderpunk.wordpress.com/2012/02/05/stuff-pansexuals-need-to-know/
Tesseral Harmonics: “Bisexual” is not oppressive, can we talk about biphobia and straight privilege? and other thoughts on bisexuality
This topic has been discussed to death, and yet it continually comes up in tumblr discussion. So let me establish once and for all (I swear, I will never discuss this again) that “bisexual” is not an oppressive identity.
Bisexual is not binarist.
The argument that it is binarist posits that (1) bisexuality is attraction to binary-identified (sometimes people throw in “cis” too) men and women, and that (2) not being attracted to someone means you deny their gender or actively hate them. Clearly, these are both fallacies.
(1) There are many uses of the term “bisexual.” Some take the “bi” to mean “two genders” and don’t specify which. Some take it to mean “same gender and different gender.” Some take it to refer to the two different social spaces they occupy in a binarist world when they are read as straight or read as not straight based on their partner. And many people disregard the constraints of etymology and use it to mean “more than one gender.”
The language police on tumblr have a really unhealthy relationship with etymology. Don’t get me wrong — I adore etymology, and I think it’s important to critique how language reinforces prejudices. But it can only get you so far. The origins of a word do not demarcate the only ways it can be used. Almost any word that we use frequently can be picked apart to justify an argument that it should be banned from our vocabulary. (“Vocabulary,” for example, is ableist, because it is related to the Latin “vocare,” from which we have “vocal,” and who’s to say only people who can speak can use language? We shouldn’t use the word “rape” to refer to nonconsensual sex, because “rape” originally meant kidnapping, and this reinforces the idea that “real” rape involves brute physical force. And so on.)
It is suspicious that people jump on the word “bisexual” so easily, when there’s a multitude of words used frequently in SJ circles that could be branded oppressive based on a quick glance at their etymology. “Lesbian,” for example, is cultural appropriation, because, as we all know, it derives from the name of a Greek island, and, before this appropriation, people from that island were naturally called “lesbians” (and some are trying to reappropriate the term). “Feminism” connotes femininity, and as we all know not all women are feminine, not all feminine people are women, and not all feminists are women. “Straight” is homophobic, because it conflates heterosexuality with correctness, properness, and honesty; it implies that those who are not straight are “crooked”: immoral, dishonest, and improper. The “trans-” in “transgender” and “transsexual” is cissexist, because “trans-” means “across” or “beyond,” and it implies that trans people necessarily “cross” gender or occupy a space beyond the binary. However, these arguments do not dominate tumblr (yet — I hope I didn’t start anything terrible), because even though their etymology is “problematic” (and it some cases, it really is), these words have meaning and power beyond, and sometimes despite, their etymology. The question is “Does their value outweigh their harm?” They are useful terms and to discard them because someone with a Greco-Latin roots dictionary can find fault with them would be silly. And the same is true of “bisexual.”
(2) Some people do use “bisexual” to mean “men and women.” And that is OK! You have the right to be attracted to whomever you like. You are under no obligation to be attracted to any particular person or group. That is your right as a sexually autonomous human being. Identifying your attractions (or your identity!) along the binary does not make you binarist.
If you are not attracted to non-binary people, that does not mean you hate non-binary people. One of the most harmful messages of the current trend of sex positivity is that support=sex. There are many ways of supporting people without sleeping with them. Indeed, showing your support for non-binary people/trans people/women/men/POC/whoever by sleeping with them is creepy, fetishizing, and gross. It reminds me of this meme:
[Image text: “How can I be misogynist if I love having sex with women?”]
Moving on. Biphobia is a thing.
A lot of smart people I really respect have been talking about how we need to discard the term “biphobia” because it suggests an axis of oppression in which bisexuals lose and gay/lesbian and straight people win. Obviously, such an axis is just as ridiculous as so-called “sexual privilege,” in which straight and LGBQ people wield power and privilege over straight and LGBQ asexuals alike.
So let me get this clear: I don’t mean biphobia with the checklists. Monosexism is not an actual axis of privilege/oppression. Instead, it’s the reluctant extension of a heterosexist model to gay people: Gay men are pretty much women, just confused about their gender, and lesbians are practically men, just with gender issues. Bisexuals, silly things, are just confused or way too into sex. What sluttysluts.
People who are gay or lesbian do not wield institutional power and privilege over bisexuals. However, there are widely held and firmly entrenched prejudices against bisexuality among both straight people and lesbian/gay/queer people. I like the term “biphobia” because it summarizes those prejudices in one easily recognizable word. I don’t think “-phobia” should be limited to situations of privilege–oppression — for example, “biophobia” is a very useful word, and we don’t need to write up the living things privilege checklist — but if anyone has anyone good arguments to not use the word “biphobia,” please let me know. I have heard the term described as “appropriative,” but I don’t think this is necessarily true. (Privilege checklists, yes.) We can talk about misogyny as a real thing, and yet “misandry” doesn’t automatically assume male oppression by women, unless it’s, say, an MRA using the term. (cinnamonwheel and others have been rocking the “misandry for life” tag, and I’m pretty sure they’re not MRAs.) (This is a shitty analogy, because bisexuals are not analogous to men in terms of power or privilege, but the point is that morphologically similar terms do not have to carry the same SJ framework.) I find the term “biphobia” useful, and it’s what I’m going to use until I hear a sufficiently convincing argument against “biphobia” and a decent alternative to it.
Here are some examples of what I mean when I talk about biphobia:
- The hate that reality-TV star Krissily Kennedy got on Autostraddle when she came out as bisexual
- Dismissing bi women as straight but slutty and bi men as closeted gay liars
- I attended a “queer” event by the LGBTQ group at my school, and when a guy and girl (each, as far as I know, gay) were talking to each other for too long and being too (platonically) affectionate, they were told — as a joke!!111 of course — that they’d better not “turn straight” or they wouldn’t be welcome in the group anymore
- When I wrote an article on homosexuality in high school, and in order to cut down the story to fit the space allotted, I simply deleted the section on bisexuality, because “bisexuals don’t really count” or deserve representation
- When the only Hungarian “LGBT” YouTube show includes comments like these in their “best of” video and otherwise, mention of bisexuality is completely lacking: “Bisexuals are those who can’t decide whether they like boys or girls” (offered as a definition of bisexuality); “Yes, I usually date guys” “Well, in today’s world, who knows?!” (applauded by commenters as a hilarious joke)
- When “bisexual” is the label high school kids would put on their myspace as a joke, along with “divorced” and “salary: over $200,000”
- When everyone prefers “pansexual” and “polysexual” and “queer” and “heteroflexible” over “bisexual,” because “bisexual,” like “lesbian,” is a word that leaves a bad taste in your mouth
In gay people, biphobia tends to come from internalized homophobia (why would you be gay if you have the chance of being straight?) and insecurity (s/he’ll leave me for a woman/man!). It also intersects with misogyny and phallocentricism and straight people’s homophobia. But I don’t think it’s enough to simply call it the intersection of those factors and leave it at that. The way people revile the very word “bisexual” and leap to banish it to the box of oppressive terms speaks to biphobia being a phenomenon that, even though it doesn’t deserve the checklists and axes of oppression, should at least have a name, if we are to talk about it. It doesn’t have to fit the same framework as homophobia.
It’s a big problem that people who are bisexually identified (or engage in bisexual behavior) are dismissed and mocked by gay/queer/lesbian people. I honestly don’t think I need to spell out an explanation of why it’s important for spaces that call themselves “queer” or “LGBT” to be inclusive. In short, anyone who is bi (in name or behavior) is still queer and may need support as a queer person. Biphobia also makes it difficult for anyone who is gay-identified and experiencing sexual fluidity (Lisa Diamond’s research on sexual fluidity (pdf) is super interesting, btw). It also means that gay people who are in “straight” relationships for whatever reasons (family and religion are two examples) are dismissed by the queer community. Biphobia is part of a culture of identity-policing, where if you don’t adhere closely enough to the requirements delineated by the official bureau of gayness you’re out of the club.
But. If we’re going to talk about biphobia, there’s something else we need to talk about. And that’s bisexual access to straight privilege. (You don’t have to call yourself bisexual to experience this — all you need is to be read as straight, especially due to the way you and a partner are read — but it something that certainly some bisexuals experience.) I recommend this excellent article, which covers the topic better than I could: “Bisexuals and straight privilege.”
There are many bisexual people who have access to straight privilege. If you only partner with people of the gender that is socially normative for you, or if you’re in a long-term relationship with such a person, if you’re in an “opposite marriage,” you definitely benefit from heterosexual privilege. I’m not bisexual, but I was in a “straight” relationship recently, and the straight privilege was everywhere. Walking around in public together. The only time I ever tried being (discreetly) affectionate in public in Hungary with someone read as my gender, it barely took half an hour, if that, for a man to yell, “Ew, lesbians!” at us. Of the countless times my ex and I were together in public, we never got harassed once. And then there’s family. My relatives knowing — and approving. My mother sending him presents. My father offering me advice on “the battle of the sexes” (his phrasing and horrible gender essentialism made me scoff in disgust, leading him to get very hurt, and we ended up in a fight, as always — but it was quite different than the epic disowning that would have ensued had I ever gone to him with “girl trouble”).
There’s a myth I saw going around tumblr earlier: Passing privilege is not privilege. I want to dispel this immediately. Passing privilege is absolutely privilege. You may not be accessing that privilege all the time, but when you are, the privileges afforded you are real. Being invisible is shitty, but it doesn’t cancel out the privileges you gain in the meantime.
Bisexual access to straight privilege is complicated. Some people are bi and experience no homophobia for it. Others may experience just as much as, or even more than, gay- or lesbian-identified people. If you’re read as gay or queer from your appearance or gender presentation, it may not matter that you’re in a “straight” partnership when homophobes itching for violence come up to you as you walk down the street alone. If you’ve been in dozens of “straight” relationships and get kicked out your home for your first same-sex relationship, accusations of straight privilege may not mean much to you. Laws targeting homosexuality don’t make exceptions for the bisexuals who are caught having sex or relationships with members of their own gender.
Bisexual access to straight privilege is individually conditioned, depending on your personal circumstances. How much biphobia you experience too may depend on who you are and where you are. But on a group-wide level, they both exist and need to be discussed. I’m tired of the reductionist tendencies on tumblr to either hold up biphobia as the new most oppressed group evar!!11 or dismiss it entirely.
Source: mikroblogolas
I think you need to sit down and be honest with her, when you’re ready, but I think the sooner, the better. You need to tell her why you told her that you were bi, even though you knew you were a lesbian. And you need to explain to her that gay and lesbian couples can have children and have a family, just like anyone else. Tell her that even straight couples who are infertile can have babies and it doesn’t make them any less of a family. Talk about the different ways gay and lesbian couples can have children. Educate her. (Do some research first and have websites etc. to show her). But if you have no intention of ever having kids, I don’t think you have to tell her that just yet. First, I don’t know how old you are, but you might change your mind about whether or not you want kids. A future partner might also change your mind. Second, I don’t think it’s necessarily your responsibility to tell your parents that you don’t want kids (if you don’t) at this time just because you wanted to come out to her. One thing at a time, I say.
Also, I too was asked by my mother and my sister when I came out as bi if I was really gay, and even one of my sister’s lesbian friends as me that when I first met her (6 years after first coming out). It’s a shitty question for bisexuals to get, because you still question whether or not they believe you when you say “no, I’m bi.” I sort of understand the reason why some gay and lesbian people say it, but I wish you would stop acting like being bisexual is somehow a cushion before the blow of admitting that you’re gay. I’m not gay, and I still wonder what people think about my sexual orientation and it doesn’t feel very coushiony. I think anything is a cushion as long as it’s not true, but close enough to the truth. (I said to myself, in my head, that I was gay, before I came out, but it only made me feel better because I knew it wasn’t the truth, it was just close to the truth…admitting to myself that I was bisexual was much more scary because then I would have to face my reality.)
Source: queersecrets
image: bisexual flag with polyamoury symbol (heart with an infinity symbol around it), adapted with rainbow colours
text:
it feels impossible that any lesbian
could (or would) love me
because i’m married to a man
Okay peoples, if you at least read the text given by the queer secrets person, you would have realized that the symbol on top of the heart is a queer polyamorous symbol. And if you didn’t knew what that was, you could have taken it as an opportunity to educate yourself. www.lovemore.com Poly=being able to date and/or fall in love with more than one person at the same time with the knowledge and consent of all parties involved. i.e. not an affair, not cheating, etc. And being romantically involved with more than one person take A LOT of love and commitment. And people who are poly and also happen to be bisexual get shit for “wanting to date one of each sex just because they’re attracted to both sexes.” That’s really not always how it works. There are bi people who are dating more than one person of a particular gender, too. There are also plenty of bisexuals who aren’t poly, and there are plenty of poly people who are only attracted to one sex (straight and gay/lesbian people) and are dating multiple people, but there’s no “clever” comment you can say about their sexual orientation in regard to their relationship decisions. So you’re really just spewing biphobia while remaining ignorant of polyamory and acting as if polyamory is sinful (while more conservatives say that everything and everyone within the LGBT community is sinful), even though at least poly people are making an informed decision based on love and commitment instead of blindly following a heteronormative system. (not that you can’t make an well-informed, truly educated decision to be monogamous, though).
Anyways, less than half of all poly people are bi, which means a lot of others are heterosexual and gay/lesbian. There are plenty of lesbian poly people in which would date the submitter. Sure, there is plenty prejudice among lesbians in regard to bisexual women, but less so in the polyamorous community. And even though there is some prejudice among some lesbian poly women, who cares, there are plenty of other poly lesbians who are cool with you having a husband and there are plenty of bisexual poly women as well. You don’t need to date a lesbian in order to date a woman, remember that.
Source: queersecrets
This makes me so fucking mad. Read this and be enraged with me!
***This is a 2005 study that will make you (bisexuals) angry and we should stop talking about because it was poorly done (read below my opinions on why) and it was redone more accurately and actually comes to the conclusion that bisexual men exist***
No Surprise for Bisexual Men: Report Indicates they Exist
Why the 2005 study sucks:
1) I wonder where they got these self-identified bisexual men from…gay clubs maybe? Not, from a wide-range of places that have nothing to do with the gay community? Bisexual men who are only in relationships with men, maybe? Not self-identified bi men who are also in relationships and marriages with women? In fact, they got them from gay and alternative newspapers. Yeah, not bisexual newspapers, but gay ones (there’s really no such thing as bi newspapers, though our community has been trying). And “LGBT” newspapers are still just gay newspapers. Yeah, there’s not much equality even within the LGBT community.
2) How many men did they even use in this study? Even the article states that more men need to be included within this study to have an official conclusion. So what was the point of even such an article being published? Because they can. People write articles all the time about studies that have no scientific conclusion, but the articles are written in such a way that makes it seem like the study has a scientific conclusion. It’s simply just something to write about. In fact, only 33 self-identified bisexual men were used in this study. Are you fucking kidding me!? That isn’t even close to enough people to state anything about anything in a scientific study.
3) How did they define bisexuality? Oh, you mean, the men didn’t say “I’m bisexual”? They just said “I’m a kinsey 2,” “I’m a kinsey 3,” “I’m a kinsey 4.” Well, just because someone says they’re a Kinsey 2, 3 or 4 doesn’t mean they identify as bisexual. In fact, some Kinsey 2s may identify as straight and some Kinsey 4s may identify as gay. (Conversely, some Kinsey 1s may identify as bisexual, and some Kinsey 5s may identify as bisexual). People do not need to be equally attracted to men and women, and do not need to be equally arousable via porn to men and women to determine whether or not they are truly bisexual. Is there even such a thing as being truly straight? or truly gay? Why yes, there are Kinsey 0s and Kinsey 6s, but why were straight and homosexual people identifying as anything other than 0 or 6? Isn’t there much more variety and overlap than three distinct categories? Hence, the Kinsey scale, that was even used in this study.
4) I didn’t realize that only involving males in studies determined conclusions we can make about human beings.
5) I didn’t realize that the only way and most accurate way to determine sexual attraction was by measuring how erect a man got. Men can become erect when being raped by a woman or another man, whether gay, straight or bisexual, and truly not wanting the experience, that doesn’t define their sexual orientation nor does it define whether or not they actually wanted sex with that person.
6) I didn’t realize that the only way and most accurate way to determine sexual attraction was by measuring how erect a man got from porn. As a bisexual woman, I don’t get aroused by every sex scene I see (between any variant of genders; male-male, male-female, female-female), but that doesn’t mean I’m not bisexual. Sometimes they’re too violent, (for others, not violent enough), sometimes they are things I’m not into, sometimes I’m not attracted to the people at hand (blondes vs. brunettes, race, height, body type, lipstick lesbian vs. bull dyke and the great number of gender differences in between, macho man vs. sensitive guy and the great number of gender differences in between, etc.). There are so many variables besides what sex the person is in a porno, and that can affect someone’s state of arousal. In addition, as a bisexual woman, if you showed a video of women having sex with each other vs. men having sex with each other, I’m more likely to be aroused by the women. Why? not because I’m more attracted to women than men, but because I AM a woman, and I can imagine me being one of them. That doesn’t mean I’m gay, it just means I’m a bisexual WOMAN. So it makes sense for bisexual men to be more into the men having sex than women having sex, they’re not women. And of course straight men are more aroused by women having sex with each other than bisexual men; the straight men don’t need to see them being involved within it. (Straight) men, sadly, see women’s sexuality as property of men…why else would men get turned on by lesbians? (they think they can still get action from them even though that’s not how lesbianism works). Bisexual men are more knowledgeable about the LGBT community, sexual orientation, and because of that would never try to get with lesbians.
7) This study also treats men as animals; that they should be aroused at any given time, no matter what, by something they’re attracted to. I’m sorry, but sometimes people are on medication that lowers their sex drive, people get depressed, people have stress in their lives, relationship or family problems…just because someone is attracted to a particular sex or gender does not mean they will always get aroused when being shown a porno. Not to mention all of the variables within the actual porno that could affect whether or not someone does not become aroused to a gender they are attracted to, stated above. In fact, “1/3 of the men in each group (Kinsey 0s & 1s, Kinsey 2s, 3s, and 4s, and Kinsey 5s & 6s) showed no significant arousal watching the movies.” So you mean, of the 33 bisexual men used, only about 22 were actually used to show results, an even more ridiculously low study group.
8) Why are we taking opinions from gay men about bisexual men? There is a long history of biphobia in the gay community, especially among gay men.
9) “Research on sexual orientation has been based almost entirely on self-reports, and this is one of the few good studies using physiological measures,” said Dr. Lisa Diamond, an associate professor of psychology and gender identity at the University of Utah, who was not involved in the study. First of all, this isn’t true. Most studies try to use this horribly inaccurate method of testing one’s sexual attraction (by measuring erection); this isn’t a new method and it’s not a good study (read #1-8). Not to mention, that Lisa Diamond does tons of studies on women’s sexuality and finds that sexuality is fluid, some women who previously identified as straight, identify as bisexual, and some women who previously identified as gay, identify as bisexual, and vice versa for both the former and latter. She would not claim that bisexuality does not exist and would agree with the variety and overlap of the Kinsey scale; this does not mean that bisexuality as a stable sexual orientation does not exist; if that was your conclusion, your conclusion would also have to be that heterosexuality and homosexuality are also not stable sexual orientations. Overlap between the three sexual orientations does not mean that none or any of the three sexual orientations do not exist.
10) The most accurate study so far, done 6 years later (and too much later, if you ask me), despite using this horrible technique of measuring male erections after watching pornos, used self-identified bisexual men who have had long-term sexual relationships with both men and women (at least 2 of each, at least 3 months each) and were not found in gay clubs. This much better study took into account some important variables that other studies have not bothered to do so. Not surprisingly, this is the only study that actually did come to the conclusion that bisexual men exist, not from just an life-long identity standpoint, but from a physiological one. All of the self-identified bisexual men in this study were found be bisexual via the definition of being equally physically aroused (measurement of penis erection) by both men and women from watching pornos. Does this mean that the bisexual men they didn’t use in this study, because they didn’t make the cut, aren’t bisexual? Of course not, it just means that they have not had the experiences/opportunity to have both 2 male and 2 female 3-month plus long-term sexual relationships and may or may not be more attracted to men or women over the other. Bisexuality can technically be anywhere from a Kinsey 1 to a Kinsey 5. Bisexuality may be considered more likely to be between a Kinsey 2 and a Kinsey 4, but it’s up to the individual whether or not they want to identify as bisexual, and only the individual knows who they’re attracted to. At the end of the day, scientists are happy that they were able to accurately test the existence of male bisexuality within labs, and the bisexual community is also happy so we can stop being told that we don’t exist, but that doesn’t mean that measuring ones penis after watching a porno is the only way or best way to see who is and who is not bisexual.
Perhaps, start learning from bisexuals, the bisexual community, bisexual leaders and activists. We wouldn’t be fighting so hard for something that didn’t exist.
Source: biconfessions
Gathering of the Bi Clan: Bisexual, Pansexual, Fluid Institue at Creating Change
Yet despite CC’s (Creating Change) nearly 30 years of existence as a Brigadoon of queer leadership togetherness and training, this will be only the third consecutive time the gathering has hosted a bi “institute” — a one-day pre-CC conclave, and it’s one of the few times the CC has had several bi-identified workshops at the same location.
Why is that? Why is it that even after more than 40 years since the modern gay movement exploded into being during the Stonewall Riots, it’s only now that bi people are beginning to be more visible at CC, let alone the rest of (American) society?
Well, it could be because bi people were too timid or shy, too non-insistent, too chameleon-like (gay in gay setting, straight in straight situations), too unsure or too scorned and rejected, and/or we were insistent — and shown the door, or not even allowed through the door.
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