November 22nd, 2009
 

365 Gay: Opinion

Corvino: Beyond Tolerance

, columnist, 365gay.com

“Why do you need other people’s approval?”

The question came from an old (straight but gay-supportive) friend, as we sat over breakfast discussing progress in the gay-rights movement. He meant it sincerely.

“After all,” he continued, “if you like rap music, and I hate rap music, you don’t need my approval to pursue your tastes. Indeed, even if I think listening to rap music is a mind-numbing waste of time, so what? Live and let live.”

That’s true. But when it comes to gay rights, “live and let live” may no longer be enough.

The difference between what he describes and what I seek is sometimes described as that between tolerance and acceptance. Roughly, “tolerance” involves leaving people alone to live as they choose, even when you don’t approve, whereas acceptance involves somehow affirming their choices.

But even “acceptance” seems too weak here. Acceptance sounds close to acquiescence, which is scarcely distinguishable from tolerance. Gay people don’t want merely to be tolerated or accepted, we want to be embraced and encouraged—like everyone else in society.

The shift from tolerance to acceptance is apparent in the movement’s goals. When I came out in the late 1980’s, we were still fighting to make gay sex legal. As late as 2003, homosexual sodomy was criminal in over a dozen states. That’s when the U.S. Supreme Court finally declared sodomy laws unconstitutional in Lawrence v. Texas, overturning Bowers v. Hardwick. Suddenly, tolerance was legally mandated.

Then things changed—rapidly.

Just a few months later, the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts declared the state’s ban on same-sex marriage unconstitutional. Gays and lesbian Americans began legally marrying the following year, and marriage became the predominant gay-rights issue in this country. Now California’s doing it (despite the threat of an amendment overturning that decision), and a handful of other states have civil unions or domestic partnerships.

Legally speaking, when it comes to marriage, “tolerance” may be enough. A marriage is legal whether people approve of it or not. Socially speaking, however, marriage requires more.

That’s because marriage is more than just a relationship between two individuals, recognized by the state. It’s also a relationship between those individuals and a larger community. We symbolize this fact by the witnesses at the wedding, who literally and figuratively stand behind the marrying couple. Marriage thrives when there’s a network of support in place to reinforce it.

Beyond that, marriage is a life-defining relationship that changes those within it. This is why the claim “I accept you but I don’t accept your homosexuality” rings so hollow. When my relationship is life-defining, rejecting it means rejecting me. “Tolerating” it is better, but not by much: nobody wants their life-defining relationship to be treated as one would treat a nuisance, much less “a mind-numbing waste of time.”

And so the rap-music analogy falters in at least two ways. First, listening to music doesn’t require the participation of others (beyond those who produced it), but marriage does. At least, it does in order to work best. Marriage is challenging, and it needs community support. Second, no one wants their life-defining relationships to be merely “tolerated.” Ideally, they should be celebrated and encouraged.

Obviously, not everyone will approve of everyone else’s marriage. You politely applaud at a wedding even if you think the groom is a jerk. But the ideal is still one where others’ participation is crucial. I’ve even been to wedding ceremonies—straight and gay—where the minister turns during the vows and asks, “Do you pledge to support Whosie and Whatsit in their marriage?” and the audience responds “We do!”

That’s one reason why same-sex marriage is so contentious. We are not simply asking people to “tolerate” something we do “in the privacy of our bedrooms.” We are asking them to support and encourage something we do publicly. We are asking them, in effect, to participate.

We should not be ashamed of asking for that. We’re social creatures, and it’s natural for us to seek others’ support. It’s especially natural for us to seek it from our friends and family. But insofar as we desire such support from people not ready to provide it, we need to make the case for it.

 

John Corvino is an author, speaker, and philosophy professor at Wayne State University in Detroit.

For over fifteen years he has traveled the country speaking on homosexuality and ethics. His writing has been featured in regional and national periodicals, at the online Independent Gay Forum (www.indegayforum.org), and in numerous scholarly anthologies. His column “The Gay Moralist” appears Fridays on 365gay.com.

For more about John Corvino, or to see clips from his “What’s Morally Wrong with Homosexuality?” DVD, visit www.johncorvino.com.


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  • Trace Said: September 11th, 2008 at 7:25 pm
    • I do not want, expect or even really care about Tolerance. What someone else thinks really makes no difference to me.

      What I expect and what I demand is the same treatment as others. I don’t believe in special right (and yes, it’s special rights that heterosexuals receive – while gay men and women are denied the same rights)for any group.

      I don’t care about work place protections, but don’t think that any other groups (religious, sex, age, etc) should receive the same protections. I don’t think someone should be dismissed from the Army for being gay unless people are dismissed for be heterosexual. And marriage, nothing is appropriate but full marriage rights.

  • Quasi Said: September 11th, 2008 at 7:06 pm
    • The older I get, the less I feel a need for acceptance or tolerance. I am more and more becoming like Sophia on the Golden Girls, and I speak my mind no matter the consequences. Those who have not lived long, and those who are bigots need to be told “how it really is!” I let people run over me too much in the past. No more, no how!

      And when I travel or eat out and hear a group of people at another table “speaking with bigoted voice”, I too become just as loud and speak the truth so they hear it. They must learn they are not living in a vacuum or where the “majority can be tyrannical” any longer. Pi$$ on their hatred, intolerance and evil tolerance.

  • Rick Said: August 28th, 2008 at 9:06 pm
    • Well said, Nikko. I have never wanted to be tolerated since tolerance is usually associated with an unpleasant situation for the tolerating individual. Acceptance is something that every human being, as social animals, wants and often never achieves. I would be pleased if we could simply be respected.

  • Mario Said: August 28th, 2008 at 8:04 pm
    • “we want to be embraced and encouraged—like everyone else in society”
      I think this was meant to be interpreted as “like everyone else in society, we want to be embraced and encouraged”. It’s a *desire* that everyone has. Or at least, it meant as opposed to straight people generally. Obviously, it wasn’t to mean that literally everyone else is embraced and encouraged – after all, no one would immediately conclude that he meant that felons are embraced and encouraged while gay people are not. But for some reason, you assumed that’s what he meant regarding race, class and disability, etc.
      Of course, it’s little surprise as there will always be someone claiming to be horribly offended based on twisting the meaning of these sorts of columns, no matter what the column says.

 
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