--I don't think there's anything more destructive to human welfare in the long term than giving up on married mothers and fathers--
Just out of curiosity, where do you see that happening?
--I don't think there's anything more destructive to human welfare in the long term than giving up on married mothers and fathers--
I get where you're coming from in the modern day.
I would like point out that Greek homosexuality definitely had a pedophile element to it. Or I would say hebephile element. Greek historical documents clearly show that Greek armies often took women and boys. Not men, but boys. It is very clear on this subject.
There's sex and then there's sexuality. Not all sex involves just sex acts. People make sex and gender roles part of their game all the time, but having all the NPCs in positions of authority be men (captain of the guard, the mayor, the head of the business council, the guildmaster, leader of the thieves, head of the church, etc). And most people aren't shy to include heterosexual partnerships (queens for the king, wives, girlfriends). Even though you don't see the king and queen having sex in the game, their heteronormativity is a part of the game.As a DM I would not be comfortable role-playing gay male romance or sex. I'm not going to be forced to role-play that with anyone. I'm heterosexual. I feel comfortable role-playing attraction to females, that's why I can role-play female homosexuality. I no more expect someone to force me to role-play male homosexual sex than I expect a male homosexual to role-play female-male or female-female sex. The same goes for transgender sexual material. Just not going to be forced into something I'm not comfortable with. No one should be forced into an uncomfortable role-play situation in a game.
As far as the game being more inclusive, I'm all for it. People should be able to play what they want. I didn't see any problem with Pathfinder including homosexual NPCs. Given I don't focus on sexuality in my games, I role-played them like a regular heterosexual couple without going into the deep details. It is the deep details I'm not comfortable with and in general I don't pursue sexuality and romance in my games on more than a surface level. I guess you could say a PG-13 TV level. That's about as far as I'm going to take it.
No one is forcing anyone to do anything. Not really.This is the oddest thread I've seen in a while. I don't see why this was ever an issue. Sexuality of any kind was mostly avoided in RPGs save by DMs and players comfortable with that type of role-play. No one should be forced into that type of role-playing, DM or otherwise.
...
Why would someone try to force overt sexuality on a DM or player group? That would be insulting whether it was homosexual or heterosexual.
Pretty much. It's encouraging people to play the sex or the gender they want and confirming that you do not need to play your own sex/gender/orientation. That's pretty much all it says (along with some examples). It's as dramatic as text saying you don't need to play someone who is as intelligent as you or matches your body type.Or is this just a matter of a player being able to write up a background where they have a homosexual partner and not experiencing discrimination? I don't have a problem with that myself. I'd just shrug and say ok. I might even have some fun with it using a few gay stereotypes I've seen on TV like a gay man with a flamboyant nagging husband or boyfriend because it would be funny to have some guy giving him a hard time for things like his clothes and hygiene. "Oh Herbert, you're all covered in blood. I'm so tired of you adventuring all the time. Always out traipsing about in some cave and you come home stinking like orc dung. I'm not going to have anything to do with you until you clean up. So foul." If there is some particularly attractive male in the group, having the husband be jealous would be hilarious. "Are you sleeping with that barbarian? Are you cheating on me, Herbert?" Have the boyfriend go off in a huff. That would be funny role-playing.
So you didn't at all read the post you were quoting, then.
That's about the opposite of what I said. A lot of characters can exist without ever having their orientation mentioned or implied. It is absolutely false that it never happens. They don't have to be straight every time it is mentioned.
Better idea of a setting where homosexuality isn't taboo: Don't make homophobia a major setting element. All I have to do is not include something. That's it.
Homosexuality isn't an alien thing. Just... don't exclude.
And don't think you don't just because you don't know about it. For some strange reason they don't always want to tell everyone.
Not exactly stepping out on a ledge there are you? This is not in anyway controversial or interesting. I have had plenty of players play female characters that identify as male. They have little trouble imagining a female going after another female romantically.
You want to do something interesting, play a male homosexual.
I can't believe how this has taken such an ugly turn. No, that's a lie, I guess I knew it would.
For what it's worth, I understood where you were trying to go with your questions. I share your concerns, and I was curious to see how people answered as well. I think this is a really important aspect of this sort of discussion.For my part, I have seen a great deal of ends justifying the means, and justifications for authoritarian rules, to squelch speech people disagree with lately. The term "liberalism," which I am not using politically in this context to refer to a "side" of the political scale or political party, used to mean something different on speech topics. It used to mean that the best answer to speech we don't like is speech we do like. That the marketplace of ideas is the only solution ever needed for speech we don't like, because the best opinions naturally rise to the top. The goal therefore is to simply respond, to inform and persuade as best we can, without ever trying to pressure others to not speak, or to deny forums for them to voice their opinion, or to defame or belittle or dehumanize the speaker instead of responding to the content of their speech, or to ever say or imply that dissent itself is unwelcome or a problem.
Which is why I keep asking what people propose we do about "stubborn insistence" that we disagree with? What do we do about "active resistance" that we disagree with? If the answer is simply, "We try to persuade people that our view is the better view" I am totally cool with that. But if the answer is "We metaphorically steam roll over them because the rightness of our views justifies putting all pressure we can on them to not continue to resist our objectively correct views or to reduce the means available to them to voice that resistance," then I disagree with that approach and think it is in the long term worse for society than the wrongheaded views being squelched to begin with.
No? Even if you are one of the few, the point that "essentially nobody knows anything about the Middle Ages" is still true.Don't you think it might be a little bit foolhardy to begin a conversation with a complete stranger on this note? You never know which two Medieval European languages (three if you count Latin) they might have wasted their college years studying.
They exist in myths and legends today. That's rather different from one living next door.As do the myths and legends of the period.
It's not actually that odd.This is the oddest thread I've seen in a while. I don't see why this was ever an issue. Sexuality of any kind was mostly avoided in RPGs save by DMs and players comfortable with that type of role-play. No one should be forced into that type of role-playing, DM or otherwise.
Tip: If the concern is that a person is afraid of experiencing discrimination, "I saw some stereotypes on TV!" is not the solution.Or is this just a matter of a player being able to write up a background where they have a homosexual partner and not experiencing discrimination? I don't have a problem with that myself. I'd just shrug and say ok. I might even have some fun with it using a few gay stereotypes I've seen on TV...
Not familiar with them. Did the writers forget about women? If so, that's an obvious problem yes. If not... well, that's what I said was a problem so I don't know why you're asking me.So "Stand by me" has a problem and should be remedied? Or "Das Boot"?
And I say, again, the thing I said in the first place that you're supposedly responding to:You said that LGTB should be included. Since there's nothing that can distinguish a LGTB from the rest of the population, you have to assume that some of the NPCs you have encountered are gay or transsexuals. They've always been included.
I'm not the one trying to come up with "alternate models" where LGBT people can exist.None of the game worlds are homophobic.
..did you look at what I was responding to?I don't understand your sentence.
Treating the presence of a minority group, no matter how polite people think they are, as an "issue" may not come off as so "civil" to the people who are members of those groups.The rest of the thread has been a series of civil discussions of the issue. Is something in there what you saw as "ugly"? What part? Seemed like a free exchange of differing views to me... That's how you change people's minds on this stuff anyway. Discuss the issue calmly, and persuade them with rational discussion.
I doubt it. People will always be who they are, and writing "be respectful" somewhere won't change that. If so, there would never be flame wars on forums...
I'd give my life for my belief in the abiding value of paired femininity and masculinity--I don't think there's anything more destructive to human welfare in the long term than giving up on married mothers and fathers--but if JesterCanuck declines to take that life I'm not going to complain. Tolerance is better than persecution.