My queer friends in Italy are so worn down by discrimination, they don’t notice it. Here’s why. I was chatting online the other day with a female friend who is undergoing IVF in Italy to have a child with her girlfriend. IVF for lesbian couples is not approved by law in Italy; instead, doctors have the power to decide whether to approve the treatment on a case-by-case basis. My friend was enthusiastic about her gynaecologist, because, as she told me, “despite being utterly against same-sex parenting, she is helping us do it without objecting”.So, it's not all doom and gloom? Well, Viola Di Grado isn't convinced:
That conversation left me with a bitter taste and, above all, confirmed how desensitised queer Italians have become to the daily discrimination they face. As an Italian who has spent most of my adult life abroad, I feel I have the privilege of being able to examine from afar LGBTQ+ Italians’ perceptions of homophobic mistreatment in their own country. From this vantage point, I can see that the hardships they experience have made it difficult for them to detect when they are being unfairly treated.
The woman literally just told you that she wasn't unfairly treated! Why do you feel entitled to 'correct' her?
I asked my friend if she was aware that “objecting” – even if it was acceptable to “object” to equality, which it isn’t – should never be expressed in a medical setting if the service provided is being approved and paid for. She sounded confused by my question, not because she didn’t share my concern, but because, as she later explained, she feels it would be “too much” to complain.
You begin to see just how much these single-issue loons must get on their more reasonable friends' nerves as well as everyone elses.
Of course, the OffenceFinder General isn't going to leave it there...
Around 10 years ago, when I was in my 20s, I moved into a new house with my girlfriend and a straight Italian couple we had just met. One of the first things my girlfriend said to the couple was “Viola and I are dating”. In response, the guy in the couple replied: “No worries, it’s fine for us.”
The basta...No wait. He's fine with it? Well, I guess no-one could object to that, surely?
This answer falls into the same category as the mostly sympathetic gynaecologist. Both express an acceptance of a same-sex partnership, but the problem is that neither take it as a given, but as something they choose to accept out of an act of kindness.
Oh, FFS!
A few years later, a guy I was dating asked me if I was bisexual because of some trauma, implying that otherwise I would be 100% straight. Again, he too reassured me that he had “nothing against same-sex couples”. When I told my friends about both instances, they were mostly unimpressed. They didn’t see why it was such a “big deal”.
Maybe they are right, and you're being overly sensitive?
It doesn’t help that there are still very few examples in Italy of visible public figures, such as singers and actors, who are “out and proud”. That, more than anything else, would help to build a counter-narrative in the fight for equality. Instead, there are still celebrities promoting so-called traditional family values, such as popular singer Carmen Consoli, who, despite having undergone IVF abroad as a single mother, declares she believes the “traditional family” is better than any other kind.
Well, one's been in use for hundreds of years. So...maybe it is? And if she thinks that, who are you to try to tell her she's wrong?
So many missed opportunities to make it all about me me me.
ReplyDeleteI read the above post before clicking on the link I thought "only the Grauniad would print this". Voilà there it is.
ReplyDeleteThis sounds like someone who's entire existence is defined by being discriminated against for being gay. This is a bit of a problem if people keep refusing to be the prejudiced homophobes that you need them to be. Didn't Little Britain have a running gag about the only gay in the village having a problem with a total lack of persecution?
ReplyDeleteQueers shouldn't get IVF paid for anywhere.
ReplyDeleteSo it's OK to call people "queer" again?
ReplyDelete"So many missed opportunities to make it all about me me me."
ReplyDeleteNarcissism seems to be the driving factor behind so many of our modern day plagues...
"Voilà there it is."
The dear old Grauniad is nothing if not predictable! 😂
"Didn't Little Britain have a running gag about the only gay in the village having a problem with a total lack of persecution?"
Yes, I did think about that reading this for the first time!
"Queers shouldn't get IVF paid for anywhere."
I'd agree - if any medical procedure should be self-funded, this is it.
"So it's OK to call people "queer" again?"
Who can keep up with the language any more?