
just don't get where any of us get to label another as something so horrible as a bigot... as if we know these people enough to know what the heck we're talking about.
I don't know what they tell others in private, I only know what they say that the rest of us can hear. And in this instance, they said something in public that I think merits a public disagreement. I'm not saying Kurt and Patrick go around beating up drag queens ('cause most drag queens would tower over them), I'm saying that they said something in public that is sexist and homophobic.
In Patrick's real life, he is good friends with gay skaters and he pays respect to his mentors who are gay.
OK a few people have used the "but they're friends with and twitter followers of gays!" defense. OK, let's discredit this nonsense for once and for all. People can have all the friends they like and still be prejudiced against their friends' traits. People compartmentalize. They reason to themselves that their friends are not like that general group of people they dislike (being Canadian, I'm sure all of Kurt and Patrick's gay friends are manly lumberjacks who doesn't even know what a Biellmann is). Being friends with people who share a certain trait doesn't mean one is enlightened in every way about that trait. After all, misogyny doesn't stop most misogynists from marrying women.
All male figure skaters suffer from gay bashing regardless of their sexuality. I doubt very much any of them would do gay bashing himself or be homophobic in this sport.
You must not have read anything Elvis Stojko has wrote and said. And more to the point, history is full of examples of people who experience prejudice and oppression but then go on to deal out the same kind of prejudice and oppression once they're in a relative position of power and authority. People internalize prejudices directed against them. We see it on a smaller scale all the time. Black kids who disparage each other's harmless behavior as "ghetto". Women who call other women the b-word for showing the kind of aggression and ambition that they'd give a pass to in men. Fat people who mock fatter people. And so on.
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I'm not calling for Kurt Browning and Patrick Chan to be tarred and feathered or punished in any way. I'm just pointing out that something they said is ignorant, prejudiced and stupid. You can be fans of a skater without thinking everything they say is completely enlightened. I'm sure in real life, we're all friends with people who sometimes say ignorant things, just as many of us do ourselves. And when ignorant things are said, they should be corrected. That's how people learn.
A study guide for Kurt Browning, Patrick Chan and their apologists:
The Biellmann spin isn't exclusive to a gender. Women do it more often because they're both more likely to train for it and more likely to be biologically suited for it. A man who does the Biellmann not only doesn't deserve disrespect, as Chan suggested, but should be admired for having the talent, hard work and open-mindedness to train something that's harder for their gender.