More from sociologist Todd Schoepflin:Straight people don't run around flaunting their straightness. Ok sure you have the odd couple kissing in public, but really for the most part it's not flaunted the same way gay people do running down a street proclaiming their gayness like it's what everybody needs to see.
I think that every time a romantic comedy comes out, straight people are flaunting their straightness. Every time I see a man and woman couple holding hands in public, they are flaunting their straightness. Every time I see a newlywed couple getting their photos taken in Gastown, they are flaunting their straightness.A follow-up question I sometimes receive when handling this topic is: “But why do they have to flaunt their sexuality?”
What, by the way, does “flaunting it” mean? How does a person flaunt their sexuality? Am I flaunting heterosexuality by wearing a wedding band? By having pictures of my wife and kids in my office? By making references to my wife?
Every time a straight couple is kissing goodbye in public, they are flaunting their straightness.
Every time a man is invited out and asks, "may I bring my wife too?" he is flaunting his straightness.
It sounds silly, doesn't it? To call any of the above "flaunting one's sexuality"? And yet when gay people do the exact same thing, people say that they are "flaunting their gayness."
It seems that something is not quite right with that state of affairs.
The gay pride parade is one day out of the year when gay people can celebrate gay sexuality in the midst of a hetero-centric culture, and proclaim: We're here, we're queer. GET USED TO IT.





