felis_ultharus: The Pardoner from the Canterbury Tales (Default)
So, yeah -- today's the 15th anniversary of my coming out. I've always sort of marked this day as a second birthday, since coming out so completely altered the direction of my life.

I sometimes wonder if that's the same experience now. It's hard to imagine now a person getting death threats, losing all their friends, and having to flee in the middle of the night -- which was a pretty normal experience when I was sixteen and coming out.

Intellectually, I know it's just as hard out in the boonies, out in rural areas (or almost just as hard since the internet is a mitigating factor). But Montreal has a talent for insulating a person, making it seem like all problems have been solved.

Sometimes it's hard to focus on how much this country is a patchwork quilt when it comes to change. Change has moved ahead so quickly in urban cores and liberal bastions like universities, while ideas now considered very conservative in those places haven't even begun to see the light of day in many other parts of the country.

Of course, since even progressive Montreal has a gaybashing a week on average -- and since a quarter of its street youth are there because they fled homophobic parents -- a lot of that insulation is just illusion, too, and not real change.

I guess what I'm trying to say is that -- whatever the elitists of our movement and the postmodernists in the universities say -- being out is still crucial, still necessary, and still just as radical as it always was.
felis_ultharus: The Pardoner from the Canterbury Tales (Default)
Politics

So Canada's Immigration and Refugee Board -- those wonderful people who in 2004 rejected an application by a openly gay Mexican man for immigration status, arguing that he was too butch to face real persecution -- has done it again.

Alvaro Antonio Orozco was born in Nicarauga. By the age of 12, he knew was gay, had survived 7 suicide attempts, and had been repeatedly threatened by his murderously homophobic father. At 12, and after a brief stint in social services, he walked and hitchiked from Nicaragua along the Panamerican Highway through the rest of Central America, hoping to make it to San Francisco, which he understood as a place where he could be free.

Orozco's story continues )

Our Minister of Immigration, Diane Finley, can reverse this order if she chooses to. I've written a a letter urging her to do so. You can, too, and the letter is postage-free if mailed in Canada:

The Honourable Diane Finley
Minister of Citizenship and Immigration
MP, Haldimand–Norfolk
House of Commons
Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6

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felis_ultharus: The Pardoner from the Canterbury Tales (Default)
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September 2011

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