...we worked hard to reclaim 'queer' and I'm not really willing to give it back up. I don't need you to use it. But it's still my word for me.
On the gripping hand, I'm pleased (even though I'm sometimes confused) that 'gay' has lost the connotations it had when I was a baby queer. See, back then, 'gay' was the word assimilationists used -- it signified you weren't one of *those* "scary homos". You weren't "queer as in fuck you". So I hear people nowadays self-id as 'gay' and my first thought is, wait, I didn't think you were that conservative? And then I figuratively slap myself and try to catch up with the times.
@sev and its interesitng how much of that is still being rebuilt, because there was community but most resources were still local or word of mouth. not that I'm that old, just... have been seeing a lot of people talking about specifically that.
@Nire Yeah. And the local communities were broken. Because the people who would have otherwise been my elders were all busy dying or nursing the dying and so people my age have no fucking idea how to mentor. Or, I guess, even why -- we had to figure it all out as we went along, so why shouldn't you? Such a disservice me & mine have done to the world.
@sev but also those still left from before, to the others. its... complicated as hell
@sev and now theres sort of another happening! where all the old resources were dying and didnt get scraped by archive because they're on tumblr/etc or didnt get enough readers
@sev along with newer people doing the opposite, where because people use the wrong words they dont listen <_< which they're free to do, but the reinventing square wheels thing is like, something thats been happening every two years >_>
@sev yeah as a lot of our bookmarks started dying you noticed a lot of 'ameture archivist' popping up in twitter bios :P
@starkatt sad tho, so brace i guess.
@sev queer was hard fought and i agree, but all the fighting was lost in that sorta lost generation around 2000 when the internet started being a place of community