Potential Car

Potential Car

A friend of mine is selling a 2003-vintage, 1l Vauxhall Corsa, and wants £1,500 for it. Are there Manchester drivers who can come view the car (in Manchester city centre) with me? Art reckons that £1,500 is a tad high for the car, but it might be worth it if it's in good nick and coming from a friend. I haven't arranged any viewing yet.

I've done a little research and some calculations - assuming a rise in petrol prices, driving to Macclesfield will cost me £2,000 a year insurance, £500 in running costs (based on brrm's estimates) and £1000 in petrol. That's £3,500 total. My current commute costs me about £1,500/yr, so I'd need to be earning about £4,000 more before tax to have the same post-commute income.
Potential Car

Potential Car

A friend of mine is selling a 2003-vintage, 1l Vauxhall Corsa, and wants £1,500 for it. Are there Manchester drivers who can come view the car (in Manchester city centre) with me? Art reckons that £1,500 is a tad high for the car, but it might be worth it if it's in good nick and coming from a friend. I haven't arranged any viewing yet.

I've done a little research and some calculations - assuming a rise in petrol prices, driving to Macclesfield will cost me £2,000 a year insurance, £500 in running costs (based on brrm's estimates) and £1000 in petrol. That's £3,500 total. My current commute costs me about £1,500/yr, so I'd need to be earning about £4,000 more before tax to have the same post-commute income.
Bisexual blog, Bisexual Pride

Bisexual blog, Bisexual Pride




It’s five years tomorrow since I started this bisexual blog. I don’t update it regularly any more, but it has been very important to me as an outlet for my ideas on bisexuality when other outlets have seemed a bit sparse. And, as hundreds of thousands of people have visited it, it must have been of some interest and importance to a few other people too.

Below, I’m going to post a link to the entry with which I opened this blog. I wrote about EuroPride, held in London that year. Tomorrow is the Pride march in London too. I had a great time at EuroPride in 2006, but in general I find the lack of politics at Pride in London combined with vacuous celebration a bit wearing and tedious. And believe me, I LOVE celebrations in general.

I think the purpose of Pride should be political as well as celebratory – just as a quick for instance, there are homophobic attacks in the UK, and essential solidarity with people in countries where same-sex is illegal and strictly punished. There are tremendous queer activists, such as David Kato in Uganda who was murdered this year, to honour.

In the Pride press pack, their Love Without Borders campaign is one of the things they do talk about. But if you saw the Pride poster (seen on the London underground, but nowhere that I can find on the interwebs), you’d have to search hard to figure out what sort of Pride it was. Smirnoff Pride, perhaps.

There will be a bi stall and bi banner at Pride, London tomorrow and I really wish those attending all the best. It is absolutely essential that bi people are properly visible and there is even an international campaign about it.

Moving on up
Thanks (in a large part) to social media, there seems to be a lot more of a bisexual community than there was back in 2006, in the UK and elsewhere. Twitter and Facebook have put loads of people in touch with each other, and not just virtually. Ideas spin around the world soon as anything.

Also, there are many more bi bloggers than there were in 2006 when I couldn’t find any British ones at all. It’s very hard to keep blogging in the long term and many have opened and closed. But thanks to the Bi Bloggers aggregator site, organised by the ever-efficient Jen Yockney, anyone who’s interested in British bi bloggers can see that there’s quite a lot of it about. And of course there are many other bi bloggers around the world (particularly North America). If a bi celebrity comes out, or a prominent queer columnist such as Dan Savage opines on bisexuality, there are plenty of other people who can write about it. There are other aspects of bisexuality that people don’t write about, though, and when I write here in the future that’s what I’ll be covering.

Anyway, as anyone who knows a smidgeon of blogging theory can tell you, less is most definitely more. So happy bisexual birthday and Pride – whether it’s been or still to come where you are – and be happy that things really can and do get better.

Here’s what I wrote in 2006.
Bisexual blog, Bisexual Pride

Bisexual blog, Bisexual Pride




It’s five years tomorrow since I started this bisexual blog. I don’t update it regularly any more, but it has been very important to me as an outlet for my ideas on bisexuality when other outlets have seemed a bit sparse. And, as hundreds of thousands of people have visited it, it must have been of some interest and importance to a few other people too.

Below, I’m going to post a link to the entry with which I opened this blog. I wrote about EuroPride, held in London that year. Tomorrow is the Pride march in London too. I had a great time at EuroPride in 2006, but in general I find the lack of politics at Pride in London combined with vacuous celebration a bit wearing and tedious. And believe me, I LOVE celebrations in general.

I think the purpose of Pride should be political as well as celebratory – just as a quick for instance, there are homophobic attacks in the UK, and essential solidarity with people in countries where same-sex is illegal and strictly punished. There are tremendous queer activists, such as David Kato in Uganda who was murdered this year, to honour.

In the Pride press pack, their Love Without Borders campaign is one of the things they do talk about. But if you saw the Pride poster (seen on the London underground, but nowhere that I can find on the interwebs), you’d have to search hard to figure out what sort of Pride it was. Smirnoff Pride, perhaps.

There will be a bi stall and bi banner at Pride, London tomorrow and I really wish those attending all the best. It is absolutely essential that bi people are properly visible and there is even an international campaign about it.

Moving on up
Thanks (in a large part) to social media, there seems to be a lot more of a bisexual community than there was back in 2006, in the UK and elsewhere. Twitter and Facebook have put loads of people in touch with each other, and not just virtually. Ideas spin around the world soon as anything.

Also, there are many more bi bloggers than there were in 2006 when I couldn’t find any British ones at all. It’s very hard to keep blogging in the long term and many have opened and closed. But thanks to the Bi Bloggers aggregator site, organised by the ever-efficient Jen Yockney, anyone who’s interested in British bi bloggers can see that there’s quite a lot of it about. And of course there are many other bi bloggers around the world (particularly North America). If a bi celebrity comes out, or a prominent queer columnist such as Dan Savage opines on bisexuality, there are plenty of other people who can write about it. There are other aspects of bisexuality that people don’t write about, though, and when I write here in the future that’s what I’ll be covering.

Anyway, as anyone who knows a smidgeon of blogging theory can tell you, less is most definitely more. So happy bisexual birthday and Pride – whether it’s been or still to come where you are – and be happy that things really can and do get better.

Here’s what I wrote in 2006.
We should chase each other out of the closets, apparently

We should chase each other out of the closets, apparently

When someone says "I'm not xxx but" you know it's not going to end well. Here's Dan Savage trying to atone for his past misdeeds:
"I'm not bi-phobic - in fact, I love bisexual people so much, I wish there were more of them."
Anyone else got that sinking feeling?

In his latest piece about bisexuals at The Stranger, Dan makes a few good points:
  • If more people (especially those in opposite-sex relationships) were out about being bi then bisexual invisibility would be less of a problem.
  • People who aren't bisexual using it as a cover for their homosexuality lead to people thinking all bisexuality is a phase.
  • There's probably more bisexual people than there are gay and lesbian people.
Sadly, and perhaps predictably, he misses the clue on a few things.
"I don't berate bi-identified teenage boys, I don't tell them they're not really bi, and I don't cruise around bi neighbourhoods looking for young bi guys to beat up. But I do know that a bi-identified 36-year-old is likelier to be bisexual than a bi-identified 16-year-old, and I resent being asked to pretend not to know it."
Which misses the point that he's telling them in the column that he thinks they're not bi. Regardless of how they'd identify in twenty years time:
  • If you take them seriously then they'll know you respect them.
  • If you don't take them seriously then they'll know you didn't respect them.
What does more damage here, faith or doubt? And who decides the difference between "says they're bisexual" and "is bisexual"? I think it should be them, not us. Not Dan.

He goes on:
"Most adult bisexuals, for whatever reason, wind up in opposite-sex relationships. And most comfortably disappear into presumed heterosexuality (including all three of my biggest bisexual antagonists—what are the odds?!)."
He thinks people want him to keep quiet on this like he's uncovered a secret conspiracy or some sort of seedy truth about the true nature of bisexuality. But it's not - it's simply maths about the dating pool; there's more "looking for opposite sex" people out there. He does this despite using figures in the same article that claim 1.7% of the US population is LG, to 1.8% B. So, with over 96% of the population uninterested in dating someone of the same sex it's not surprising that the people attracted to more than one gender find that the people attracted to them are usually of the opposite gender. What are the odds indeed!

Disappearing into presumed heterosexuality isn't their fault, either. Society's assumption is that any mixed-sex couple is straight. I suspect Dan's assumption is that every same-sex couple he sees on the scene is gay. I do agree that if more people were out then this would be less of an issue, but being "incidentally out" about being bi is incredibly hard. The weight of the assumptions is immense, and just as not all gay people want to wear rainbows and triangles all the time, bisexual people shouldn't have to either.

This leads to the other point he (perhaps wilfully) misses:
"Bisexual activists like to complain that they're the most oppressed because (1) it's a contest, and (2) it's a good excuse. If they can argue—and unfortunately, they can—that lots of gay people are mean to them (some gay people don't want to date them, some gay people doubt they exist) and straight people are mean to them (some straight people don't want to date them, some straight people doubt they exist), then bisexual people aren't to blame for the bisexual closet. Everyone else is.

And they have a point—but it's a self-serving, self-defeating point. Yes, lots of people judge and condemn and fear bisexuals. If those were good reasons to stay closeted, no gay or lesbian person would ever come out"
He's right that gay and lesbian people face fear, condemnation and judgement too. And he's right that more of them come out than bisexuals. But is that surprising when the gay community supports and encourages them, offers safe spaces, even careers to them? When I rang the London Lesbian and Gay Switchboard (way back when) to ask about bisexual groups, I was met with "Are you sure you're not gay? Bisexuality is normally just a phase!"

The gay community is slowly trying to live up to its new name "the LGBT community" but the fact remains that few people working in it think gays don't exist, or that all lesbians are lying. Coming out as gay or lesbian is still much more supported than coming out as bi. This is one very big reason bisexuals don't do it. It's not about wanting to win at oppression.

Dan ends, with condemnation and/or judgement, ironically:
"I'm sorry, bisexual activists, but you're doing it all wrong. Instead of berating me for my alleged bi-phobia—and if I'm the enemy, you're in real trouble—berate your closeted compatriots. If they all came out tomorrow, you could put an end to bi-phobia, take over the LGBT movement, and kick my ass out of it."
I don't think Dan is the enemy. His "It Gets Better" campaign is a force for good. And I do think he makes some good points, but he does also say some biphobic things even in this column about how he's not biphobic.

If we all came out tomorrow we could take over the LGBT movement (why would we want to?) and we could kick Dan Savage out of it (though we'd prefer he was just less wrong). But "if we all did X tomorrow" is a redundant exercise. We don't. No-one does.

Each person who comes out does so as an individual, not as part of a tide. The reception we face is based on the people around us, the support and respect we receive is based on that too. While events like BiCon can provide a sense of community, I think it's exceedingly unfair to suggest that it's our all own fault the gay community looks down on us while expecting us to rush to come out.



Dan's full article, with extensive comments section is here: The Stranger
Anna Paquin talks about ‘bisexual prejudice’

Anna Paquin talks about ‘bisexual prejudice’

 

I’ve been swamped with life stuff lately and very slow getting things posted, but wanted to get this link up to keep this blog in the ‘conversation’ so to speak:

anna-paquin-stephen-moyer-2009-2-23-3-5-22

True Blood star Anna Paquin says there is a lot of prejudice against bisexual people.

“The 28-year-old actress, who is married to her co-star Stephen Moyer, came out as bisexual last April when she filmed an advert for an LGBT charity.

Speaking to W magazine, she said: ‘Frankly no one had ever asked me about being bisexual before.

‘There is a lot of prejudice against us but the more people talk about it, the less of a deal it will be’.”

Anna Paquin talks about ‘bisexual prejudice’

Anna Paquin talks about ‘bisexual prejudice’

 

I’ve been swamped with life stuff lately and very slow getting things posted, but wanted to get this link up to keep this blog in the ‘conversation’ so to speak:

anna-paquin-stephen-moyer-2009-2-23-3-5-22

True Blood star Anna Paquin says there is a lot of prejudice against bisexual people.

“The 28-year-old actress, who is married to her co-star Stephen Moyer, came out as bisexual last April when she filmed an advert for an LGBT charity.

Speaking to W magazine, she said: ‘Frankly no one had ever asked me about being bisexual before.

‘There is a lot of prejudice against us but the more people talk about it, the less of a deal it will be’.”

Free to a Good Home: DVD Player, Freeview STB

Free to a Good Home: DVD Player, Freeview STB

Basically as per subject. We've got a standalone DVD player with SCART out, and a Freeview box with ditto. They both work, but we have no need for them - the PS3 plays DVDs, and our new TV's got a built in Freeview decoder (not that we can get a signal...
Free to a Good Home: DVD Player, Freeview STB

Free to a Good Home: DVD Player, Freeview STB

Basically as per subject. We've got a standalone DVD player with SCART out, and a Freeview box with ditto. They both work, but we have no need for them - the PS3 plays DVDs, and our new TV's got a built in Freeview decoder (not that we can get a signal...
Free to a Good Home: DVD Player, Freeview STB

Free to a Good Home: DVD Player, Freeview STB

Basically as per subject. We've got a standalone DVD player with SCART out, and a Freeview box with ditto. They both work, but we have no need for them - the PS3 plays DVDs, and our new TV's got a built in Freeview decoder (not that we can get a signal...